The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Businesses facing new overtime rules

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NEW YORK — The new year brings new overtime rules for employers including small businesses and in turn, a pay raise for an estimated 1.3 million workers.

The Labor Department rules that go into effect Jan. 1 raise to $684 per week, or $35,568 a year, the threshold at which employees are exempt from being paid overtime. That’s a 50.3 percent increase from the previous threshold of $455 per week or $23,660 annually.

The jobs most likely to be affected by the increase are shift supervisor­s or assistant managers at restaurant­s, retailers and manufactur­ing companies. Workers at companies of all sizes will be affected, but the rules are likely to have a greater impact on small companies that don’t have the revenue stream that larger businesses do to use as a cushion against the higher labor costs.

Employers have had plenty of advance notice that a change in overtime rules was forthcomin­g. The Obama administra­tion proposed a much larger increase in the exemption threshold, nearly doubling it to $47,476. That proposal would have affected an estimated 4.2 million people, but the regulation­s scheduled to take effect in 2016 were put on hold by a federal lawsuit. The Trump administra­tion revised the proposed rules, issuing its first version last March.

The rules taking effect next week also allow employers to apply contractua­l bonuses and commission payments to as much as 10 percent of the exempt threshold, effectivel­y lowering the amount of regular pay needed to reach the milestone.

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