Overtime overhaul may cost employers billions

 

Millions more employees may be entitled to overtime pay under new rules

Millions more employees may be entitled to overtime pay under new rules

On March 13, President Obama issued a memo to the Secretary of Labor calling for sweeping changes to the regulations that govern overtime pay.   According to the President, the “regulations regarding exemptions from the Act’s overtime requirement, particularly for executive, administrative, and professional employees (often referred to as ‘white collar’ exemptions) have not kept up with our modern economy.”   The President’s use of his executive power to push new rules without congressional approval has been controversial, and it is not yet clear what form the new rules will take.

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Playing by the Rules Under Maine’s Independent Contractor Statute

Contractors

For small business owners hiring both independent contractors and employees, it is important to fully understand the distinctions between the two to avoid complications from the Maine Workers’ Compensation Board (WCB).  With everyone looking to cut costs and the WCB’s Abuse Investigation Unit cracking down on worker misclassification, we take a look at the definition of an independent contractor as laid out in the Workers’ Compensation Act, 39-A M.R.S.A. §102(13-A).

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Don’t like an employee’s Facebook posts? Think twice before clicking the “fire” button

chained keyboardIf your company is like most, it already has a social media policy, is working on one, or is thinking about putting one in place.  Employees often talk – and gripe – about their jobs on social media sites, prompting employers to adopt policies for their employees’ internet posts about work.  However, recent decisions by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) show that it considers certain forms of e-griping to be protected speech, and a policy preventing it could earn your company unwanted federal attention.

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Workers’ Compensation Fraud Case Highlights Value of Investigators

Handcuffs

This week, a Scarborough man was sentenced in federal court  to five months in prison followed by five months of home confinement for concealing self-employment income while receiving federal wage-replacement workers’ compensation benefits.  The man, a former United States Post Office driver, had been collecting weekly benefits since 2001, was required to file annual forms certifying that he was not working.  In 2012 an undercover agent  caught him operating a long-haul car transportation business on a cash-only basis.

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