|
Small
Business Handbook
LAWS, REGULATIONS AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE SERVICES
Read This First
This Handbook on the basic regulations and related services
administered by the Department of Labor (DOL) is designed primarily for small
businesses in general industry. It begins with a general overview of DOL
requirements. This is followed by ten sections containing information on the
specific laws and regulations. Read the overview first to find out which
requirements apply to your business. For each requirement the overview refers to
specific sections or to a DOL office. Employers in certain industries (such as
agriculture and mining) or employers working on government contracts should
contact the referenced DOL offices for further information and assistance.
Each section discusses: covered employers; basic provisions
and requirements; how to obtain information and assistance from DOL; penalties
for non-compliance; and relation to state, local and other federal laws. The
section subtitles identify the applicable laws and the associated regulations,
which can be found in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). Many sections refer
to an appendix which provides additional addresses and phone numbers for
obtaining DOL assistance.
You should be aware that other federal agencies besides DOL
enforce laws and regulations that affect employers. For example, statutes
designed to ensure non-discrimination in employment are generally enforced by
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Also, the Taft-Hartley Act
regulating employer conduct with regard to employees in a wide range of areas is
administered by the National Labor Relations Board. Please consult these
agencies for further information on their requirements.
The information contained in this publication is not to be
considered a substitute for any provisions of the laws enforced by the
Department of Labor or for any regulations issued by the Department.
CONTENTS
Overview page 1
Section 1. Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay page 11
Section 2. Child Labor (Nonagriculture) page 17
Section 3. Employment Eligibility of Alien Workers page 20
Section 4. Occupational Safety and Health page 22
Section 5. Employee Benefit Plans page 36
Section 6. Whistleblower Protection page 42
Section 7. Veterans page 44
Section 8. Plant Closings and Mass Layoffs page 46
Section 9. Lie Detector Tests page 48
Section 10. Wage Garnishment page 50
Appendix page 53
OVERVIEW: Major Statutes and Regulations Administered by the
Department of Labor
I. Requirements Applicable to Most Employers
Wages and Hours
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) prescribes minimum wage
and overtime pay (and record-keeping) standards affecting most private and
public employment, including homework. This is administered by the Wage and Hour
Division of DOL's Employment Standards Administration (ESA).
1. The Minimum Wage and Overtime provisions of the FLSA
require the following from employers ofcovered employees who are not otherwise
exempt:
Pay covered employees a minimum wage of not less than $4.25
an hour effective April 1, 1991. (Employers may pay employees on a piece-rate
basis and under some circumstances consider the tips of employees as part of
their wages.)
Until March 31, 1993, employers may pay a training wage,
under certain conditions, of at least 85 percent of the minimum wage (but not
less than $3.35 an hour) for up to 90 days to employees under age 20.
While not placing a limit on the total hours which may be
worked, the Act requires that covered employees, unless otherwise exempt, be
paid not less than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay for all
hours worked in excess of 40 in a workweek.
2. Homework requirements of the FLSA generally prohibit the
performance of certain types of work in an employee's home unless the employer
has obtained prior certification from the Department of Labor.
See Section 1, page 11, for more detail on wages and hours.
Who May Work, and When (administered by the Wage and Hour
Division)
1. Child Labor provisions of the FLSA (Non-agriculture)
include restrictions on the hours of work and occupations for youths under age
16, and these provisions set forth 17 hazardous occupations orders for jobs
declared by the Secretary of Labor to be too dangerous for minors under age 18
to perform.
See Section 2, page 17, for more detail.
2. Immigrant Labor is regulated by the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA). Under the INA, employers may legally hire workers only if
they are citizens of the U.S. or aliens authorized to work in the United States.
The INA requires that employers verify the employment eligibility of all
individuals hired after November 6, 1986.
See Section 3, page 20, for more detail.
The Immigration Nursing Relief Act of 1989 (INRA) was enacted
to provide relief for the shortage of registered nurses by legalizing current
nonimmigrant registered nurses and ensuring employer efforts to attract and
develop more U. S. employees to the nursing profession. Contact your local ESA
Wage and Hour Division office for more details (see page 54).
Workplace Safety and Health
The Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act), which is
administered by DOL's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
regulates safety and health conditions in most private industries (except those
regulated under other federal statutes, e.g., transportation). Many private
employers are regulated through states operating under OSHA-approved plans.
It is the responsibility of employers to become familiar with
standards applicable to their establishments, to eliminate hazardous conditions
to the extent possible, and to comply with the standards. Compliance may include
assuring that employees have and use personal protective equipment when required
for safety or health. Employees must comply with all rules and regulations that
are applicable to their own actions and conduct.
Covered employers are required to maintain workplaces that
are safe and healthful, including meeting many regulatory requirements. OSHA
promulgates safety and health standards, and makes distinctions by type of
industry.
Safety standards include regulations covering hazards such as
falls, explosions, electricity, fires, and cave-ins, as well as machine and
vehicle operation and maintenance, etc. Health standards regulate exposures to a
variety of health hazards through engineering controls, the use of personal
protective equipment (e.g., respirators, ear protection etc.), and work
practices.
Where OSHA has not promulgated a specific standard, employers
are responsible for complying with the OSH Act's "general duty" clause [Section
5(a)(1)], which states that each employer "shall furnish . . . a place of
employment which is free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely
to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees."
When OSHA develops effective safety and health regulations,
safety and health regulations originally issued under the following laws
administered by the Department of Labor are superseded: the Walsh-Healey Act,
the Service Contract Act, the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act, the
Arts and Humanities Act, and the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act.
See Section 4, page 22, for more detail.
Pensions and Welfare Benefits
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) regulates
employers who have pension or welfare benefit plans. This statute preempts many
state laws in this area and is administered by DOL's Pension and Welfare
Benefits Administration (PWBA). The statute also provides an insurance mechanism
to protect retirement benefits with employers required to pay annual pension
benefit insurance premiums to the Pension Benefits Guarantee Corporation (PBGC),
which is associated with the Department.
1. Pension Plans must meet a wide range of fiduciary and
reporting and disclosure requirements, with regulations defining such concepts
as the value of plan assets, what is adequate consideration for the sale of
assets, the effects of participants having control over the assets in their
plans, etc.
2. Welfare Benefit Plans also must meet a wide range of
fiduciary, reporting, and disclosure requirements. In addition, PWBA administers
the disclosure and notification requirements for the continuation of health care
provisions that were enacted as part of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA). These provisions cover group health plans of
employers with 20 or more employees on a typical business day in the previous
calendar year. COBRA gives participants and beneficiaries an election to
maintain, at their own expense, coverage under the employer's health plan.
See Section 5, page 36, for more detail.
3. Pension Insurance information can be obtained from the
Pension Benefits Guarantee Corporation by writing PBGC, Coverage and Inquiries
Branch (25440), 2020 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006-1860, or by calling
(202) 778-8800.
Miscellaneous Requirements for Most Employers
1. The Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (also
known as the Landrum-Griffin Act, LMRDA) deals with the relationship between a
union and its members. It provides for safeguarding of union funds, reporting
and disclosure of financial transactions, and administrative practices of union
officials, labor consultants, etc. This is administered by DOL's Office of
Labor-Management Standards (OLMS). Call your local OLMS office for more detail
(see page 65).
2. Employee Protection provisions are built into most labor
and public safety statutes, e.g., the FLSA, the OSH Act, ERISA, many
environmental protection statutes, etc. These protect employees who exercise
their rights under these Acts to complain about employers, ask for information,
etc. (remedies can include back wages and reinstatement.) They are normally
enforced by the DOL agency most concerned, e.g., OSHA enforces those arising
under the OSH Act. For more information on employee protection under a statute
administered by DOL, see the relevant section. For information on employee
protection in the environmental context, see Section 6, page 42, for more
detail.
3. Veteran's Reemployment Rights ensures that those who serve
in the armed forces have a right to reemployment with the employer they were
with when they went in service, including protection for those called up from
the reserves or National Guard. These are administered by DOL's Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Veterans' Employment and Training. See Section 7, page
44, for more detail.
4. Plant Closings and Layoffs by employers may be subject to
the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) which provides for
early warning to employees of the proposed layoffs or plant closings. Questions
on WARN may be addressed to DOL's Employment and Training Administration (ETA).
See Section 8, page 46, for more detail.
5. The Employee Polygraph Protection Act (EPPA) prohibits
most use of lie detectors by employers on their employees. This is administered
by the Wage and Hour Division of ESA.
See Section 9, page 48, for more detail.
6. Garnishment of Wages by employers is subject to regulation
under the Consumer Credit Protection Act. This is administered by the Wage and
Hour Division of ESA.
See Section 10, page 50, for more detail.
II. Requirements Applicable to Employers Because of the
Receipt of Government Contracts, Grants, or Financial Assistance
1. Wage, Hour, and Fringe Benefit Standards are determined
for these contracts under: the Davis-Bacon and related Acts (for construction);
the Contract Work, Hours, and Safety Standards Act; the McNamara-O'Hara Service
Contract Act (for services); and the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act (for
manufacturing). The Wage and Hour Division of ESA both makes the determination
of wages and benefits and enforces them. Contact your local ESA Wage and Hour
Division Office for more detail (see page 54).
2. Safety and Health Standards are also issued under these
Acts and are specifically applicable to covered contracts. Contact your local
ESA Wage and Hour Division Office for more detail (see page 54).
3. Non-discrimination and Affirmative Action Requirements are
set under Executive Order 11246, Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act, and the
Vietnam Veteran's Readjustment Assistance Act (38 U.S.C. 4212). These programs
prohibit discrimination and require affirmative action with regard to race, sex,
ethnicity, religion, disability and veterans' status. They are administered by
ESA's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP). OFCCP works
closely with EEOC to coordinate these efforts. Contact your local ESA Office of
Federal Contract Compliance Programs for more detail (see page 57).
III. Industry-Specific Requirements in Addition to the Above
Agriculture
Several safety and health standards issued and enforced by
OSHA (e.g., field sanitation) and the Environmental Protection Agency (e.g.,
pesticides) apply to this industry. In addition, several agriculture- specific
programs are administered by ETA and ESA's Wage and Hour Division. For more
information on these programs, contact your local ESA office (see page 54).
1. The Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection
Act (MSPA) requires that covered farm labor contractors, agricultural employers
and agricultural associations comply with worker protection applicable to
migrant and seasonal agricultural workers whom they recruit, solicit, hire,
employ, furnish or transport or, in the case of migrant agricultural workers, to
whom they provide housing.
2. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) requires that
employers wishing to use nonimmigrant workers for temporary agricultural
employment apply with the Employment and Training Administration for a labor
certificate showing that there are not sufficient workers in the U.S. able,
willing, qualified and available to do the work and that employment of such
nonimmigrant workers will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions
of workers in the U.S.
3. INA as Amended by the Immigration Reform and Control Act
requires all employers of special and replenishment agricultural workers (SAWs
and RAWs) to provide certain information on the use of such workers to the
federal government.
4. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) contains special child
labor regulations applicable to agricultural employment. The regulations
administered and enforced by the DOL agencies apply only to those establishments
with employees (e.g., they do not apply to family-run and family-operated farms
that do not hire outside workers).
Additionally, in some cases there are minimum employment
standards which must be met before an establishment is covered by a regulation
(e.g., OSHA's field sanitation standard is not enforced at establishments that
employ fewer than 11 workers in the field).
Mining Safety and Health
The goal of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 is
to improve working conditions in the nation's mines. Its provisions cover all
miners and other persons employed to work on mine property, and it is
administered by the Labor Department's Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA).
This law strengthened an earlier coal mining law and brought metal and nonmetal
(non-coal) miners under the same general protections as those afforded coal
miners.
Under the Act, the operators of mines, with the assistance of
their employees, have the primary responsibility for ensuring the health and
safety of the miners. MSHA is responsible for fully inspecting every underground
mine at least four times a year and every surface mine at least twice a year to
ensure that these responsibilities are met.
This law also established mandatory miners' training
requirements and strengthened health protection measures and gassy mine safety
programs. It also included tougher civil dollar penalties for safety or health
violations by mine operators. The Act also provided for closure of mines in
cases of imminent danger to workers or failure to correct violations within the
time allowed, and it called for greater involvement of miners and their
representatives in processes affecting workers' health than previously had been
possible.
Each mine must be legally registered with MSHA. Many mine
operators are required to submit plans to MSHA for approval before beginning
operations. Such plans must be followed during mining. Required plans cover
operational aspects such as ventilation, roof control, and miner training. Mine
operators are required to report each individual mine accident or injury to
MSHA.
MSHA's Coal Mine Safety and Health Division enforces law and
regulations at more than 4,600 underground and surface coal mines. MSHA's Metal
and Nonmetal Mine Safety and Health Division enforces federal requirements,
conducts training, and assists the mining industry in reducing deaths, serious
injuries and illnesses at more than 11,000 non-coal mines (including open pit
mines, stone quarries, and sand and gravel operations).
Health and safety regulations cover numerous hazards,
including those associated with the following:
exposure to respirable dust, airborne contaminants and noise
design, operation and maintenance requirements for mechanical equipment,
including mobile equipment roof falls, and rib and face rolls flammable,
explosive and noxious gases, dust and smoke electrical circuits and equipment
fires storage, transportation, and use of explosives hoisting access and egress
Contact your local MSHA office for more detail (see page 74).
Construction
Several DOL agencies are involved in administering programs
solely related to the construction industry.
1. Safety and Health:
OSHA has separate occupational safety and health standards
which apply only to the construction industry. See Section 4, page 22, for more
detail.
2. Wage and Fringe Benefits: The Davis-Bacon Act and related
Acts require most contractors and subcontractors on federally assisted contracts
in excess of $2,000 to pay the prevailing wage rates and fringe benefits as
determined by the Secretary of Labor. Contact your local ESA Wage and Hour
Division Office for more detail (see page 54).
3. Non-discrimination:
OFCCP has special regulations on non-discrimination and
affirmative action which apply only to the construction industry.
Contact your local ESA/OFCCP office for more detail (see page
57).
4. Anti-Kickback:
The "Anti-Kickback" section of the Copeland Act applies to
all contractors and subcontractors performing on any federally funded or
assisted contract for the construction, prosecution, completion or repair of any
public building or public work -- except contracts for which the only federal
assistance is a loan guarantee. This provision precludes a contractor or
subcontractor from inducing an employee -- in any manner -- to give up any part
of his/her compensation to which he/she is entitled under his/her contract of
employment.
Contact your local ESA Wage and Hour Division office for more
detail (see page 54).
Transportation
Many laws with labor provisions in them that affect the
transportation industry are administered by agencies outside of the Department.
For example, the Railway Labor Act is administered primarily by the Department
of Transportation and the Railway Retirement Board. Special DOL programs for
this industry are:
1. Safety and Health:
Special longshoring and maritime industry standards issued
and enforced by OSHA.
See Section 4, page 22, for more detail.
2. Longshoring and Harbor Work:
Workers' compensation coverage provided under the Longshore
and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, which is administered by ESA. Employers
must meet the coverage, funding, and other requirements needed to provide these
benefits.
Contact your local ESA/OWCP office for more detail (see page
77).
1. MINIMUM WAGE AND OVERTIME PAY
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as Amended (Title 29, U.S.
Code, Sections 201 et seq.; 29 CFR 510-800).
Who is Covered
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) establishes minimum wage,
overtime pay, record-keeping and child labor standards that affect more than 80
million full- and part-time workers in the private sector and in federal, state
and local governments.
The Act applies to enterprises that have employees who are
engaged in interstate commerce, producing goods for interstate commerce, or
handling, selling or working on goods or materials that have been moved in or
produced for interstate commerce. For most firms, an annual dollar volume of
business test of not less than $500,000 applies. The following are covered by
the Act regardless of their dollar volume of business: hospitals, institutions
primarily engaged in the care of the sick, aged, mentally ill or disabled who
reside on the premises; schools for children who are mentally or physically
disabled or gifted; preschools, elementary and secondary schools and
institutions of higher education; and federal, state and local government
agencies.
Employees of firms that do not meet the $500,000 annual
dollar volume test may be individually covered in any workweek in which they are
individually engaged in interstate commerce, the production of goods for
interstate commerce, or an activity which is closely related and directly
essential to the production of such goods. Domestic service workers, such as day
workers, housekeepers, chauffeurs, cooks or full-time babysitters, are also
covered if they receive at least $50 in cash wages in a calendar quarter from
their employers or work a total of more than 8 hours a week for one or more
employers.
An enterprise that was covered by the Act on March 31, 1990,
and that ceased to be covered because of the increase in the annual dollar
volume test to $500,000, as required under the 1989 amendments to the Act, must
continue to pay its employees not less than $3.35 an hour (the statutory minimum
wage prior to 4/1/90) and continues to be subject to the overtime pay, child
labor and record-keeping requirements of the Act.
Some employees are excluded from the Act's minimum wage
and/or overtime pay provisions under specific exemptions provided in the law.
Because these exemptions are generally narrowly defined, employers should
carefully check the exact terms and conditions for each by contacting the Wage
and Hour Division of the Employment Standards Administration (ESA) at the
offices referenced below.
The following are examples of employees exempt from both the
minimum wage and overtime pay requirements:
Executive, administrative and professional employees
(including teachers and academic administrative personnel in elementary and
secondary schools and also including certain skilled computer professionals as
provided in P.L. 101-583, November 15, 1990) and outside sales persons
Employees of seasonal amusement or recreational
establishments
Employees of certain small newspapers and switchboard
operators of small telephone companies
Seamen employed on foreign vessels
Employees engaged in fishing operations
Farm workers employed on small farms (i.e., those that used
no more than 500 "man-days" of farm labor in any calendar quarter of the
preceding calendar year)
Casual babysitters and persons employed as companions to the
elderly or infirm
The following are examples of employees exempt from the Act's
overtime pay requirements only:
Certain commissioned employees of retail or service
establishments Auto, truck, trailer, farm implement, boat or aircraft
salesworkers, or parts-clerks and mechanics servicing autos, trucks or farm
implements, and who are employed by non-manufacturing establishments primarily
engaged in selling these items to ultimate purchasers
Railroad and air carrier employees, taxi drivers, certain
employees of motor carriers, seamen on American vessels and local delivery
employees paid on approved trip rate plans
Announcers, news editors and chief engineers of certain
non-metropolitan broadcasting stations
Domestic service workers who reside in their employer's
residence
Employees of motion picture theaters
Farmworkers
Certain employees may be partially exempted from the Act's
overtime pay requirements. These include:
Employees engaged in certain operations on agricultural
commodities and employees of certain bulk petroleum distributors Employees of
hospitals and residential care establishments which have agreements with the
employees to work a 14-day work period in lieu of a 7-day workweek if the
employees are paid overtime premium pay within the requirements of the Act for
all hours worked over 8 in a day or 80 in the 14-day work period, whichever is
the greater number of overtime hours
Employees who lack a high school diploma or who have not
completed the eighth grade may be required by their employer to spend up to 10
hours in a workweek in remedial reading or training in other basic skills that
is not job-specific, as long as they are paid their normal wages for the hours
spent in training. Such employees need not be paid overtime premium pay for
their training hours.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
The Act requires employers of covered employees who are not
otherwise exempt to pay these employees a minimum wage of not less than $4.25 an
hour. The increases in the minimum wage mandated by the 1989 amendments to the
Act will be phased in on an industry-by-industry basis in Puerto Rico. All
Puerto Rican industries must reach the mainland minimum wage by April 1, 1996.
Employers may pay employees on a piece-rate basis, as long as they receive at
least the equivalent of the required minimum hourly wage rate. Employers of
tipped employees, i.e., employees who customarily and regularly receive more
than $30 a month in tips, may consider the tips of these employees as part of
their wages. This tip credit may not, however, exceed 50 percent of the required
minimum wage.
Employers may pay a training wage, under certain conditions,
of at least 85 percent of the minimum wage (but not less than $3.35 an hour) for
up to 90 days to employees under age 20, except for migrant or seasonal
agricultural workers and H-2A nonimmigrant agricultural workers performing work
of a temporary or seasonal nature. An employee who has been paid at the training
wage for 90 days can be employed for 90 additional days at the training wage by
a different employer if that employer provides on-the-job training in accordance
with rules of the Department of Labor. Employers may not displace employees (or
reduce their wages or benefits) in order to hire employees at the training wage.
These training wage provisions expire on March 31, 1993.
The Act also permits the employment of the following
individuals at wage rates below the statutory minimum wage under certificates
issued by the Department:
Student learners
Full-time students in retail or service establishments,
agriculture, or institutions of higher education
Individuals whose earning or productive capacity is impaired
by a physical or mental disability, including those related to age or injury,
for the work to be performed
While not placing a limit on the total hours which may be
worked, the Act requires that covered employees, unless otherwise exempt, be
paid not less than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay for all
hours worked in excess of 40 in a workweek. Employers are required to keep
records on wages, hours and other items as set out in the Department of Labor's
regulations. Most of this information is of the type generally maintained by
employers in ordinary business practice.
Performance of certain types of work in an employee's home is
prohibited under the Act unless the employer has obtained prior certification
from the Department of Labor. Restrictions apply in the manufacture of knitted
outerwear, gloves and mittens, buttons and buckles, handkerchiefs, embroideries
and jewelry (where safety and health hazards are not involved). Employers
wishing to employ homeworkers in these industries are required to, among other
things, provide written assurances to the Department that they will comply with
the Act's monetary and other requirements. The manufacture of women's apparel
(and jewelry under hazardous conditions) is generally prohibited, except under
special certificates that allow homework in these industries when the homeworker
is unable to adjust to factory work because of age or physical or mental
disability, or is caring for an invalid in the home.
Special provisions apply to state and local government
employment. It is a violation of the Act to fire or in any other manner
discriminate against an employee for filing a complaint or for participating in
a legal proceeding under the Act. The Act also prohibits the shipment of goods
in interstate commerce which were produced in violation of the minimum wage,
overtime pay, child labor, or special minimum wage provisions.
Assistance Available
More detailed information, including copies of explanatory
brochures and regulatory and interpretative materials, may be obtained by
contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53 in the appendix.
Penalties
Enforcement of the Act is carried out by Wage and Hour
Division compliance officers stationed throughout the country. A variety of
remedies are available to the Department to enforce compliance with the Act's
requirements. When compliance officers encounter violations, they recommend
changes in employment practices in order to bring the employer into compliance.
Willful violations may be prosecuted criminally and the violators fined up to
$10,000. A second conviction may result in imprisonment. Employers who willfully
and repeatedly violate the minimum wage or overtime pay requirements are subject
to civil money penalties of up to $1,000 per violation. Employers are subject to
a civil money penalty of up to $10,000 for each employee employed in violation
of the child labor provisions. When a civil money penalty is assessed, employers
have the right, within 15 days of receipt of the notice of such penalty, to file
an exception to the determination. When an exception is filed, it is referred to
an administrative law judge for a hearing and determination as to the
appropriateness of the penalty. If an exception is not filed, the penalty
becomes final.
The Secretary of Labor may also bring suit for back pay and
an equal amount in liquidated damages and obtain injunctions to restrain persons
from violating the Act. Employees may also bring suit, where the Department has
not done so, for back pay and liquidated damages, as well as attorney's fees and
court costs.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
State laws also apply to employment subject to this Act. When
both this Act and a state law apply, the law setting the higher standards must
be observed.
2. CHILD LABOR (Nonagriculture)
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as Amended (Title 29, U.S.
Code, Section 201 et seq.; 29 CFR 570-580).
Who is Covered
The child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act
(the Act) are designed to protect the educational opportunities of youths and
prohibit their employment in jobs and under conditions detrimental to their
health and well-being.
In nonagriculture, the child labor provisions apply to
enterprises that have employees who are engaged in interstate commerce,
producing goods for interstate commerce, or handling, selling or working on
goods or materials that have been moved in or produced for interstate commerce.
For most firms, an annual dollar volume of business test of not less than
$500,000 applies. The following are covered by the Act regardless of their
dollar volume of business: hospitals; institutions primarily engaged in the care
of the sick, aged, mentally ill or disabled who reside on the premises; schools
for children who are mentally or physically disabled or gifted; preschools,
elementary and secondary schools and institutions of higher education; and
federal, state and local government agencies. Employees of firms that do not
meet the $500,000 annual dollar volume test may be individually covered in any
workweek in which they are individually engaged in interstate commerce, the
production of goods for interstate commerce or an activity which is closely
related and directly essential to the production of such goods. Domestic service
workers, such as day workers, housekeepers, chauffeurs, cooks or full-time
babysitters, are also covered if they receive at least $50 in cash wages in a
calendar quarter from their employers or work a total of more than 8 hours a
week for one or more employers.
An enterprise that was covered by the Act on March 31, 1990,
and ceased to be covered because of the increase in the annual dollar volume
test to $500,000 as required under the 1989 amendments to the Act, remains
subject to the Act's child labor provisions. Sixteen is the minimum age for most
nonfarm work. However, youths may, at any age: deliver newspapers; perform in
radio, television, movies, or theatrical productions; work for their parents in
their solely owned nonfarm businesses (except in mining, manufacturing, or in
any other occupation declared hazardous by the Secretary of Labor); or gather
evergreens and make evergreen wreaths.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
The Act's child labor provisions include restrictions on the
hours of work and occupations for youths under age 16. These provisions set
forth 17 hazardous occupations orders for jobs declared by the Secretary of
Labor to be too dangerous for minors under age 18 to perform. The Act prohibits
the shipment of goods in interstate commerce which were produced in violation of
the child labor provisions. It is also a violation of the Act to fire or in any
other manner discriminate against an employee for filing a complaint or for
participating in a legal proceeding under the Act. The permissible jobs and
hours of work, by age, in nonfarm work are as follows:
Youths 18 years or older may perform any job for unlimited
hours Youths age 16 and 17 may perform any job not declared hazardous by the
Secretary of Labor, for unlimited hours Youths age 14 and 15 may work outside
school hours in various nonmanufacturing, nonmining, nonhazardous jobs under the
following conditions: no more than 3 hours on a school day, 18 hours in a school
week, 8 hours on a nonschool day, or 40 hours in a nonschool week. In addition,
they may not begin work before 7 a.m. nor work after 7 p.m., except from June 1
through Labor Day, when evening hours are extended until 9 p.m. Youths aged 14
and 15 who are enrolled in an approved Work Experience and Career Exploration
Program (WECEP) may be employed for up to 23 hours in school weeks and 3 hours
on school days (including during school hours). Detailed information on the
occupations determined to be hazardous by the Secretary is available by
contacting the Wage and Hour Division at the offices listed below.
Department of Labor regulations require employers to keep
records of the date of birth of employees under age 19, including daily starting
and quitting times, daily and weekly hours worked, and the employee's
occupation.
Employers may protect themselves from unintentional violation
of the child labor provisions by keeping on file an employment or age
certificate for each youth employed to show that the youth is the minimum age
for the job. Certificates issued under most state laws are acceptable for this
purpose.
Assistance Available
More detailed information, including copies of explanatory
brochures and regulatory and interpretative materials, may be obtained by
contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53 in the appendix.
Penalties
Employers are subject to a civil money penalty of up to
$10,000 for each employee employed in violation of the child labor provisions.
When a civil money penalty is assessed, employers have the right, within 15 days
of receipt of the notice of such penalty, to file an exception to the
determination. When an exception is filed, it is referred to an administrative
law judge for a hearing and determination as to the appropriateness of the
penalty. Either party may appeal the decision of the administrative law judge to
the Secretary of Labor. If an exception is not timely filed, the penalty becomes
final. The Act also provides, in the case of a conviction for a willful
violation, for a fine of up to $10,000; or, for a second offense committed after
the conviction of such person for a similar offense, for a fine of not more than
$10,000 and imprisonment for up to six months, or both. The Secretary of Labor
may also bring suit to obtain injunctions to restrain persons from violating the
Act.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws Many states
have child labor laws. When both this Act and a state law apply, the law setting
the higher standards must be observed.
3. EMPLOYMENT ELIGIBILITY OF ALIEN WORKERS
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) (8 U.S. Code, Section
1186).
Who is Covered
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) employment
eligibility verification and related nondiscrimination provisions apply to all
employers.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
Under the INA, employers may legally hire workers only if
they are citizens of the U.S. or aliens authorized to work in the United States.
For some aliens (students, nurses, "specialty occupations," fashion models)
employers must comply with attestation procedures through the Department of
Labor. The INA requires that employers verify the employment eligibility of all
individuals hired after November 6, 1986. To do so, employers must require
applicants to show proof of their employment eligibility, by requiring
completion of the I-9 form. Employers must keep I-9s on file for at least 3
years (or one year after employment ends, whichever is greater). The INA also
protects U.S. citizens, and aliens authorized to accept employment in the U.S.,
from discrimination in hiring or discharge on the basis of national origin and
citizenship status.
Assistance Available
More detailed information, including copies of explanatory
brochures and regulatory and interpretative materials, may be obtained by
contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53 in the appendix.
Penalties
Employers who fail to complete and/or retain the I-9 forms
are subject to civil fines of up to $1,000 per applicant. Enforcement of the INA
requirements on employment eligibility verification comes under the jurisdiction
of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). The Justice Department is
responsible for enforcing the anti-discrimination provisions. In conjunction
with their ongoing enforcement efforts, the Employment Standards
Administration's Wage and Hour Division and Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs conduct inspections of the I-9 forms. Their findings are
reported to the INS and to the Department of Justice where there is apparent
disparate treatment in the verification process.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws Not Applicable.
4. OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSH Act), 29
U.S.C. 651 et seq.; Title 29 Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 1900 to end.
Who is Covered
In general, coverage of the Act extends to all employers and
their employees in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and all
other territories under federal government jurisdiction. Coverage is provided
either directly by the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
or through an OSHA-approved state job safety and health program.
As defined by the Act, an employer is any "person engaged in
a business affecting commerce who has employees, but does not include the United
States or any state or political subdivision of a State." Therefore, the Act
applies to employers and employees in such varied fields as manufacturing,
construction, longshoring, agriculture, law and medicine, charity and disaster
relief, organized labor and private education. Such coverage includes religious
groups to the extent that they employ workers for secular purposes.
The following are not covered by the Act: Self-employed
persons
Farms at which only immediate members of the farmer's family
are employed
Working conditions regulated by other federal agencies under
other federal statutes. This category includes most employment in mining,
nuclear energy and nuclear weapons manufacture, and many segments of the
transportation industries.
When another federal agency is authorized to regulate safety
and health working conditions in a particular industry, if it does not do so in
specific areas, then OSHA requirements apply.
As OSHA develops effective safety and health regulations of
its own, safety and health regulations originally issued under the following
laws administered by the Department of Labor are superseded: the Walsh-Healey
Act, the Service Contract Act, the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act,
the Arts and Humanities Act, and the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation
Act.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
The Act assigns to OSHA two principal functions: setting
standards and conducting workplace inspections to assure employers are complying
with the standards and providing a safe and healthful workplace. OSHA standards
may require conditions, or the adoption or use of one or more practices, means,
methods or processes reasonably necessary and appropriate to protect workers on
the job. It is the responsibility of employers to become familiar with standards
applicable to their establishments, to eliminate hazardous conditions to the
extent possible, and to comply with the standards. Compliance may include
assuring that employees have and use personal protective equipment when required
for safety or health. Employees must comply with all rules and regulations that
are applicable to their own actions and conduct.
Where OSHA has not promulgated a specific standard, employers
are responsible for complying with the OSH Act's "general duty" clause. The
general duty clause of the Act [Section 5(a)(1)] states that each employer
"shall furnish . . . a place of employment which is free from recognized hazards
that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his
employees."
States with OSHA-approved job safety and health programs must
set standards that are at least as effective as the equivalent federal standard.
Many state-plan states adopt standards identical to the federal ones.
Federal OSHA Standards
These fall into four major categories: general industry (29
CFR 1910), construction (29 CFR 1926), maritime - shipyards, marine terminals,
longshoring - (29 CFR 1915-19), and agriculture (29 CFR 1928).
Each of these four categories of standards imposes
requirements that are, in some cases, identical for each category of employers;
in others, they are either absent or vary somewhat.
Among the standards that impose similar requirements on all
industry sectors are those for access to medical and exposure records, personal
protective equipment, and hazard communication. Access to Medical and Exposure
Records: This standard requires that employers grant employees access to any of
their medical records maintained by the employer and to any records the employer
maintains on the employees' exposure to toxic substances.
Personal Protective Equipment: This standard, included
separately in the standards for each industry segment (except agriculture)
requires that employers provide employees, at no cost to employees, with
personal protective equipment designed to protect them against certain hazards.
This can range from protective helmets in construction and cargo handling work
to prevent head injuries, to eye protection, hearing protection, hard-toed
shoes, special goggles (for welders, for example) and gauntlets for iron
workers.
Hazard Communication: This standard requires that
manufacturers and importers of hazardous materials conduct a hazard evaluation
of the products they manufacture or import. If the product is found to be
hazardous under the terms of the standard, containers of the material must be
appropriately labeled and the first shipment of the material to a new customer
must be accompanied by a material safety data sheet (MSDS). Receiving employers
must train their employees, using the MSDSs they receive, to recognize and avoid
the hazards the materials present.
In general, however, all employers should be aware that any
hazard not covered by an industry-specific standard may be covered by a general
industry standard or by the general duty clause. This coverage becomes important
in the enforcement aspects of OSHA's work.
Other types of requirements are imposed by regulation rather
than by a standard. OSHA regulations cover such items as record-keeping,
reporting and posting.
Record-keeping: Every employer covered by OSHA who has more
than 10 employees must maintain OSHA-specified records of job-related injuries
and illnesses. There are two such records, the OSHA Form 200 and the OSHA Form
101.
The OSHA Form 200 is an injury/illness log, with a separate
line entry for each recordable injury or illness (essentially those work-related
deaths, injuries and illnesses other than minor injuries that require only first
aid treatment and that do not involve medical treatment, loss of consciousness,
restriction of work or motion, or transfer to another job). A summary section of
the OSHA Form 200, which includes the total of the previous year's injury and
illness experience, must be posted in the workplace for the entire month of
February each year.
The OSHA Form 101 is an individual incident report that
provides added detail about each individual recordable injury or illness. A
suitable insurance or worker compensation form that provides the same details
may be substituted for the OSHA Form 101.
Unless an employer has been selected in a particular year to
be part of a national survey of workplace injuries and illnesses conducted by
the Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), employers with ten
or fewer employees or employers in traditionally low-hazard industries are
exempt from maintaining these records; all employers selected for the BLS survey
must maintain the records. Employers so selected will be notified before the end
of the year to begin keeping records during the coming year, and technical
assistance on completing these forms is available from the state offices which
select these employers for the survey.
Industries designated as traditionally low hazard include:
automobile dealers; apparel and accessory stores; furniture and home furnishing
stores; eating and drinking places; finance, insurance, and real estate
industries; and service industries, such as personal and business services,
legal, educational, social and cultural services and membership organizations.
Reporting: In addition to selected employers each year being
required to report their injury and illness experience, each employer,
regardless of number of employees or industry category, must report to the
nearest OSHA office within 48 hours any accident that results in one or more
fatalities or hospitalization of five or more employees. Such accidents are
often investigated by OSHA to determine whether violations of standards
contributed to the event.
Workplace Inspections
To enforce its standards, OSHA is authorized under the Act to
conduct workplace inspections. Every establishment covered by the Act is subject
to inspection by OSHA compliance safety and health officers (CSHOs), who are
chosen for their knowledge and experience in the occupational safety and health
field. CSHOs are thoroughly trained in OSHA standards and in the recognition of
safety and health hazards. Similarly, states with their own occupational safety
and health programs conduct inspections using qualified state CSHOs.
Employee Rights
Employees are granted several important rights by the Act.
Among them are the right to: complain to OSHA about safety and health conditions
in their workplace and have their identity kept confidential from the employer,
contest the time period OSHA allows for correcting standards violations, and
participate in OSHA workplace inspections.
Anti-Discrimination Provisions
Private sector employees who exercise their rights under OSHA
can be protected against employer reprisal. Employees must notify OSHA within 30
days of the time they learned of the alleged discriminatory action. This
notification is followed by an OSHA investigation. If OSHA agrees that
discrimination has occurred, the employer will be asked to restore any lost
benefits to the affected employee. If necessary, OSHA can take the employer to
court. In such cases, the worker pays no legal fees.
Assistance Available
Copies of Standards
The Federal Register is one of the best sources of
information on standards, since all OSHA standards are published there when
adopted, as are all amendments, corrections, insertions or deletions. The
Federal Register, published five days a week, is available in many public
libraries. Annual subscriptions are available from the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), Washington, DC 20402. For the
current price, contact GPO at (202) 783-3238.
Each year the Office of the Federal Register publishes all
current regulations and standards in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),
available at many public libraries and from GPO. OSHA's regulations and
standards are collected in several volumes in Title 29 CFR, Parts 1900-1999.
Since states with OSHA-approved job safety and health
programs adopt and enforce their own standards under state law, copies of these
standards can be obtained from the individual states. Addresses and phone
numbers are found beginning on page 60 in the appendix.
Training and Education OSHA's field offices (more than 70)
are full-service centers offering a variety of informational services such as
publications, technical advice, audio-visual aids on workplace hazards, and
lecturers for speaking engagements.
The OSHA Training Institute in Des Plaines, IL, provides
basic and advanced training and education in safety and health for federal and
state CSHOs; state consultants; other federal agency personnel; and private
sector employers, employees and their representatives. Institute courses cover
topics such as electrical hazards, machine guarding, ventilation and ergonomics.
The Institute facility includes classrooms, laboratories, a library and an
audio-visual unit. The laboratories contain various demonstrations and
equipment, such as power presses, woodworking and welding shops, a complete
industrial ventilation unit, and a noise demonstration laboratory. Sixty-three
courses are available for students from the private sector dealing with subjects
such as safety and health in the construction industry and methods of voluntary
compliance with OSHA standards.
OSHA also provides funds to nonprofit organizations to
conduct workplace training and education in subjects where OSHA believes there
is a current lack of workplace training. OSHA identifies areas of unmet needs
for safety and health education in the workplace annually and invites grant
applications to address these needs. The Training Institute is OSHA's point of
contact for learning about the many valuable training products and materials
developed under such grants.
Organizations awarded grants use funds to develop training
and educational programs, reach out to workers and employers for whom their
program is appropriate, and provide these programs to employers and employees.
Grants are awarded annually, with a one-year renewal
possible. Grant recipients are expected to contribute 20 percent of the total
grant cost.
While OSHA does not provide grant materials directly, it will
provide addresses and phone numbers of contact persons from whom the public can
order such materials for its use. Contact the OSHA Training Institute at (708)
297-4810.
Consultation Assistance
Consultation assistance is available to employers who want
help in establishing and maintaining a safe and healthful workplace. Largely
funded by OSHA, the service is provided at no cost to the employer.
No penalties are proposed or citations issued for hazards
identified by the consultant.
The service is provided to the employer with the assurance
that his or her name and firm and any information about the workplace will not
be routinely reported to OSHA inspection staff.
Besides helping employers identify and correct specific
hazards, consultation can include assistance in developing and implementing
effective workplace safety and health programs with emphasis on the prevention
of worker injuries and illnesses. Limited assistance such as training and
education services, is also provided away from the worksite.
Primarily targeted for smaller employers with more hazardous
operations, the consultation service is delivered by state government agencies
or universities employing professional safety consultants and health
consultants. When delivered at the worksite, consultation assistance includes an
opening conference with the employer to explain the ground rules for
consultation, a walk through the workplace to identify any specific hazards and
to examine those aspects of the employer's safety and health program which
relate to the scope of the visit, and a closing conference followed by a written
report to the employer of the consultant's findings and recommendations.
This process begins with the employer's request for
consultation and the commitment to correct any serious job safety and health
hazards identified by the consultant. Possible violations of OSHA standards will
not be reported to OSHA enforcement staff unless the employer fails or refuses
to eliminate or control worker exposure to any identified serious hazard or
imminent danger situation. In such unusual circumstances, OSHA may investigate
and begin enforcement action.
Employers who receive a comprehensive consultation visit,
correct all identified hazards, and demonstrate that an effective safety and
health program is in operation may be exempted from OSHA general schedule
enforcement inspections (not complaint or accident investigations) for a period
of one year. Comprehensive consultation assistance includes an appraisal of all
work practices; mechanical, physical, and environmental hazards in the
workplace; and, all aspects of the employer's present job safety and health
program.
Additional information concerning consultation assistance,
including a directory of OSHA-funded consultation projects, can be obtained by
requesting OSHA publication No. 3047, Consultation Services for the Employer.
Voluntary Protection Programs
The Voluntary Protection Programs (VPPs) represent one part
of OSHA's effort to extend worker protection beyond the minimum required by OSHA
standards. These programs, along with others such as expanded on-site
consultation services and full-service area offices, are cooperative approaches
which, when coupled with an effective enforcement program, expand worker
protection to help meet the goals of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970.
The VPPs are designed to:
Recognize outstanding achievement of those who have
successfully incorporated comprehensive safety and health programs into their
total management system
Motivate others to achieve excellent safety and health
results in the same outstanding way
Establish a relationship between employers, employees, and
OSHA that is based on cooperation rather than coercion OSHA reviews an
employer's VPP application and conducts an on-site review to verify that the
safety and health program described is in operation at the site. Evaluations are
conducted on a regular basis, annually for Merit and Demonstration programs, and
triennially for Star. All participants must send their injury information
annually to their OSHA regional office. Sites participating in the VPP are not
scheduled for programmed inspections; however, any employee complaints, serious
accidents or significant chemical releases that may occur are handled according
to routine enforcement procedures.
An employer may make application for any VPP at the nearest
OSHA regional office. Once OSHA is satisfied that, on paper, the employer
qualifies for the program, an onsite review will be scheduled. The review team
presents its findings in a written report for the company's review prior to
submission to the Assistant Secretary of Labor, who heads OSHA. If approved, the
employer receives a letter from the Assistant Secretary informing the site of
its participation in the VPP. A certificate of approval and flag are presented
at a ceremony held at or near the approved worksite. Star sites receiving
reapproval after each triennial evaluation receive plaques at similar
ceremonies.
The VPPs described are available in states under federal
jurisdiction. Some states with their own safety and health programs have similar
programs. Interested companies in these states should contact the appropriate
state agency for more information (see list beginning on page 59).
Information Sources
Information about state programs, VPP, consultation programs,
and inspections can be obtained from the nearest OSHA field office, or from one
of the 10 regional OSHA offices listed, beginning on page 63 in the appendix.
The listing indicates the states and territories under the jurisdiction of each
regional office. Area offices under regional office jurisdiction are listed in
local phone directories under U.S. Government listings for the U.S Department of
Labor.
Other Sources
A single free copy of an OSHA catalog, OSHA 2019, "OSHA
Publications and Audiovisual Programs," may be obtained by mailing a
self-addressed mailing label to the OSHA Publications Office, Room N3101, US
Department of Labor, Washington, DC 20210; telephone (202) 219-9667.
Descriptions of and ordering information for all OSHA publications and
audiovisual programs are contained in this catalog.
Questions about OSHA programs, the status of ongoing
standards-setting activities, and general inquiries about OSHA may be addressed
to the OSHA Office of Information & Consumer Affairs, Room N3637, U.S.
Department of Labor, Washington, DC 20210; telephone (202) 219-8151.
Those who are interested in following OSHA activities more
closely may be interested in subscribing to OSHA's official magazine, Job Safety
& Health Quarterly. Subscription orders may be placed with the Superintendent of
Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402; telephone (202)
783-3238. Orders by phone may be charged to VISA or MASTERCARD. Written orders
should be accompanied by a check or money order made payable to "Superintendent
of Documents" in the amount of $5.50 (international orders add 25%).
Penalties
These are the types of violations that may be cited and the
penalties that may be proposed:
Other-Than-Serious Violation: A violation that has a direct
relationship to job safety and health, but probably would not cause death or
serious physical harm. A proposed penalty of up to $7,000 for each violation is
discretionary. A penalty for an other-than-serious violation may be adjusted
downward by as much as 95 percent, depending on the employer's good faith
(demonstrated efforts to comply with the Act), history of previous violations,
and size of business. When the adjusted penalty amounts to less than $50, no
penalty is proposed.
Serious Violation: A violation where there is substantial
probability that death or serious physical harm could result and that the
employer knew, or should have known, of the hazard. A mandatory penalty of up to
$7,000 for each violation is proposed.
A penalty for a serious violation may be adjusted downward,
based on the employer's good faith, history of previous violations, the gravity
of the alleged violation, and size of business. Willful Violation: A violation
that the employer intentionally and knowingly commits. The employer either knows
that what he or she is doing constitutes a violation, or is aware that a
hazardous condition existed and has made no reasonable effort to eliminate it.
The Act provides that an employer who willfully violates the
Act may be assessed a civil penalty of not more than $70,000 but not less than
$5,000 for each violation. A proposed penalty for a willful violation may be
adjusted downward, depending on the size of the business and its history of
previous violations. Usually no credit is given for good faith.
If an employer is convicted of a willful violation of a
standard that has resulted in the death of an employee, the offense is
punishable by a court-imposed fine or by imprisonment for up to six months, or
both. A fine of up to $250,000 for an individual, or $500,000 for a corporation
[authorized under the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (1984 CCA), not
the OSH Act], may be imposed for a criminal conviction.
Repeated Violation: A violation of any standard, regulation,
rule or order where, upon reinspection, a substantially similar violation is
found. Repeated violations can bring a fine of up to $70,000 for each such
violation. To be the basis of a repeat citation, the original citation must be
final; a citation under contest may not serve as the basis for a subsequent
repeat citation.
Failure to Correct Prior Violation: Failure to correct a
prior violation may bring a civil penalty of up to $7,000 for each day the
violation continues beyond the prescribed abatement date. Additional violations
for which citations and proposed penalties may be issued are as follows:
Falsifying records, reports or applications upon conviction
can bring a fine of $10,000 or up to six months in jail, or both Violations of
posting requirements can bring a civil penalty of up to $7,000
Assaulting a compliance officer, or otherwise resisting,
opposing, intimidating, or interfering with a compliance officer in the
performance of his or her duties is a criminal offense, subject to a fine of not
more than $250,000 for an individual and $500,000 for a corporation (1984 CCA)
and imprisonment for not more than three years
Citation and penalty procedures may differ somewhat in states
with their own occupational safety and health programs.
Appeals Process
Appeals by Employees: If an inspection was initiated due to
an employee complaint, the employee or authorized employee representative may
request an informal review of any decision not to issue a citation.
Employees may not contest citations, amendments to citations,
penalties or lack of penalties. They may contest the time in the citation for
abatement of a hazardous condition. They also may contest an employer's Petition
for Modification of Abatement (PMA) which requests an extension of the abatement
period. Employees must contest the PMA within 10 working days of its posting or
within 10 working days after an authorized employee representative has received
a copy.
Within 15 working days of the employer's receipt of the
citation, the employee may submit a written objection to OSHA. The OSHA area
director forwards the objection to the Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission, which operates independently of OSHA. Employees may request an
informal conference with OSHA to discuss any issues raised by an inspection,
citation, notice of proposed penalty or employer's notice of intention to
contest.
Appeals by Employers: When issued a citation or notice of a
proposed penalty, an employer may request an informal meeting with OSHA's area
director to discuss the case. Employee representatives may be invited to attend
the meeting. The area director is authorized to enter into settlement agreements
that revise citations and penalties to avoid prolonged legal disputes.
Petition for Modification of Abatement (PMA): Upon receiving
a citation, the employer must correct the cited hazard by the prescribed date
unless he or she contests the citation or abatement date. If factors beyond the
employer's reasonable control prevent the completion of corrections by that
date, the employer who has made a good faith effort to comply may file a PMA for
an extended date.
The written petition should specify all steps taken to
achieve compliance, the additional time needed to achieve complete compliance,
the reasons this additional time is needed, and all temporary steps being taken
to safeguard employees against the cited hazard during the intervening period.
It should also indicate that a copy of the PMA was posted in a conspicuous place
at or near each place where a violation occurred, and that the employee
representative (if there is one) received a copy of the petition. Notice of
Contest: If the employer decides to contest either the citation, the time set
for abatement, or the proposed penalty, he or she has 15 working days from the
time the citation and proposed penalty are received in which to notify the OSHA
area director in writing. An orally expressed disagreement will not suffice.
This written notification is called a "Notice of Contest."
There is no specific format for the Notice of Contest;
however, it must clearly identify the employer's basis for contesting the
citation, notice of proposed penalty, abatement period, or notification of
failure to correct violations.
A copy of the Notice of Contest must be given to the
employees' authorized representative. If any affected employees are not
represented by a recognized bargaining agent, a copy of the notice must be
posted in a prominent location in the workplace, or else served personally upon
each unrepresented employee.
Appeal Review Procedure
If the written Notice of Contest has been filed within the
required 15 working days, the OSHA area director forwards the case to the
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC). The Commission is an
independent agency not associated with OSHA or the Department of Labor. The
Commission assigns the case to an administrative law judge.
The judge may disallow the contest if it is found to be
legally invalid, or a hearing may be scheduled for a public place near the
employer's workplace. The employer and the employees have the right to
participate in the hearing; the OSHRC does not require that they be represented
by attorneys.
Once the administrative law judge has ruled, any party to the
case may request a further review by OSHRC. Any of the three OSHRC commissioners
also may, at his or her own motion, bring a case before the Commission for
review. Commission rulings may be appealed to the appropriate U.S. Court of
Appeals.
Appeals In State-Plan States
States with their own occupational safety and health programs
have a state system for review and appeal of citations, penalties, and abatement
periods. The procedures are generally similar to Federal OSHA's, but cases are
heard by a state review board or equivalent authority.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
As discussed above in the section titled "Who is Covered,"
Federal OSHA has jurisdiction over workplace safety and health issues in all
states that do not operate their own OSHA-approved programs. In fact, any
occupational safety and health issues regulated by a state that does not have an
OSHA-approved program are preempted by OSHA jurisdiction.
The agency also covers all working conditions that are not
covered by safety and health regulations of some other federal agency under
other legislation. Industries where such regulations frequently apply include
most transportation industries (rail, air and highway safety are under the
Department of Transportation), nuclear industries (covered either by the
Department of Energy or the Nuclear Regulatory commission) and mining (covered
by the Department of Labor's Mine Safety and Health Administration, and
discussed elsewhere in this publication). OSHA also has the authority to monitor
the safety and health of federal employees.
5. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 USC §1001
et seq., 29 CFR §2509 et seq.
Who is Covered
The provisions of Title I of ERISA are intended to require
compliance from most private sector employee benefit plans. Employee benefit
plans are voluntarily established and maintained by an employer, an employee
organization, or jointly by one or more such employers and the employee
organization. Employee benefit plans which are pension plans are established and
maintained to provide retirement income or to defer income to termination of
covered employment or beyond. Employee benefit plans which are welfare plans are
established and maintained to provide, through insurance or otherwise, health
benefits, disability benefits, death benefits, prepaid legal services, vacation
benefits, day care centers, scholarship funds, apprenticeship and training
benefits, or other similar benefits.
In general, ERISA does not cover plans established or
maintained by governmental entities or churches for their employees, or plans
which are maintained solely to comply with applicable workers compensation,
unemployment or disability laws. ERISA also does not cover plans maintained
outside the United States primarily for the benefit of nonresident aliens or
unfunded excess benefit plans.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
ERISA sets uniform minimum standards to assure the equitable
character of employee benefit plans and their financial soundness to provide
workers with benefits promised by their employers. In addition, employers have
an obligation to provide promised benefits
and satisfy ERISA's requirements on managing and
administering private pension and welfare plans. The Department's Pension and
Welfare Benefits Administration (PWBA), together with the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS), carries out its statutory and regulatory authority to assure that
workers receive the promised benefits. The Department has principal jurisdiction
over Title I of ERISA, which requires persons and entities who manage and
control plan funds to: Carry out their duties in a prudent manner and refrain
from conflict-of-interest transactions expressly prohibited by law, for the
exclusive benefit of participants and beneficiaries Comply with limitations on
certain plans' investments in employer securities and properties
Fund benefits in accordance with the law and plan rules
Report and disclose information on the operations and financial condition of
plans to the government and participants Provide documents required in the
conduct of investigations to assure compliance with the law
The IRS administers Title II of ERISA, which includes vesting
participation, discrimination and funding standards.
Reporting and Disclosure
Part 1 of Title I requires the administrator of an employee
benefit plan to furnish participants and beneficiaries with a summary plan
description (SPD), describing in understandable terms, their rights, benefits
and responsibilities under the plan. Plan administrators are also required to
furnish participants with a summary of any material changes to the plan or
changes to the information contained in the summary plan description. Generally,
copies of these documents must be filed with the Department. In addition, the
administrator must file an annual report (Form 5500 Series) each year containing
financial and other information concerning the operation of the plan. Plans with
100 or more participants must file the Form 5500. Plans with fewer than 100
participants file the Form 5500-C at least every third year and may file a Form
5500-R, an abbreviated report, in the two intervening years. The forms are filed
with the Internal Revenue Service, which furnishes the information to the
Department of Labor. Welfare benefit plans with fewer than 100 participants that
are fully insured or unfunded (i.e., benefits are provided exclusively through
insurance contracts where the premiums are paid directly from the general assets
of the employer or the benefits are paid from the general assets of the
employer) are not required to file an annual report under regulations issued by
the Department. Plan administrators must furnish participants and beneficiaries
with a summary of the information in the annual report.
The Department's regulations governing reporting and
disclosure requirements are set forth at 29 CFR §2520.101-1 et seq.
Fiduciary Standards
Part 4 sets forth standards and rules governing the conduct
of plan fiduciaries. In general, persons who exercise discretionary authority or
control regarding management of a plan or disposition of its assets are
"fiduciaries" for purposes of Title I of ERISA. Fiduciaries are required, among
other things, to discharge their duties solely in the interest of plan
participants and beneficiaries and for the exclusive purpose of providing
benefits and defraying reasonable expenses of administering the plan. In
discharging their duties, fiduciaries must act prudently and in accordance with
documents governing the plan, to the extent such documents are consistent with
ERISA. Certain transactions between an employee benefit plan and "parties in
interest," which include the employer and others who may be in a position to
exercise improper influence over the plan, are prohibited by ERISA. Most of
these transactions are also prohibited by the Internal Revenue Code ("Code").
The Code imposes an excise tax on "disqualified persons" -- whose definition
generally parallels that of parties in interest -- who participate in such
transactions.
Exemptions
Both ERISA and the Code contain various statutory exemptions
from the prohibited transaction rules and give the Departments of Labor and
Treasury, respectively, authority to grant administrative exemptions and
establish exemption procedures. Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978 transferred
the authority of the Treasury Department over prohibited transaction exemptions,
with certain exceptions, to the Labor Department.
The statutory exemptions generally include loans to
participants, the provision of services necessary for operation of a plan for
reasonable compensation, loans to employee stock ownership plans, and investment
with certain financial institutions regulated by other State or Federal
agencies. (See ERISA section 408 for the conditions of the exemptions.)
Administrative exemptions may be granted by the Department on a class or
individual basis for a wide variety of proposed transactions with a plan.
Applications for individual exemptions must include, among other information:
Percentage of assets involved in the exemption transaction
The names of persons with investment discretion
Extent of plan assets already invested in loans to, property
leased by, and securities issued by parties in interest involved in the
transaction
Copies of all contracts, agreements, instruments and relevant
portions of plan documents and trust agreements bearing on the exemption
transaction
Information regarding plan participation in pooled funds when
the exemption transaction involves such funds
Declaration, under penalty of perjury by the applicant,
attesting to the truth of representations made in such exemption submissions
Statement of consent by third-party experts acknowledging that their statement
is being submitted to the Department as part of an exemption application
The Department's exemption procedures are set forth at 29 CFR
§2570.30 through 2570.51.
Enforcement
ERISA imposes substantial law enforcement responsibilities on
the Department. Part 5 of ERISA Title I gives the Department authority to bring
a civil action to correct violations of the law, gives investigative authority
to determine whether any person has violated Title I, and imposes criminal
penalties on any person who willfully violates any provision of Part 1 of Title
V.
Continuation Health Coverage
Continuation health care provisions were enacted as part of
the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA). These
provisions cover group health plans of employers with 20 or more employees on a
typical working day in the previous calendar year. COBRA gives participants and
beneficiaries an election to maintain at their own expense coverage under their
health plan at a cost that is comparable to what it would be if they were still
members of the employer's group. Employers and plan administrators have an
obligation to determine specific rights of beneficiaries with respect to
election, notification and type of coverage options. (See 29 USC §§1161 through
1168). Plans must give covered individuals an initial general notice informing
them of their rights under COBRA and describing the law. Plan administrators are
required to provide specific notices when certain events occur. In most
instances of employee death, termination, reduced hours of employment,
entitlement to Medicare, or bankruptcy, it becomes the employer's responsibility
to provide a specific notice to the plan administrator.
The Department has limited regulatory and interpretative
jurisdiction over COBRA provisions. Its responsibility includes the COBRA
notification and disclosure provisions.
Jurisdiction of the Internal Revenue Service
The IRS has regulatory and interpretative responsibility for
all provisions of COBRA not under DOL's jurisdiction. (See IRS proposed
regulations in the Federal Register of June 14, 1987 (52 FR 22716).) In
addition, ERISA provisions relating to participation, vesting, funding and
benefit accrual, contained in parts 2 and 3 of Title I, are generally
administered and interpreted by the Internal Revenue Service.
Assistance Available
PWBA has numerous general publications designed to assist
employers and employees in understanding their obligations and rights under
ERISA. Publications -- a listing of PWBA booklets and pamphlets -- is available
by writing to: Publications Desk, PWBA, Division of Public Affairs, Room N-5511,
200 Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20210.
In addition, employee benefit plan documents and other
materials are available from the PWBA Public Disclosure Room. This facility may
be used to view and to obtain copies of materials on file. Materials include:
summary plan descriptions, Form 5500 Series reports, Master Trust reports,
103-12 Investment Entity Reports, Common or Collective Trust or Pooled Separate
Account direct filings, Apprentice and Other Training Plans notices, "Top Hat"
plan statements, advisory opinions, announcements and transcripts of public
hearings and proceedings.
The PWBA Public Disclosure Room is open to the public Monday
through Friday, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Copies of materials are available at
a cost of 15 cents per page by ordering in person or writing to: PWBA Public
Disclosure Room, U.S. Department of Labor, Room N-5507, 200 Constitution Ave.,
NW, Washington, DC 20210. Given the complexity of ERISA requirements, employers
may seek the assistance of an attorney, CPA firm, investment or brokerage firm,
and other employee benefit consultants in complying with the law.
Penalties
PWBA has authority to assess civil penalties for reporting
violations and prohibited transactions involving a plan under ERISA Section
502(c). A penalty of up to $1,000 per day may be assessed against plan
administrators who fail to or refuse to comply with annual reporting
requirements. Section 502(i) gives the agency authority to assess civil
penalties against parties in interest who engage in prohibited transactions with
welfare and nonqualified pension plans. The penalty can range from five percent
to 100 percent of the amount involved in a transaction. A parallel provision of
the Code directly imposes an excise tax against disqualified persons, including
employee benefit plan sponsors and service providers, who engage in prohibited
transactions with tax-qualified pension and profit sharing plans. Finally, the
Department is required under Section 502(l) to assess mandatory civil penalties
equal to 20 percent of any amount recovered with respect to fiduciary breaches
resulting from either a settlement agreement with the Department or a court
order as the result of a lawsuit by the Department.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
Part 5 of Title I provides that the provisions of ERISA
Titles I and IV supersede state and local laws which "relate to" an employee
benefit plan. ERISA, however, saves certain state and local laws from ERISA
preemption, including certain exceptions for state insurance regulation of
multiple employer welfare arrangements (MEWAs). MEWAs generally constitute
employee welfare benefit plans or other arrangements providing welfare benefits
to employees of more than one employer, not pursuant to a collective bargaining
agreement.
In addition, ERISA's general prohibitions against assignment
or alienation of pension benefits does not apply to qualified domestic relations
orders. These orders must be made pursuant to state domestic relations law and
award all or part of a participant's benefit in the form of child support,
alimony, or marital property rights to an alternative payee (spouse, former
spouse, child or other dependent). Plan administrators must comply with the
terms of such orders.
6. WHISTLEBLOWER PROTECTION
Employee Protection (Whistleblower) Provisions -- Clean Air Act (Title 42
U.S. Code, Section 7622); Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act (Title 42 U.S. Code, Section 9610); Energy Reorganization Act of
1974 (Title 42 U.S. Code, Section 5851); Safe Drinking Water Act (Title 42 U.S.
Code, Section 300j-9(i)); Solid Waste Disposal Act (Title 42 U.S. Code, Section
6971); Toxic Substances Control Act (Title 15 U.S. Code, Section 2622); Federal
Water Pollution Control Act (Title 33 U.S. Code, Section 1367); 29 CFR 24).
Who is covered
These environmental Acts provide protection from discharge or
other discriminatory actions by employers in retaliation for employees' good
faith complaints about safety and health hazards in the workplace. The Acts
cover all private sector employers.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
The employee protection provisions of these Acts prohibit
employers from discharging or otherwise discriminating against employees in
retaliation for their disclosure of safety and health hazards to the employer or
to the appropriate federal agency. They also protect employee participation in
formal government proceedings in connection with safety and health hazards. The
Acts specifically exclude from protection the disclosure of hazards deliberately
caused by an employee. Additionally, the statutes do not protect "frivolous"
complaints. Employees have the right under the Acts to refuse to work in
hazardous or unsafe situations.
Employees who believe they have been discriminated against in
violation of these protective provisions may file a complaint, within 30 days of
the alleged violation, with the Employment Standards Administration's Wage and
Hour Division.
Assistance Available More detailed information, including
copies of explanatory brochures and regulatory and interpretative materials, may
be obtained by contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53 in the
appendix.
Penalties
Upon receipt of a complaint, the Wage and Hour Division
conducts an investigation to determine whether a violation has occurred. When a
violation has occurred, the employer is notified of the violation determination
and efforts are made to conciliate the situation. The employer may appeal a
violation determination to an administrative law judge, if done within 5
calendar days of the notification of the determination. The administrative law
judge's decision is referred to the Secretary of Labor for a final order. The
Secretary may affirm or set aside the administrative law judge's decision. Where
the Secretary concludes that a violation has occurred, his/her final order may
instruct the employer to take affirmative action to abate the violation and
provide for appropriate relief, which may include restoration of back pay,
employment status and benefits. The Secretary may also order the employer to
provide compensatory damages to the employee. If dissatisfied with the
Secretary's decision, the employer may appeal in federal court. Final
determinations on violations are enforceable through the courts. The employee is
entitled to similar appeal rights under the Acts.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws The current
whistleblower programs do not preempt existing state statutes and common law
claims. All provisions contained in the programs are in addition to protection
provided by state laws.
7. VETERANS
Veterans' Reemployment Rights Act (VRR).
Who is Covered
VRR applies to persons who are inducted into the Armed
Forces, to persons who volunteer directly for active duty and to Reservists and
members of the National Guard who are called to active duty either voluntarily
or involuntarily. In addition, VRR covers members of the Reserves and National
Guard during initial active duty training, active duty for training and inactive
duty training.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
Veterans returning from active duty must meet the following
five eligibility requirements to be covered by VRR: Held an "other than
temporary" (not necessarily "permanent") civilian job.
Left the civilian job for the purpose of going on active duty
Did not remain on active duty longer than 4 years, unless the period beyond 4
years (up to an additional year) was "at the request and for convenience of the
Federal Government" Was discharged or released from active duty "under honorable
conditions"
Applied for reemployment with the pre-service employer or
successor in interest within 90 days after separation from active duty Eligible
veterans are entitled to reinstatement within a reasonable time to a position of
like seniority, status and pay. In addition, the returning veterans do not step
back on the seniority escalator at the point they stepped off. Rather the
veterans step back on at the precise point that they would have occupied had
they kept the position continuously during the military service.
VRR provides that a reservist or member of the National Guard
shall upon request be granted a leave of absence by such person's employer to
perform active duty training or inactive duty training and that the employee
shall not be denied retention in employment or any promotion or other incident
or advantage of employment because of any obligation as a member of a Reserve
component of the Armed Forces. In addition, while the employer is not required
to pay the Reservist or National Guard member for the hours or days not worked
because of military training obligations, it is unlawful to require the employee
to use earned vacation time for military training.
A person who leaves a civilian job in order to perform active
duty is not required to request a leave of absence or even to notify the
employer that military service is the reason for leaving the job, although such
a person is encouraged to provide the employer with as much information as
possible. However, a Reservist or member of the National Guard must request a
leave of absence when leaving the civilian job to perform active duty training
or inactive duty training.
VRR is enforced by DOL's Veterans' Employment and Training
Service (VETS).
Assistance Available
VETS has published two fact sheets covering the veteran
reemployment and job rights. These are OASVET 90-09 entitled "Job Rights for
Reservists and Members of the National Guard" and OAVET 90-10 entitled
"Reemployment Rights for Returning Veterans." Copies of these and other VETS'
publications or answers to questions on VRR may be obtained from the nearest
VETS office, as listed beginning on page 67 in the appendix.
Penalties Not Applicable.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws The VRR does
not preempt state laws providing greater or additional rights, but it does
preempt state laws providing lesser rights or imposing additional eligibility
criteria.
8. PLANT CLOSINGS AND MASS LAYOFFS
Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act, 29
U.S.C. 2101 et seq.; 20 CFR Part 639.
Who is Covered
In general, employers are covered by WARN if they have 100 or
more employees, not counting employees who have worked less than 6 months in the
last 12 months and not counting employees who work an average of less than 20
hours a week. Regular federal, state and local government entities which provide
public services are not covered. Employees entitled to notice under WARN include
hourly and salaried workers, as well as managerial and supervisory employees.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
WARN requires employers to provide notice 60 days in advance
of covered plant closings and covered mass layoffs. This notice must be provided
to affected workers or their representatives (e.g., a labor union), to the state
dislocated worker unit, and to the appropriate local government.
A covered plant closing occurs when a facility or operating
unit is shut down for more than 6 months, and 50 or more workers lose their jobs
as a result during a 30-day period. A covered mass layoff occurs when a layoff
of 6 months or longer affects 500 or more workers, or 33 percent or more of the
employer's workforce when the layoffs affect between 50 and 499 workers. The
number of affected workers is the total number laid off during a 30-, or in some
cases 90-, day period.
WARN does not apply to the closing of temporary facilities,
or the completion of an activity when the workers were hired only for the
duration of that activity. WARN also provides for less than 60 days notice when
the layoffs were the result of the closing a faltering company, unforeseeable
business circumstances, or a natural disaster.
Assistance Available
The Department of Labor has published a pamphlet entitled "A
Guide to Advance Notice of Closings and Layoffs," which describes the Worker
Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. Requests for copies of the pamphlet,
or general questions on the regulations, may be addressed to:
U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Training
Administration Office of Work-Based Learning Room N-4469 200 Constitution
Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20210 (202) 219-5577 (not a toll-free number)
The Department, since it does not have administrative or
enforcement authority under WARN, cannot provide specific advice or guidance
with respect to individual situations.
Penalties
An employer who violates the WARN provisions is liable to
each employee for an amount equal to back pay and benefits for the period of the
violation, up to 60 days. This may be reduced by the period of any notice that
was given, and any voluntary payments made by the employer to the employee.
An employer who fails to provide the required notice to the
unit of local government is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $500 for
each day of violation. This may be avoided if the employer satisfies the
liability to each employee within 3 weeks after the closing or layoff.
Enforcement of WARN requirements is through the United States
district courts. Workers, or their representatives, and units of local
government may bring individual or class action suits. The Court may allow
reasonable attorney's fees as part of any final judgement.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
WARN is in addition to, and does not preempt any other
federal, state or local law, or any employer/employee agreement which requires
other notification or benefit.
9. LIE DETECTOR TESTS
Employee Polygraph Protection Act of 1988 (29 U.S. Code, Section 2001 et
seq.; 29 CFR Part 801).
Who is Covered
The Employee Polygraph Protection Act (EPPA) applies to most
private employers. Federal, state and local governments are not covered by the
law.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
The EPPA prohibits most private employers from using lie
detector tests either for pre-employment screening or during the course of
employment.
Employers are generally prohibited from requiring or
requesting any employee or job applicant to take a lie detector test, and from
discharging, disciplining, or discriminating against an employee or prospective
employee for refusing to take a test or for exercising other rights under the
Act. Employers may not use or inquire about the results of a lie detector test
or discharge or discriminate against an employee, a prospective employee, or a
former employee for refusal to take a test, on the basis of the results of a
test, or for filing a complaint, or participating in a proceeding under the Act.
The Act permits polygraph (a type of lie detector) tests to
be administered, subject to restrictions, to certain prospective employees of
security service firms (armored car, alarm, and guard), and of pharmaceutical
manufacturers, distributors and dispensers.
The Act also permits polygraph testing, subject to
restrictions, of certain employees of private firms who are reasonably suspected
of involvement in a workplace incident (theft, embezzlement, etc.) that resulted
in specific economic loss or injury to the employer. Where polygraph
examinations are permitted, they are subject to strict standards concerning the
conduct of the test, including the pretest, testing and post-testing phases. An
examiner must also be licensed and bonded or have professional liability
coverage. The Act strictly limits the disclosure of information obtained during
a polygraph test.
Assistance Available
The Act is administered and enforced by the Employment
Standards Administration's Wage and Hour Division. More detailed information,
including copies of explanatory brochures and regulatory and interpretative
materials, may be obtained by contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53
in the appendix.
Penalties
The Secretary of Labor can bring court action to restrain
violators and assess civil money penalties up to $10,000 per violation against
violators. Employers who violate the law may be liable to the employee or
prospective employee for legal and equitable relief, including employment,
reinstatement, promotion and payment of lost wages and benefits. Any person
against whom a civil money penalty is assessed may, within 30 days of the notice
of assessment, request a hearing before an administrative law judge. If
dissatisfied with the administrative law judge's decision, such person may
request a review of the decision by the Secretary of Labor. Final determinations
on violations are enforceable through the courts.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
The law does not preempt any provision of any state or local
law or any collective bargaining agreement which is more restrictive with
respect to lie detector tests.
10. WAGE GARNISHMENT
Title III, Consumer Credit Protection Act (15 U.S. Code, Sections 1671 et seq;
29 CFR 870).
Who is Covered
Title III of the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA)
protects employees from being discharged by their employers because of
garnishment for any one indebtedness and limits the amount of employees'
earnings which may be garnished in any one week. Title III applies to all
individuals who receive personal earnings and to their employers. Personal
earnings include wages, salaries, commissions, bonuses and income from a pension
or retirement program but does not ordinarily include tips. The law applies in
all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and all U.S. territories
and possessions.
Basic Provisions/Requirements
Wage garnishment is a legal procedure through which the
earnings of an individual are required by court order to be withheld by an
employer for the payment of a debt. Title III prohibits an employer from
discharging an employee whose earnings have been subject to garnishment for any
one debt, regardless of the number of levies made or proceedings brought to
collect it. It does not, however, protect an employee from discharge if the
employee's earnings have been subject to garnishment for a second or subsequent
debts.
Title III also protects employees by limiting the amount of
their earnings that may be garnished in any workweek or pay period to the lesser
of 25 percent of disposable earnings or the amount by which disposable earnings
are greater than 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage prescribed by section
6(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. This limit applies regardless
of the number of garnishment orders received by an employer. The federal minimum
wage is $4.25 per hour.
In court orders for child support or alimony, Title III
allows up to 50 percent of an employee's disposable earnings to be garnished if
the employee is supporting another spouse or child, and up to 60 percent for an
employee who is not. An additional 5 percent may be garnished for support
payments which are more than 12 weeks in arrears.
"Disposable earnings" is the amount of employee earnings left
after legally required deductions have been made for federal, state and local
taxes, Social Security, unemployment insurance and state employee retirement
systems. Other deductions which are not required by law, e.g., union dues,
health and life insurance, and charitable contributions, are not subtracted from
gross earnings when calculating the amount of disposable earnings for
garnishment purposes.
Title III specifies that garnishment restrictions do not
apply to bankruptcy court orders and debts due for federal and state taxes. Nor
does it affect voluntary wage assignments, i.e., situations in which workers
voluntarily agree that their employers may turn over some specified amount of
their earnings to a creditor or creditors.
Assistance Available
Title III is administered and enforced by the Employment
Standards Administration's Wage and Hour Division. More detailed information,
including copies of explanatory brochures and regulatory and interpretative
materials, may be obtained by contacting the offices listed beginning on page 53
in the appendix.
Penalties
Violations of Title III may result in the reinstatement of a
discharged employee, with back pay, and the correction of improper garnishment
amounts. Where violations cannot be resolved through informal means, court
action may be initiated to restrain and remedy violations. Employers who
willfully violate the discharge provisions of the law may be prosecuted
criminally and fined up to $1,000, or imprisoned for not more than one year, or
both.
Relation to State, Local and Other Federal Laws
If a state wage garnishment law differs from Title III, the
law resulting in the smaller garnishment, or prohibiting the discharge of any
employee because his or her earnings have been subject to garnishment for more
than one indebtedness must be observed.
APPENDIX
Wage and Hour Division
National Office
Office of Program Operations Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards
Administration U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-3028 200 Constitution Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-8353
Division of Farm Labor, Child Labor, and Polygraph Standards Wage and Hour
Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of Labor, Room
S-3510 200 Constitution Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-4670
Division of Contract Standards Operations Wage and Hour Division Employment
Standards Administration U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-3018 200 Constitution
Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-7541
Division of Fair Labor Standards Act Operations Wage and Hour Division
Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-3516 200
Constitution Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-1407
Division of Wage Determinations Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards
Administration U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-3014 200 Constitution Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-7531
Regional Administrators
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor, Room 750 201 Varick St. New York, New York 10014 (212) 337-2000
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor, Room 662 1375 Peachtree St., N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30367 (404) 347-4801
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor Federal Building, S. 800 525 S. Griffin St. Dallas, Texas 75202 (214)
767-6894
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor Federal Office Building 1801 California St., S. 930 Denver, Colorado
80202-2614 (303) 391-6780
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor 1111 Third Ave., S. 600 Seattle, Washington 98101 (206) 553-1914
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor One Congress St., 11th Fl. Boston, Massachusetts 02114 (617) 565-2066
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor, Room 15230 Gateway Building 3535 Market St. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
19104 (215) 596-1185
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor, Room 820 230 South Dearborn St. Chicago, Illinois 60604 (312) 353-7280
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor Federal Office Building, Room 2000 911 Walnut St. Kansas City, Missouri
64106 (816) 426-5381
Wage and Hour Division Employment Standards Administration U.S. Department of
Labor, S. 930 71 Stevenson St. San Francisco, California 94105 (415) 744-6645
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor 200 Constitution Ave., N.W. Washington, DC
20210 (202) 219-9475
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor One Congress St., 11th Fl. Boston, MA
02114 (617) 565-2055
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor 201 Varick St., Room 750 New York, NY
10014 (212) 337-2006
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor Gateway Building, Room 15340 3535 Market
St. Philadelphia, PA 19104 (215) 596-6168
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor, S. 678 1375 Peachtree St., N.E. Atlanta,
GA 30367 (404) 347-3200
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor New Federal Building, Room 570 230 South
Dearborn St. Chicago, IL 60604 (312) 353-0335
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor Federal Building, Room 840 525 South
Griffin St. Dallas, TX 75202 (214) 767-4771
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor 911 Walnut St., Room 2011 Kansas City, MO
64106 (816) 426-5384
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor Federal Office Building, S. 935 1801
California St. Denver, CO 80202 (303) 844-5011
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor 71 Stevenson St., S. 910 San Francisco, CA
94105 (415) 744-6640
OFCCP/ESA U.S. Department of Labor, S. 610 1111 Third Ave. Seattle, WA 98101
(206) 553-4508
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
State Program Offices
Alaska Department of Labor 1111 West 8th St., Room 306 Juneau, AK 99802 (907)
465-2700
Industrial Comm. of Arizona 800 W. Washington Phoenix, AZ 85007 (602)
542-5795
California Dept. of Industrial Relations 455 Golden Gate Ave., 4th Fl. San
Francisco, CA 94102 (415) 703-4590
Connecticut Dept. of Labor 200 Folly Brook Blvd. Wethersfield, CT 06109 (203)
566-5123
Hawaii Dept. of Labor and Industrial Relations 830 Punchbowl St. Honolulu, HI
96813 (808) 586-8844
Indiana Dept. of Labor State Office Bldg., Room W-195 402 West Washington St.
Indianapolis, IN 46204 (317) 232-2378
Iowa Div. of Labor Services 1000 E. Grand Ave. Des Moines, IA 50319 (515)
281-3447
Kentucky Labor Cabinet 1049 US Highway 127 South Frankfort, KY 40601 (502)
564-3070
Maryland Div. of Labor and Industry Dept of Licensing and Regs 501 St. Paul
Pl., 2nd Fl. Baltimore, MD 21202 (301) 333-4179
Michigan Dept. of Labor P.O. Box 30015 Victor Office Center 201 N. Washington
Square Lansing, MI 48933 (517) 373-9600
Michigan Dept. of Public Health P.O. Box 30195 3423 N. Logan St. Lansing, MI
48909 (517) 335-8022
Minnesota Dept. of Labor and Industry 443 Lafayette Rd. St. Paul, MN 55155
(612) 296-2342
Nevada Department of Industrial Relations Division of Occupational Safety and
Health Capitol Complex 1370 S. Curry St. Carson City, NV 89710 (702) 687-3032
New Mexico Environment Dept. Occupational Health and Safety Bureau P.O. Box
26110 1190 St. Francis Dr. Santa Fe, NM 87502 (505) 827-2850
New York Dept. of Labor State Office Building Campus 12, Room 457 Albany, NY
12240 (518) 457-2741
North Carolina Dept. of Labor 4 W. Edenton St. Raleigh, NC 27601 (919)
733-0360
Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Div. Dept. of Insurance and Finance,
Room 160 21 Labor and Industry Bldg. Summer and Chemekita Sts., N.E. Salem, OR
97310 (503) 378-3272
Puerto Rico Dept. of Labor and Human Resources 505 Munoz Rivera Ave. Hato Rey,
PR 00918 (809) 754-2119
South Carolina Dept. of Labor P.O. Box 11329 3600 Forest Dr. Columbia, SC
29211 (803) 734-9594
Tennessee Dept. of Labor 501 Union Bldg, 2nd Fl., S. "A" Nashville, TN 37243
(615) 741-2582
Utah Occupational Safety and Health 160 E. 300 South P.O. Box 5800 Salt Lake
City, UT 84110 (801) 530-6900
Vermont Dept. of Labor and Industry 120 State St. Montpelier, VT 05620 (802)
828-2288
Virgin Islands Dept. of Labor 2131 Hospital St. Christiansted, St Croix VI
00840 (809) 773-1994
Virginia Dept. of Labor and Industry Powers-Taylor Bldg. 13 S. 13th St.
Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 786-2376
Washington Dept. of Labor and Industries P.O. Box 44001 Olympia, WA 98504
(206) 956-4200
Wyoming Dept. of Employment Occupational Health and Safety Administration
Herschler Bldg, 2nd Fl. East 122 West 25th St Cheyenne, WY 82002 (307) 777-7672
Regional OSHA Offices
Region I (CT**, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT*) 133 Portland St., 1st Fl. Boston, MA
02114 (617) 565-7164
Region II (NJ, NY**, PR*, VI*) 201 Varick St., Room 670 New York, NY 10014
(212) 337-2378
Region III (DC, DE, MD*, PA, VA*, WV) 3535 Market St., S. 2100 Philadelphia,
PA 19104 (215) 596-1201
Region IV (AL, FL, GA, KY*, MS, NC*, SC*, TN*) 1375 Peachtree St., N.E., Room
587 Atlanta, GA 30367 (404) 347-3573
Region V (IL, IN*, MI*, MN*, OH, WI) 230 S. Dearborn St., Room 3244 Chicago,
IL 60604 (312) 353-2220
Region VI (AR, LA, NM*, OK, TX) 525 Griffin St, Room 602 Dallas, TX 75202
(214) 767-4731
Region VII (IA*, KS, MO, NE) 911 Walnut St., Room 406 Kansas City, MO 64106
(816) 426-5861
Region VIII (CO, MT, ND, SD, UT*, WY*) 1961 Stout St., Room 1576 Denver, CO
80294 (303) 844-3061
Region IX (American Samoa, AZ*, CA*, Guam, HI*, NV*, Pacific Trust
Territories) 71 Stevenson St., 4th Flr. San Francisco, CA 94105 (415) 744-6670
Region X (AK*, ID, OR*, WA*) 1111 Third Ave., Room 715 Seattle, WA 98101-3212
(206) 553-5930
*State operates an OSHA-approved program in both the public and private
sectors.
**State operates a public employee-only program (NY & CT).
Office of Labor-Management Standards
OLMS S. 600 1365 Peachtree St., NE Atlanta, GA 30367 (404) 347-4237
OLMS S. 302 121 High St. Boston, MA 02110 (617) 565-8130
OLMS S. 774 Federal Office Building 230 S. Dearborn St. Chicago, IL 60604
(312) 353-7264
OLMS S. 831 Federal Office Building 1240 East 9th St. Cleveland, OH 44199
(216) 522-3855
OLMS S. 300 525 Griffin Square Bldg. Griffin and Young Streets Dallas, TX
75202 (214) 767-6834
OLMS S. 1606 Federal Office Building Kansas City, MO 64106 (816) 426-2547
OLMS S. 878 201 Varick St. New York, NY 10014 (212) 337-2580
OLMS S. 9452 William Green Federal Building 600 Arch St. Philadelphia, PA
19106 (215) 597-4960
OLMS S. 725 71 Stevenson St. San Francisco, CA 94105 (415) 744-6669
OLMS S. 558 Ridell Building 1730 K St., N.W. Washington, DC 20006 (202)
254-6510
Veterans Employment and Training Service
MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA 36130 649 Monroe St. (205) 223-7677
JUNEAU, ALASKA 99802 1111 West 8th St. (907) 465-2723
PHOENIX, ARIZONA 85005 1300 West Washington (602) 261-4961
LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS 72201 Employment Security Bldg. State Capitol Mall, Rm.
G-12 (501) 682-3786
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA 94280 P. O. Box 942880 800 Capitol Mall, Room W1142
(916) 654-8178
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94105 71 Stevenson St., S. 705 (415) 744-6677
DENVER, COLORADO 80203 600 Grant St., S. 900 (303) 866-1114
WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT 06109 CT Department of Labor Building 200 Folly
Brook Boulevard (203) 566-3326
NEWARK, DELAWARE 19702 Stockton Building, Room 104 100 Chapman Rd. (302)
368-6898
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001 500 C St., N.W., Room 108 (202) 727-3342
TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA 32399 S. 102, Atkins Building 1320 Executive Center Dr.
(904) 488-2967
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303 Sussex Place, S. 504 148 International Blvd, N.E.
(404) 656-3127
HONOLULU, HAWAII 96813 830 Punchbowl St. Room 232A (808) 541-1780
BOISE, IDAHO 83735 317 Main St., Room 303 (208) 334-6164 or 6163
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60605 401 South State St., 2 North (312) 793-3433
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 46204 10 North Senate Ave., Room 203 (317) 232-6804
DES MOINES, IOWA 50319 1000 East Grand Ave. (515) 281-5106
TOPEKA, KANSAS 66612 1309 Topeka Boulevard (913) 296-5032
FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY 40621 c/o Department for Employment Services 275 East
Main St. (502) 564-7062
BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA 70804 Louisiana DOL Employment Security Bldg. Room
174, 1001 N. 23rd St. (504) 342-5691
LEWISTON, MAINE 04243 522 Lisbon St. (207) 783-5352
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND 21201 1100 North Eutaw St. Room 205 (410) 333-5194
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02203 Room 506, JFK Federal Building (617) 565-2081
DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48202 7310 Woodward Ave. S. 407 (313) 876-5613, 5614, or
5615
ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA 55101 390 North Robert, 1st Fl. (612) 296-3665
JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI 39215 1520 West Capitol St. (601) 961-7588 JEFFERSON
CITY, MISSOURI 65104 421 East Dunklin St. (314) 751-9231
HELENA, MONTANA 59624 515 North Sanders (406) 449-5431
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68509 550 South 16th St. (402) 437-5289
CARSON CITY, NEVADA 89710 500 East Third St. (702) 885-4632
CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE 03301 55 Pleasant St., Room 325 (603) 225-1424 or
235-1425
TRENTON, NEW JERSEY 08609 28 Yard Ave., Room 200 (609) 292-2930
ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO 87108 1st National Bank Building, East 5301 Central,
N.E., Room 1214 (505) 841-4592
ALBANY, NEW YORK 12240 Harriman State Campus Building 12, Room 518 (518)
457-7465
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA 27605 700 Wade Ave. (919) 733-7402
BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 58501 1000 Divide Ave. (701) 224-2865
CLEVELAND, OHIO 44115 2728 Euclid Ave., 2nd Fl. (216) 622-3084
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43216 OBES Building 145 South Front St. (614) 466-2768
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA 73105 Will Rogers Memorial Office Building, Room 301
(405) 557-7189
SALEM, OREGON 97311 312 Employment Division Building 875 Union St., N.E.
(503) 378-3338
HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA 17121 Labor and Industry Building Room 625 Seventh
and Forster Streets (717) 787-5834
HATO REY, PUERTO RICO 00918 Puerto Rico Department of Labor and Human
Resources Building 505 Munoz Rivera Ave. 15th Fl. (809) 754-5391
PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND 02903 507 Federal Building and Courthouse (401)
528-5134
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA 29201 914 Richland St., S. 101 (803) 253-7649
ABERDEEN, SOUTH DAKOTA 57402 420 South Roosevelt P. O. Box 4730 (605)
226-7289
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 37201 301 James Robertson Parkway Room 317 (615)
741-2135
AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701 TEC Building, Room 516-B Trinity and 12th St. (512)
463-2207
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84111 140 E. 300 South (801) 524-5703 or 524-5704
MONTPELIER, VERMONT 05602 Post Office Building 87 State St., Room 303 (802)
828-4441 or 828-4437
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 23219 701 East Franklin St., S. 1409 (804) 786-7269
LACEY, WASHINGTON 98503 605 Woodview Dr., S.E. (206) 438-4600
CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA 25305 112 California Ave., Room 212 Capitol Complex
(304) 348-4001 or 347-5290
MADISON, WISCONSIN 53701 GEF I, 201 E. Washington Ave. Room 250 (608)
266-3110
CASPER, WYOMING 82602 100 West Midwest Ave. (307) 235-3281 or 235-3282
Mine Safety and Health Administration
Coal Mining
MSHA District 1 Office Penn Place 20 N. Pennsylvania Ave. Wilkes-Barre, PA
18701. (717) 826-6321
MSHA District 2 Office R.R. 1, Box 736 Hunker, PA 15639 (412) 925-5150
MSHA District 5 Office P.O. Box 560 Norton, VA 24273 (703) 679-0230
MSHA District 8 Office 501 Busseron St. Vincennes, IN 47591 (812) 882-7617
MSHA District 3 Office 5012 Mountaineer Mall Morgantown, WV 26505 (304)
291-4277
MSHA District 4 Office 100 Bluestone Rd. Mt. Hope, WV 25880 (304) 877-3900
MSHA District 6 Office 219 Ratliff Creek Rd. Pikeville, KY 41501 (606)
432-0943
MSHA District 7 Office HC 66, Box 1762 Barbourville, KY 40906 (606) 546-5123
MSHA District 10 Office 100 YMCA Dr. Madisonville, KY 42431 (502) 821-4180
MSHA District 9 Office P.O. Box 25367 Denver, CO 80225 (303) 231-5468
Metal and Nonmetal Mining
MSHA Northeastern District Office 230 Executive Dr. Mars, PA 16046 (412)
772-2333
MSHA Southeastern District Office 35 Gemini Circle, S. 212 Birmingham, AL
35209 (205) 290-7294
MSHA North Central District Office 515 W. First St. No. 228 Duluth, MN 55802
(218) 720-5448
MSHA South Central District Office 1100 Commerce St., Room 4650 Dallas, TX
75242 (214) 767-8401
MSHA Rocky Mountain District Office P.O. Box 25367 Denver, CO 80225 (303)
231-5465
MSHA Western District Office 3333 Vaca Valley Parkway, S. 600 Vacaville, CA
95688 (707) 447-9844
Longshore and Harbor Workers
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Room C-4315 200 Constitution Ave.,
N.W. Washington, D.C. 20210 (202) 219-8572
District NO. 1 (MA, ME, NH, VT, RI, and CT)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA One Congress St., 11th Fl. Boston,
MA 02114 (617) 565-2103
District NO. 2 (NY, NJ, and Puerto Rico)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA P.O. Box 249 201 Varick St., Room
750 New York, NY 10014 (212) 337-2033
District NO. 3 (PA, DE, and WV)
OWCP,DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA P.O. Box 7336 Gateway Building, Room
13180 3535 Market St. Philadelphia, PA 19104 (215) 596-5570
District NO. 7 (LA and AR)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Room 13032 701 Loyola Ave. New
Orleans, LA 70113 (504) 589-3664
District NO. 8 (TX, OK, and NM)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA One South Green Building, Room 105
12600 N. Featherwood Dr. Houston, TX 77034 (713) 481-9750
District No. 10 (IL, IN, IA, KS, MI, MN, MO, NE, OH, and WI)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Room 800 230 South Dearborn St.
Chicago, IL 60604 (312) 353-8883
District NO. 18 (That part of the State of California south of the northern
boundaries of the counties of San Luis Obispo, Kern, and San Bernardino)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA S. 720 401 E. Ocean Boulevard Long
Beach, CA 90802 (213) 514-6226
District NO. 40 (Processes cases under the District of Columbia Workmen's
Compensation Act of 1928)
Labor Standards D.C. Department of Employment Services 1200 Upshur St., N.W.
Washington, DC 20011 (202) 576-6265
District NO. 4 (MD and DC)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Federal Building, Room 1026 31
Hopkins Plaza Baltimore, MD 21201 (410) 962-3677
District NO. 5 (VA) OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Federal
Building, Room 212 200 Granby Mall Norfolk, VA 23510 (804) 441-3071
District NO. 6 (FL, NC, KY, TN, SC, GA, AL, and MS)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Edward Ball Building, Fl. 10 214
Hogan St. Jacksonville, FL 32202 (904) 791-2881
District No. 13 (AZ NV, and that part of the State of California north of the
northern boundaries of the counties of San Luis Obispo, Kern, and San
Bernardino)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA P.O. Box 3770 71 Stevenson St., Room
210 San Francisco, CA 94119 (415) 744-6869
District NO. 14 (AK, CO, ID, MT, ND, SD, OR, UT, WA, and WY)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA 1111 3rd. Ave., S. 620 Seattle, WA
98101 (206) 442-4471
Dallas Office
OWCP U.S. Department of Labor, ESA Griffin Square Building, Room 407 525
Griffin Square Dallas, TX 75202 (214) 767-4712
District NO. 15 (Hawaii)
OWCP/DLHWC U.S. Department of Labor, ESA P.O. Box 50209, Room 5108 300 Ala
Moana Boulevard Honolulu, HI 96850 (808) 551-1983
Contact us for more info

[Home] [Index Business Information
2] [Top]
|