Florida AFL-CIO · United Labor Lobby
Legislative Alert!
135 S. Monroe St.,
Tallahassee, FL 32301 · 850-224-6926 · FAX 850-224-2266 · www.flaflcio.org
Do Your Part to
PROTECT OVERTIME
Generations of workers
fought to get it…
now we must fight to
keep it!
On March 31, 2003, the Department of Labor (DOL)
proposed regulations that would disqualify millions of workers from overtime
protection under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Today (Thursday July 10th)
Wisconsin Congressman Dave Obey (D) will offer an amendment to the Fiscal Year
2004 Labor-HHS Appropriations bill that will prevent the DOL from enacting any
regulation that takes away workers’ overtime rights. Four of Florida’s Representatives have been
identified as critical votes for the Obey Amendment.
WE MUST CONTACT THESES
REPRESENTATIVES AND TELL THEM TO SUPPORT THE OBEY AMENDMENT AND PROTECT
OVERTIME!
- The DOL proposal would make it much easier for
employers to reclassify workers as “white collar” employees ineligible for
overtime. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938
requires employers to pay their employees a cash premium for overtime
work, but provides a narrow exception for white collar employees in
“executive,” “administrative,” and “professional” positions. A so-called “duties” test determines
whether these exceptions apply, and every change DOL proposes to the
“duties” test would make it easier for employers to avoid paying their
workers overtime.
- The DOL proposal would strip overtime rights from
more than 8 million workers The Economic Policy Institute (EPI) has concluded that DOL’s
proposed regulation would strip overtime rights from over 8 million
workers in only 78 of 257 white collar job titles.
- The DOL proposal would fail to guarantee overtime
eligibility for low-income workers.
- The DOL proposal would undermine the 40-hour
workweek. The many millions of workers denied
overtime protection under the DOL proposal would no longer be paid anything
for their overtime work. If
employers no longer have to pay extra for overtime, they will have an incentive
to demand longer hours, and workers will have less time to spend with
their families.
- The DOL proposal would be a pay cut. Millions
of workers depend on overtime pay to make ends meet, and in 2000 overtime
pay accounted for about 25% of the income of workers who worked overtime.
- There is no justification for taking away
workers’ overtime rights. There is broad consensus that an
adjustment of the minimum salary threshold for inflation is long
overdue. But the need to update this
salary threshold is no justification for weakening the “duties” test for
workers above the threshold. If DOL
weakened the “duties” tests every time it updated the minimum salary
threshold for inflation, in short order it would completely gut the FLSA.
- The Obey amendment is needed to stop DOL from
taking away workers’ overtime rights. The Obey
amendment would not stop DOL from issuing a regulation, but would prohibit
DOL from issuing any regulation that takes away overtime rights. The Obey amendment would still allow DOL
to fully update the salary threshold and to “clarify” the duties tests in
ways that do not take away workers’ overtime rights. But it would stop DOL from using the
need for “clarity” as an excuse to take away the overtime rights of more
than 8 million workers.
Call, FAX or Email
These Representatives Now
TELL THEM “SUPPORT
WORKERS, SUPPORT OVERTIME RIGHTS, SUPPORT THE OBEY AMENDMENT TO THE FY 2004
Labor-HHS Appropriations Bill!"
Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart (202) 225-2778 / Fax (202)
226-0346
Miami – (305) 225-6866
Naples – (239) 348-1620
Mario.diaz-balrt@mail.house.gov
Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart
(202) 225-4211 / Fax (202) 225-8576
Miami
– (305) 470-8555
www.house.gov/diaz-balart
Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
(202) 225-3931 / Fax (202) 225-5620
Miami – (305) 275-1800
www.house.gov/roslehtinen
Congresswoman Katherine Harris
(202) 225-5015 / Fax (202) 226-0828
Katherine.harris@mail.house.gov
Congressman Allen Boyd (202) 225-5235 / Fax (202) 225-5615
Tallahassee – (850) 561-3979
Panama City – (850) 785-0812
www.house.gov/boyd