Texas Salary + Overtime...

SINep

Veteran XX
Are you owed Overtime Compensation in Texas?

Salary for Workweek Exceeding 40 Hours: A fixed salary for a regular workweek longer than 40 hours does not discharge FLSA statutory obligations. For example, an employee may be hired to work a 45 hour workweek for a weekly salary of $300. In this instance the regular rate is obtained by dividing the $300 straight-time salary by 45 hours, resulting in a regular rate of $6.67. The employee is then due additional overtime computed by multiplying the 5 overtime hours by one-half the regular rate of pay ($3.335 x 5 = $16.68).

Overtime Pay May Not Be Waived: The overtime requirement may not be waived by agreement between the employer and employees. An agreement that only 8 hours a day or only 40 hours a week will be counted as working time also fails the test of FLSA compliance. An announcement by the employer that no overtime work will be permitted, or that overtime work will not be paid for unless authorized in advance, also will not impair the employee's right to compensation for compensable overtime hours that are worked.

Sup?
 
thats pretty awesome actually

my job is fuckin ruthless about overtime, but it works out for me; if I work thru a few lunches, I go home a few hours early on Friday. Woohoo for starting your weekend early.
 
thats pretty awesome actually

my job is fuckin ruthless about overtime, but it works out for me; if I work thru a few lunches, I go home a few hours early on Friday. Woohoo for starting your weekend early.

I'm just trying to find out if this really is the case...
I just got my first full time salary job and I am concerned, because I'm starting to do 12h days (10 of work).
 
I don't trust that site for shit. Typos all over the place.
action against them that is in violation of a state statute such as firing someone because he is order to pay child support and the employer simply does not want to deal the chils support enforcemant agency.

The only situation where Texas courts have recognized a claim for wrongful discharge is in the limited context where anemployee was discharged for refusing to perform an illegal act.
 
http://www.twc.state.tx.us/news/efte/exemptions_from_minimum_wage_and_overtime.html said:

Exemptions from Minimum Wage and Overtime


The following categories of employees are exempt from both minimum wage and overtime pay requirements of the FLSA:

1.

"White collar exempt" employees – executive, administrative, professional, computer professional, and outside sales representative employees – Section 213(a)(1) and 213(a)(17) (the latter section, applicable to computer professionals, specifies a minimum hourly rate of $27.63 per hour, which applies if the employee is not paid a minimum salary of $455 per week)
2.

Employees of certain amusement or recreational establishments – Section 213(a)(3)
3.

Employees involved in cultivation, propagation, catching, harvesting, or first processing at sea of aquatic forms of animal or vegetable life – Section 213(a)(5)
4.

Certain agricultural employees of small farms or family-owned farms – Section 213(a)(6) – does not apply to farms operating in conjunction with other establishments, the combined business volume of which exceeds $10,000,000
5.

Employees principally engaged in the range production of livestock – Section 213(a)(6)
6.

Employees exempt under special certificates issued under Section 214 – Section 213(a)(7)

The 213(a)(7) exemption encompasses the following categories:
1.

Learners – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – Section 214(a)
2.

Apprentices – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – Section 214(a)
3.

Messengers – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – Section 214(a)
4.

Students employed in retail or service establishments – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – significant limitations on hours - Section 214(b)(1)
5.

Students employed in agriculture – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – in compliance with child labor laws - Section 214(b)(2)
6.

Students in institutions of higher education who are employed by their institutions – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – significant limitations on hours - Section 214(b)(3)
7.

Handicapped workers – under special certificates issued by the Secretary of Labor – Section 214(c)
8.

Students of elementary or secondary schools who are employed by their schools as part of the curriculum – in compliance with child labor laws – Section 214(d)
7.

Employees of certain small local newspapers – Section 213(a)(8)
8.

Switchboard operators for certain independently-owned public telephone companies – Section 213(a)(10)
9.

Seamen on vessels other than American vessels – Section 213(a)(12)
10.

Certain babysitters or companions for the elderly – Section 213(a)(15)
11.

Criminal investigators paid on an availability pay basis – Section 213(a)(16)
12.

Computer professionals – Section 213(a)(17) (also noted at the beginning of this list) [note: although this appears in the "minimum wage and overtime exemptions" part of Section 213, it is really only an overtime exemption – to get the overtime exemption, the employer must pay the employee at least $27.63 per hour, i.e., a "minimum" wage, for all hours worked.]


Chances are you conveniently fall into one of these many exemptions.
 
why does this thread exist. was there another thread wherein someone claimed no one in texas could get overtime?

if so WHY THE FUCK DOES THIS WHOLE FUCKING BRAND NEW THREAD EXIST
 
So there has to be an agreement to work over the 40 hour week in place beforehand? Then calculating overtime based on that?

Seems reasonable.

And $300 a week is a pretty... bad.
 
No but you're going to have to read the sentence you quoted to figure out why.

Yeah yeah, I re-read it...
Besides that, I don't think I'm technically a "Computer Professional," from reading through all that crap.

Anywho, I'll figure it out.
 
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