Fighting for Your Overtime?
Papa Legba asks: "I am in a battle, with a now ex-employer, over the unpaid overtime that I incurred while working in their IT department. I refused to accept the answer 'you are a computer guy, you don't get overtime' and did some looking. My research has turned up these relevant documents: the definition of exempt Computer professional at section 13(a)(17) of the FLSA managed by the Department of Labor, the amendments in the ESA labeled C.F.R.541.3(a)(4) and C.F.R.541.303 , and a site referring to a letter, which I cannot find a copy of. The letter describes a Dept. of Labor ruling from December 4, 1998 that set out who qualifies as a computer professional. Can anyone find this letter, and is there any more documents that I am missing. I have a lawyer but this is a very specific area and I want to do this right. Has anyone else fought this battle?"
I've had this battle before, in both IT and physical security (ie, rent-a-cop) occupations. Security isn't exempt from OT, and therefore, gets overtime - the company I was at refused to pay OT and also went so far as to change the defined "workweek" to 7 days, period - even scattered across 1 month. IRS and DOL define a "workweek" as 7 consecutive days. A nice sit-down talk with the owner with printed documentation in hand and a few phone calls from myself and my fellow cow-orkers to the Regional Dept. of Labor Administrator, and we got our OT.
_ By_Side.htm.
Interestingly, the DOL website has news concerning proposed changes to the definition of a "computer professional", but unfortunately for you, the current rules are so vague as to define just about anyone in the IT industry as to be exempt from OT. A good overview comparison document is at http://www.labor.gov/_sec/media/speeches/541_Side
Your state may give you more rights, but Uncle Sam isn't going to help you any.
-Yert
Truck driver, plumber, Linux systems engineer.