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Four-day work week
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Four-day work week
Discuss workforce management, performance management, retention, communication, motivation, contributing to business results and other topics.
I know this has been batted around before but I’m not having much luck locating a thread on the subject. We are considering a four-day work week with a prorated reduction in compensation for exe
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Forums » Topic Forums » General Forum » Four-day work week
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 7:59 AM EDT
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 9:33 AM EDT
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 9:55 AM EDT
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 10:17 AM EDT
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 10:18 AM EDT
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Posts: 2146
First: 2/15/2006 Last: 9/14/2011 |
You need to make sure that they are still making the full minimum amount per week after the cut. That amount can NOT be prorated...so federally it would still be $455 per week. Your state may differ in minimums.
I would be careful how you communicate this, because what happens now if an exempt as to work more than 40 hours per week? What will happen if the employee has to come in on the 5th day/day off? And here is one really good exerpt from an article on it: "...Recently the DOL opined that, in general, reducing exempt employees' work schedules with a corresponding reduction in salary because of lack of work violated the salary basis test. According to the Department, "salary deductions due to a reduction of hours worked for short-term business needs do not comply with [the salary basis test for exempt status] because they result from 'the operating requirements of the business.'" Indeed, the DOL opined that any deductions from salary due to day-to-day or week-to-week fluctuations of the business' operating requirements "are precisely the circumstances the salary basis requirement is intended to preclude." There is one ray of hope, however. The DOL further clarified that an employer may make a "fixed" and "permanent" decision to reduce the hours and corresponding pay for exempt employees.2 For instance, an employer could reduce the work schedule for the year from 52 five day workweeks to 47 five day workweeks and 5 four-day workweeks, and also reduce the pay of exempt employees as a result of the shortened workweeks. The linchpin of the distinction between this permitted approach and the impermissible hours reduction is the permanence of the acceptable schedule reduction as contrasted to a temporary reduction in the normal scheduled work week to address a short-term work slowdown or temporary economic conditions. Unfortunately, what constitutes a "permanent" change in work schedules has not been clearly defined..." http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=78158 |
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Four-day work week
posted at 6/22/2009 11:14 AM EDT
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Four-day work week
posted at 7/7/2009 7:55 AM EDT
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