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Library - Employment Law
Meal & Rest Periods
EMPLOYEES SHOULD BE PAID FOR WORKING BEFORE
OR AFTER THEIR SCHEDULED SHIFT
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Q:
Due to being
short-staffed and the need to meet critical deadlines, I
have been coming to work earlier and leaving later than
my scheduled shift. My boss knows I am doing this and
even though the company has a ‘no unauthorized overtime’
policy, I have not been told to stop. I am an hourly
employee and do not have executive, managerial or
administrative duties. Am I supposed to be paid for the
extra hours that I worked even though the company did
not ask me and I may not be authorized to work those
extra hours? |
A:
Yes, you should be paid for the hours
you worked before or after your scheduled shift even though your
employer has not directly asked you or authorized you to perform
work outside your scheduled shift. These extra hours are termed “off
the clock” hours because they occur outside an employee’s regular
work hours or shift. If by working outside your shift you end up
working more than 8 hours per day or more than 40 hours per week,
you are additionally entitled to the overtime rate of 1½ times your
regular rate.
Under California laws, off-the-clock hours are considered “hours
worked.” “Hours worked” is defined as the time during which an
employee is subject to the control of an employer. It includes all
the time the employee is suffered or permitted to work, whether or
not required to do so. To be “suffered or permitted” to work means
that the employer knows or believes that the employee is working and
allows the employee to continue doing so.
Aside from coming to work early and working before the shift's
official starting time or leaving work after the shift’s official
end time, there are other work-related activities before or after
the scheduled shift that fall within the scope of “work time.” “Work
time” is essentially the time an employee spends on activities that
are controlled by and for the benefit of the employer. This includes
all the time that the employee is required to be present at the
workplace. Pre-shift "roll calls," pre-shift meetings (for example,
safety meetings), and setting up equipment before the official start
time of a shift are some of these activities.
Employees may similarly "stay late" and perform work after their
designated shift time is over. Time spent by an employee cleaning
equipment after the close of a shift or time spent on job-related
activities "on the way home" (for example a secretary who drops off
the day's mail at the post office or delivers some paperwork to a
customer or supplier) are some such activities. Some employees may
take work home or are contacted at home by telephone for
work-related reasons or are "called back" to work. All of these
post-shift activities fall within work time and, therefore, should
be paid.
If any of the activities above caused the employees to incur
overtime hours, then California Labor Code requires that the
employees be paid at the premium rate of 1 ½ times the employee’s
regular rate if the employee worked more than 8 but less than 12
hours in a work day. If the employee worked more than 12 hours in a
work day or in excess of 8 hours on the seventh day in a work week,
the employee is entitled to double the employee’s regular rate. An
employer’s failure to compensate its employees for work hours or
work time incurred in excess of the employee’s scheduled hours may
result in an expensive employment lawsuit against the employer.
©
Law Offices C. Joe Sayas, Jr.
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[C. Joe
Sayas, Jr., Esq. is an experienced trial attorney helping to protect
the rights of employees, policyholders, and consumers. Mr. Sayas has
obtained multi-million dollar recoveries for his clients and their
families in cases involving serious personal injuries, wrongful
death, insurance claims, wage and hour (overtime) litigation and
unfair business practices. He is currently Class Counsel to
thousands of employees seeking recovery of back wages and consumers
seeking damages arising from the sale of insurance policies. He is a
graduate of Georgetown University Law Center Washington, D.C. and
the University of the Philippines.]

Disclaimer:
As a public service, the Law Offices of C. Joe Sayas, Jr. has
prepared informative articles on topics of interest to consumers and
policyholders. Nothing contained in these articles should be
construed as creating or intending to create an attorney-client
relationship or purporting to give legal advice on individual
matters. Due to constant changes in the law, exceptions to general
rules of law, and factual differences, please seek professional
legal advice before acting on any matter.
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