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Federal Judge Says Interns Should Be Paid

An anonymous reader writes "Student interns are typically relegated to menial tasks like fetching coffee and taking out the trash, the idea being that they get paid in experience instead of money. On Tuesday, Manhattan Federal District Court Judge William H. Pauley disagreed, ruling in favor of two interns who sued Fox Searchlight Pictures to be paid for their work on the 2010 film Black Swan. The interns did chores that otherwise would have been performed by paid employees. Pauley ruled, in accordance with criteria laid out by the U.S. Department of Labor, that unpaid internships should be educational in nature and specifically structured to the benefit of the intern, and reasoned that if interns are going to do grunt work like regular employees, then they should be paid like regular employees." The article seems to imply that this might be the beginning of the end for the rampant abuse of unpaid internships: "Judge Pauley rejected the argument made by many companies to adopt a 'primary benefit test' to determine whether an intern should be paid, specifically whether 'the internship’s benefits to the intern outweigh the benefits to the engaging entity.' Judge Pauley wrote that such a test would be too subjective and unpredictable."

3 of 540 comments (clear)

  1. it's not the judge... by sribe · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unpaid internships have always been very restricted according to labor laws. It has always been the case that many companies in the entertainment and publishing and fashion industries were breaking the law. What is new is simply that a few former interns got fed up enough with their treatment that they are ratting out their unethical non-employers ;-)

  2. Re:Genius judge by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Informative

    "There are plenty of paid internships out there already"

    That's a pretty broad statement that ignores a number of facts, such as:
    1) Not every field has paid internships
    2) Not every field has internships readily available
    3) Not every location has companies nearby willing to take on interns (think small cities and rural areas)
    4) Not every paid internship is flexible enough to be viable
    5) Not every internship meets the educational requirements some schools have for it to count

  3. Re:Genius judge by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 5, Informative

    But it is the judge's job to determine if working someone without pay is legal or not.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.