Recently, there have been a number of reports indicating that federal wage-hour lawsuits under the Fair Labor Standards Act increased by 10% in 2012, after smaller increases in the preceding years.
What about California, though?
While I am not aware of anyone who has compiled the figures to determine whether the number of California wage-hour cases has risen or fallen in the past year or so, from where I sit it certainly seems like there has been some decline in the number of wage-hour cases filed in California. And, if not, we can probably expect that in the years to come.
There has been a lack of clarity in California wage and hour law on how compensation must be structured to meet the “salary basis test,” particularly where an exempt employee is paid based on hours worked. However, in Negri v. Koning & Associates, the California Court of Appeal addressed this very issue and concluded that a compensation scheme based solely upon the number of hours worked, with no guaranteed minimum, is not considered a “salary” for the purpose of state overtime laws.
Under California law, an employee exempt from overtime laws must ...
Michael Kun, co-founder of this blog and Member of Epstein Becker Green, was recently quoted in Inside Counsel about the impact of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Wal-Mart v. Dukes decision upon wage-hour class actions.
The article, "Citing Dukes, Court Overturns Class Certification in Wage and Hour Dispute," focuses on the Ninth Circuit’s recent Wang v. Chinese Daily News decision, about which Michael has previously written in this blog.
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