The Washington Post.
The Obama administration's new overtime rule was finalized Tuesday night, and it will go into effect in the nation's workplaces on Dec. 1 of this year. I'll get to the details in a moment, but this update of a vital labor standard is a great advance for working people. I'd go as far as to say that this may be the administration's most significant action on behalf of middle-class paychecks.
Here are the basics of the final rule:
• The new salary threshold is $47,476, or $913 per week, just about double the current weekly threshold of $455.
To prevent abuse of the overtime law, which maintains that all hourly workers must be paid "time-and-a-half" (1.5 times their base hourly wage) for weekly hours worked beyond 40, employers can't simply make someone exempt by paying them a salary. Salaried workers whose pay is below the OT threshold must also get OT pay. The new threshold represents the 40th percentile pay of full-time, salaried workers in the southern region of the United States. I know: why 40th, why southern, etc.?
A number of us who have been agitating for this change argued that the last time the threshold was consistent with the intent of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) was back in 1975, when it was a bit more than twice the current threshold (obviously, it wasn't indexed to inflation or wage growth). The new threshold gets close to the 1975 level, adjusted for inflation, which corresponds to about the 40th percentile today.
But during the comment period, when the Department of Labor did its due diligence and listened to stakeholders on all sides of the change, it was suggested that the threshold should reflect regional wage and price differences. Instead of having a bunch of different thresholds, it decided on the 40th percentile of the lowest-wage region, i.e., the south. This took the threshold down from around $50,000 when the president first introduced the change to about $47,500.
• The new rule will directly affect 4.2 million workers. According to the Department of Labor, that's the number of salaried workers newly eligible for overtime pay. That is, their salary stands between the current and the new threshold, between $455 and $913. Of course, not everyone in that range will end up working overtime - though about 20 percent regularly do so - but if they do, they'll now be eligible for the OT premium.