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Employee Pay for Multiple Jobs

Pay for Employees Performing More than One Job Q&A If you have employees who want to work additional jobs for extra pay, you need to make sure you are paying them properly. Nonexempt employees may be owed overtime, while exempt employees generally can be paid the extra compensation without affecting their exempt status.

Pay for Employees Performing More than One Job Q&A

If you have employees who want to work additional jobs for extra pay, you need to make sure you are paying them properly. Nonexempt employees may be owed overtime, while exempt employees generally can be paid the extra compensation without affecting their exempt status.

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Q: We have several employees who have expressed interest in working second jobs in our organization to help out during the busy holiday season so they can earn extra compensation. How will this extra work affect their pay and will it affect nonexempt and exempt employees differently?

A: Generally, you can allow both exempt and nonexempt employees to work second jobs for extra compensation. But, you may have to pay overtime to the nonexempt employees and should watch how much time exempt employees spend on nonexempt duties to ensure their exempt status is not affected.

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Regarding nonexempt employees, if the employees work more than 40 hours in a single workweek performing two different jobs for your organization, they should be paid overtime for those hours over 40. Calculating the overtime can be a little tricky when an employee works two or more jobs for which the employee is paid different hourly rates since overtime must be based on the employee’s “regular rate of pay.” Typically, according to the FLSA regulations found at 29 C.F.R. §778.115, the employee’s regular rate of pay when he works two jobs is calculated as the weighted average of the different rates.

For example, the regular rate of an employee who works 35 hours per week at $15 per hour as a machine operator ($525), and works 10 hours that same week at $8 per hour cutting the grass outside the plant ($80), is $605 divided by 45 hours or $13.44 per hour. The overtime premium owed the employee is an additional $6.72 ($13.44 divided by 2) for each hour over 40, regardless of which job the employee performs during the extra hours. (The employee in the example has already been paid straight time for the first 5 overtime hours up to 40 and is only entitled to the additional “half” of the time and one-half of overtime pay on the balance over 40.) Accordingly, the employee would be paid an additional $33.60 in overtime ($6.72 times 5 hours), so that the employee’s total pay for the week would be $638.60 ($605 straight time pay plus $33.60 overtime premium). The employee’s regular and overtime rates may vary from week to week with the number of hours spent performing each job.

Alternatively, as explained in the FLSA regulations at 29 C.F.R. §778.419(a), an employer and employee may agree, before the work is performed, that the overtime rate will be based on the regular rate that applies to the type of work performed during the hours in excess of forty. Therefore, if an employee spends 35 hours in a week working as a machine operator at $15 per hour, and five hours a week cutting the grass at $8 per hour, the overtime rate for any additional hours spent cutting the grass is $12.00 per hour ($8 times 1.5). Conversely, the overtime rate for any additional hours spent working as a machine operator is $22.50 ($15 times 1.5). This method of computation is available for hourly employees only and does not apply to nonexempt salaried employees.

Exempt employees do not have to be paid overtime for additional work hours, but when you provide exempt employees with extra compensation for performing additional job duties, two questions arise: (1) whether the exempt employee would be performing more nonexempt work than is consistent with her exempt status; and (2) whether she can still be considered paid on a “salary basis” under the FLSA if you pay her additional hourly compensation.

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Regarding the first issue, the FLSA salary basis test for white-collar exemptions requires that most exempt employees be paid a salary of at least $455 per week and that their “primary duty” must consist of the performance of exempt work. The FLSA regulations, found in 29 C.F.R. §541.700(b), indicate that employees who normally spend more than 50% of their time performing exempt work will satisfy the primary duty requirement. However, time alone is not the sole test, and employees who spend less than 50% of their time on exempt duties still may meet the primary duty standard if the other factors support the exemption.

Although these regulations focus on nonexempt work related to the exempt employee’s regular job, the same analysis can be applied when the employee works in a second, unrelated job. Thus, as long as the exempt employee devotes over 50% of all of her working time to exempt job duties she should continue to meet that exemption criterion.

The second issue raises the question of whether extra compensation paid in addition to the exempt employee’s salary will jeopardize the exempt status. The FLSA regulations define “salary basis” as payment on a weekly or less frequent basis of a predetermined amount constituting all or part of compensation, without reductions for variations in the quality or quantity of the work performed.

The regulations specifically allow employers to provide exempt employees extra compensation without jeopardizing the exemption or violating the salary basis requirement. According to the regulations, found in 29 C.F.R. §541.604(a), if the exempt employee is guaranteed a minimum weekly payment of at least $455, she also may be paid a commission on sales or a percentage of profits or sales, or even additional compensation based on hours worked beyond the normal workweek. This additional compensation can be paid on any basis, including a flat sum, bonus payment, straight-time hourly amount, time and one-half, or any other basis, including paid time-off.

Regards,

Robin Thomas, J.D.
Personnel Policy Service, Inc.

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Withheld InFear
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Withheld InFear

I have worked for a company for 17 years as a mechanical design drafter. Eight years ago, the sole proprietor I work for saw that I had a knack for computers and asked me to “help out” in that area. I now, and called daily away from my desk to lend computer support (hardware, software, networking, disaster recovery, restoring failed harddrives, installation of motherboards on network server, etc.) I am the type of guy to prove myself capable first, and not immediately ask for more money. Since then, I have also been given the task of handling the design drafting… Read more »

Periwinkle
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Periwinkle

To Withheld: It sounds like you work for a cheapskate. I bet he has you come out to his house to mow his lawn too.  right now, you are trapped. Try not to let this lead you to slitting your wrists, as I know full well, the literal hell that working for someone like this can make in your life. Nickel and diming your way thru emergencies, racking up years worth of credit card debt to handle further emergencies, the sense of being “Denied” thru dismissal of your value, for nothing other than lack of integrity. This business owner, must… Read more »

Withheld InFear
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Withheld InFear

Most of the time when I speak to people (peers, family members, other business owners), and tell them what I do, they immediately blurt out “yeah.. they are taking advantage of you”… Stay until you find something else. So I am left with working here, or finding something else.  What Payscale.com does NOT do is tell a person how to account for the value he creates when he covers other job descriptions. As the mechanical drafter/designer, I kind find all kinds of information about the salary ranges and median for that job, but what about the IT work and intellectual… Read more »

Anna Ford
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Anna Ford

I work for an auto auction company started as a regular driver then had to take over as crew leader driving the van that transports drivers to pick up cars at the company property to take to other areas on the property, I was then put in a scanner position told as a fill in I’ve done that for 3 mnths neither of these two positions have I been paid what these positions pay I was told it is because I am a fill in not regular then to make matters worse I was placed on a van as a… Read more »

Mimi
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Mimi

I am currently working as a PCA personal care assistant. I was originally hired to work with one student. However, shortly after being hired I was told that I had other duties, like working with two behavioral students as well as another student that is non ambulatory, which needs toiletry assistant. Recently, another non ambulatory student started attending the school that requires his own PCA. This new student did not have all of his paper work completed by a doctor prior to starting this school. I was told that he too would be my responsibility and that I have to… Read more »

steven fuller
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steven fuller

i am a salary employee who works Monday- Friday from 5am-3:30pm. I will also work for the same company, when needed, from 3:30pm to 12am any were from 1 to 4 times a week at an hourly wage for manual labor. Do i qualify for over time pay during the second job?

Elaine
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Elaine

Can a company hire 2 employees for the same job and hire one salaried and the other hourly

Richard Reece
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Richard Reece

I work for Dunkin donuts, as a night baker. I work at 3 different locations, owned by the same person. 2 days out of the week i check in the delivery truck. Over all i work 45 hours a week. Paid by a check from each location. Each location is registered as a different company. Is how i am getting paid legal and should i be getting paid overtime for the 5 hours?

Feeling Very Under appreciated
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Feeling Very Under appreciated

Performing 3 jobs- Paid for 1————- 1) Full time Nurse Practitioner; 2) Lead Supervisor of 30+ staff members; 3) previous supervisor of a different dept left clinic, that full time supervisor job position also became my job. Recently, a new provider was hired to our office, with similar years of np experience but no experience in this particular specialty. Within a month of hire, she become unhappy with discussion of a change in the hours originally hired to work. She first came to me as her supervisor, and shared about her decision to take a cut in pay to move… Read more »

Blanca
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Blanca

If I work for a staffing company which means I have to work for different places and different hours, and I worked more than 40 hours but those 40 hours are in different places, those hours are considered over time?

Packers and Movers in Pune
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Packers and Movers in Pune
Packers and Movers India
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Packers and Movers India
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