BLR®’s FLSA New Overtime Regulations Survey has just closed today, and the results are a little surprising. For example, with less than one month to go before the new overtime regulations, our survey has found that over half (53.1%) of respondents have not informed their workers about the change in overtime laws.
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The result that more than half of the respondents have not informed their employees of the new change comes despite the fact that 48.9% said that the changes will have a moderate impact on their business operations and 27.6% said the changes will have a significant impact.
A full set of results will be released once our poll is written up, but we at BLR® wanted to share with you some of the most interesting highlights from the survey now.
- More than half of respondents (53.1%) say that they have not told their workers about the change.
- Just under half of survey takers (48.9%) say the change will have a moderate impact on their organization, and 27.6% say that it will have a significant impact.
- A majority of respondents (60.3%) answered that their employees have not been asking about the change—perhaps because so many have not been told.
- Of the 35.9% of survey takers that said their employees have been asking about the change, the major concern (61.3%) was by currently exempt employees disliking the prospect of having to punch a clock.
- 7% of employees who have been asking about the new rules say they feel like they are being demoted.
- The majority of communications about the changes to come are reminders that these are federal regulations, not discretionary company decisions (65.9%) and that their reclassification is not a matter of their performance (61.2%).
- Most of the respondents (64.8%) say they will reclassify affected employees as nonexempt, but limit overtime hours as a strategy. 56.0% say they will train affected employees to use timekeeping methods in order to prevent them from working unauthorized overtime.
- One fifth of respondents are not auditing their employees to see who has been misclassified as exempt. Of those that are, 28.1% found misclassified employees.
Thanks for looking at some of these early results from our just completed survey on the new overtime regulations that will go into effect on December 1st.
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