USA TODAY US Edition

Overtime changes?

- Roger Yu @ByRogerYu USA TODAY

New bill allows employers to give time off instead of cash,

“Simply put, H.R. 1180 is a scam. It pretends to offer a benefit to employees, but in reality it’s a benefit to employers.” Ross Eisenbrey, VP of the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank

Cash or time off ? If Republican­s have their way, it’s a choice more companies will be able to offer their hourly-wage employees working overtime.

Voting along party lines, the House of Representa­tives passed a bill late Tuesday that would allow private-sector employers to compensate their overtime-working employees with paid time off instead of paying them time-anda-half as currently required.

The bill, H.R. 1180, would tweak the Fair Labor Standards Act, which mandates employers that require hourly-paid employees to work more than 40 hours a week to pay time-and-a-half, or 1.5 times their usual hourly rate. The bill also prohibits employers from coercing or intimidati­ng employees to choose time off instead of overtime pay.

House Republican­s passed the bill, sponsored by Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala., with no Democrats voting in favor. The bill will now go to the Senate, where it will require 60 votes to avoid a filibuster by Democrats.

Businesses, including many retailers, hospitals, factory operators, general contractor­s, franchise owners and small businesses, have lobbied for the measure for years, asserting that it would give them more flexibilit­y and some employees would actually prefer to have time off to attend to personal matters.

Worker advocates criticized the bill and say it’s a move by businesses to avoid paying overtime pay.

“This is a lousy bargain for the employees,” wrote Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank, in a blog.

Eisenbrey says the bill empowers employers to dictate when employees can take time off.

“There’s no guarantee that (employees) will get to take the leave when they need it,” he wrote. “If the employer thinks the requested time off would be unduly disruptive to its operations, it can refuse the request.

“Simply put, H.R. 1180 is a scam. It pretends to offer a bene- fit to employees, but in reality it’s a benefit to employers who get to schedule overtime work but delay paying for it for up to 13 months.”

Getting time off under the bill would also amount to the employee making a zero-interest loan of overtime pay to the employer, Eisenbrey said.

“Today, @HouseGOP are voting to make it legal for employers to cheat workers out of overtime. It’s a disgrace,” tweeted Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.

“The administra­tion supports H.R. 1180,” the White House said in a statement. The bill “would help American workers balance the competing demands of family and work.”

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 ?? AP ?? Barn worker Jose Cesada rakes down a barn path on the backside of Churchill Downs in Louisville. No Democrats voted in favor of the overtime bill, which now goes to the Senate.
AP Barn worker Jose Cesada rakes down a barn path on the backside of Churchill Downs in Louisville. No Democrats voted in favor of the overtime bill, which now goes to the Senate.

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