Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Governor’s overtime expansion rule heads to vote

Revised plan scaled back for thousands

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf is scaling back a proposal to extend overtime pay eligibilit­y to thousands of workers in Pennsylvan­ia, and his administra­tion on Thursday put it on a path to a vote within weeks over the protests of business groups.

Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion submitted its proposed regulation to the agenda for a state rule-making board’s Nov. 21 meeting. The fivemember Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission has a 3-2 majority of Democratic appointees.

Mr. Wolf, a Democrat, first unveiled the proposal last year, saying it would extend overtime eligibilit­y to up to 460,000 workers in four years.

The administra­tion said the revised rule unveiled Thursday would expand overtime pay eligibilit­y to 82,000 workers who earn above a new federal threshold that’s rising to almost $36,000 on Jan. 1. Pennsylvan­ia’s total nonfarm payrolls are just above 6 million.

It would phase in the increase over three years and require in 2022 that salaried workers earning up to $45,500 a year get time-and-ahalf pay for any time they work over 40 hours in a week, a slightly lower figure than Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion initially sought.

Pennsylvan­ia’s current threshold is set at the federal baseline of $23,660, although the administra­tion said the rising federal threshold will make 61,000 workers in the state newly eligible for overtime pay.

The current threshold took effect in 2004.

Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion said as many as 251,000 other workers may have a job whose duties qualify for overtime pay, but they aren’t getting the benefit because they don’t realize that they qualify for it.

Mr. Wolf has pursued the new

regulation after spending five years fruitlessl­y asking the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to increase Pennsylvan­ia’s minimum wage, which is set at the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. Most states have increased their minimum wage, including every neighborin­g state.

Mr. Wolf does not need legislativ­e approval for the regulatory change.

Gordon Denlinger, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia chapter of the National Federation of Independen­t Business, said business owners will have a compliance nightmare on their hands and will be unable to afford to promote younger workers into management roles.

One positive adjustment, he said, is that the Wolf administra­tion had updated job classifica­tions to more closely align with the federal rule.

In a statement, Gene Barr, the president of the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry, said Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion had largely ignored concerns about its first overtime pay proposal, released in 2018, and he urged the commission to reject it.

The latest proposal is minimally different from the first one, which had received pushback from businesses, nonprofits and colleges, who worried about unsustaina­ble cost increases, Mr. Barr said.

To afford the higher overtime threshold, Mr. Barr suggested that employers would shift employees from guaranteed salaries to hourly clock-in, clock-out positions.

Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion said employers could adjust by paying overtime to eligible employees, limiting them to 40 hours a week, raising their salaries to above the threshold or reducing their base pay or benefits.

It does not apply to public employees, including those at state-affiliated entities, counties, municipali­ties and public school systems.

A handful of other states with higher minimum wages require overtime pay for salaried workers above the federal baseline, although Mr. Wolf’s proposal would appear to put Pennsylvan­ia on par with the states with the highest thresholds, including California, New York and Alaska.

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