[Federal Register Volume 62, Number 164 (Monday, August 25, 1997)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 45064-45076]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 97-22390]
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OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 551
RIN 3206-AG70
Pay Administration Under the Fair Labor Standards Act
AGENCY: Office of Personnel Management.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is publishing a
proposed rule to amend regulations on the Fair Labor Standards Act
(referred to as ``the Act'' or ``FLSA''). The purpose of the majority
of the revisions is to make text clearer, standardize terms, change to
the active voice, reorganize material for added clarity, insert or
revise headings to accurately reflect content, reduce internal cross-
referencing, correct typographical, punctuation, and grammatical
errors, and use ``plain English.'' The proposed rule includes guidance
published in the sunsetted Federal Personnel Manual (FPM), adds certain
work in the computer software field to the professional exemption
criteria, adds an exemption for certain pilots, adds the statutory
exclusion of customs officers, and includes regulations on child labor
and claims and compliance.
DATES: Written comments will be considered if received on or before
October 24, 1997. Please organize and identify comments by section and
paragraph designation.
ADDRESSES: All comments concerning these proposed regulations should be
addressed to Jeffrey D. Miller, Director, Classification Appeals and
FLSA Programs, Office of Personnel Management, 1900 E Street NW., Room
7679, Washington, DC 20415.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeffrey D. Miller, Director,
Classification Appeals and FLSA Programs, by telephone on 202-606-2990;
by fax on 202-606-2663; or by e-mail at [email protected]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On January 10, 1995, OPM published a
proposed rule (60 FR 2549) to amend regulations on the Fair Labor
Standards Act by adding a subpart F--Complaints and Compliance.
That subpart F provided for FLSA complaint adjudication by the
agency involved rather than by OPM. Comments were received from
four Federal agencies, four labor organizations, and one employee
organization. OPM reconsidered its proposal and withdrew the
proposed subpart F (62 FR 9995, March 5, 1997).
The purpose of the majority of these revisions is to make text
clearer, standardize terms, change to the active voice, reorganize
material for added clarity, insert or revise headings to accurately
reflect content, reduce internal cross-referencing, correct
typographical, punctuation, and grammatical errors, and use ``plain
English.'' The proposed rule includes guidance published in the
sunsetted Federal Personnel Manual, adds certain work in the computer
software field to the professional exemption criteria, adds an
exemption for certain pilots, adds the statutory exclusion of customs
officers, and adds two new subparts, subpart F--Child Labor and subpart
G--FLSA Claims and Compliance. The changes are discussed section by
section below. When the reason for a revision is one or more of the
ones described in this paragraph, we do not repeat the reason when we
describe the change.
1. Nomenclature Changes
References to the Office of Personnel Management are changed to
``OPM'; the word ``shall'' is changed to ``will'' or ``must,'' as
appropriate; the phrase ``shall be'' is changed to ``is''; the phrase
``employee in a position properly classified'' is substituted for
``employee classified''; and ``primary duty test'' is substituted for
``primary duty criterion.''
2. Miscellaneous Changes
The following changes are made throughout: quotation marks are
removed, and paragraph headings are added.
3. New Sections
Two new sections are added to subpart B--Exemptions and the subpart
is retitled ``Exemptions and Exclusions.'' One new section (551.204)
describes the exemption of Federal Wage System employees. The other new
section (551.211) describes the statutory exclusion of customs officers
of the United States Customs Service. Customs officers whose exclusive
entitlement to overtime pay is governed by section 5 of the Act of Feb.
13, 1911, as amended (sections 261 and 267 of title 19, United States
Code), are excluded from the hours of work and overtime pay provisions
of the FLSA. As used in section 5, the term ``customs officer'' means a
customs inspector, a supervisory customs inspector, a canine
enforcement officer, or a supervisory canine enforcement officer.
4. New Subparts
Two new subparts are added. The first (subpart F) addresses child
labor and the second (subpart G) addresses complaints and compliance.
5. Subpart A
Subpart A is restructured. Section 551.102--Definitions is
redesignated Sec. 551.104 with the same title. Section 551.104--
Administrative authority is redesignated Sec. 551.102 and retitled
``Authority and administration''.
6. Section 551.101--General.
The second sentence of paragraph (a) is revised by deleting all
that follows the word ``Act''. Revised paragraph (a) is moved to
redesignated Sec. 551.102--Authority and administration.
Paragraph (b) is redesignated paragraph (a). In the first sentence,
the phrase ``Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended (referred to
as ``the Act'' or ``FLSA'')'' replaces the word ``Act''.
Paragraph (c) is redesignated paragraph (b).
7. Redesignated Sec. 551.102--Authority and Administration
Paragraph (a) is moved to this section from published Sec. 551.101
and paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) are added.
Paragraph (a), moved here from published Sec. 551.101, describes
OPM's authority. The sole sentence of published Sec. 551.104--
Administrative authority is added to paragraph (a) and is revised by
deleting all the text following the word ``except'' and substituting
``as specified in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section.''
Paragraph (b) states that the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission administers the equal pay provisions of the Act.
Paragraph (c) lists the United States Government entities for which
the Department of Labor administers the Act. Those are the Library of
Congress, the United States Postal Service, the Postal Rate Commission,
and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Paragraph (d) lists the United States Government entities for which
the Office of Compliance administers the Act. The Congressional
Accountability
[[Page 45065]]
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-1, 109 Stat. 4, January 23, 1995) authorized
the application of the provisions of the FLSA to the legislative branch
of the Federal Government and authorized the Office of Compliance to
administer the FLSA for any employee of the United States House of
Representatives; the Unites States Senate; the Capitol Guide Service;
the Capitol Police; the Congressional Budget Office; the Office of the
Architect of the Capitol; the Office of the Attending Physician; the
Office of Compliance; and the Office of Technology Assessment.
8. Section 551.103--Coverage
The phrase ``as defined in Sec. 551.102'' is deleted from
paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3).
9. Redesignated Sec. 551.104--Definitions
Several of the current definitions are revised. The phrase ``or
FLSA'' is added to the definition of ``Act''. The definition of
``agency'' is revised by deleting the colon and all text following the
colon and adding ``the entities of the United States Government listed
in Sec. 551.101 for which the Department of Labor and the Office of
Compliance administer the Act.'' The definition of ``employ'' is
revised by deleting the phrase ``as defined for this part''. The
definition of ``employee'' is revised by adding a reference to law to
subparagraphs (1) and (2) and deleting the words ``legislative or''
from subparagraph (4). The list of locations under the definition of
``exempt area'' is updated--``U.S.'' is inserted before the name
``Virgin Islands,'' Eniwetol Atoll and Kwajalein Atoll are deleted, and
Midway Atoll and Palmyra are added.
Many of the terms used in the FLSA arena have acquired well-
established interpretations that sometimes differ from the customary
interpretations in the Federal service. Terms and definitions from FPM
Letter No. 551-7, dated July 1, 1975, are added, as well as definitions
of other FLSA and pay administration terms. Terms added are as follows:
Administrative employee
Claim
Claim period
Claimant
Customarily and regularly
De minimis activity or worktime
Discretion and independent judgment
Emergency
Essential part of administrative or professional functions
Executive employee
FLSA exempt
FLSA exemption status
FLSA exemption status determination claim
FLSA nonexempt
FLSA overtime pay
FLSA pay claim
Foreign exemption
Formulation or execution of management programs or policies
Hours of work
Management or general business function or supporting service
Nonexempt area
Participation in the executive or administrative functions of a
management official
Perform work in connection with an emergency
Preserve the claim period
Primary duty
Professional employee
Reckless disregard of the requirements of the Act
Recognized organizational unit
Situations 1 through 4
Statute of limitations
Supervisory and closely related work
Temporary work or duties
Title 5 overtime pay
Willful violation
Work of an intellectual nature
Work of a specialized or technical nature
Workday
Worktime
Worktime in a representative workweek
Workweek
Workweek basis
10. Section 551.201--Agency Authority
The statement ``All employees are presumed to be FLSA nonexempt
unless the employing agency makes a determination that the position
meets one or more of the exemption criteria of this subpart.'' is added
as the first sentence.
11. Section 551.202--General Principles Governing Exemptions
The introductory language is revised by deleting the phrase ``the
principles that--'' and substituting ``following principles:''.
In paragraph (c), the phrase ``must be exempted'' is changed to
``must be designated FLSA exempt'' and the sentence ``If there is a
reasonable doubt as to whether an employee meets the criteria for
exemption, the employee should be designated FLSA nonexempt.'' is
added.
Four additional general principles from FPM Letter 551-7, dated
July 1, 1975, are added as paragraphs (d) through (g). An additional
general principle is added as paragraph (h).
12. Section 551.203--Exemption of General Schedule Employees
At the end of paragraph (a) the caveat is added that employees in
positions properly classified at GS-4 or below are nonexempt unless
subject to the foreign exemption.
In paragraph (b), the phrase ``GS-5 or above'' is substituted for
the phrase ``GS-5 through GS-10'' and the reference ``Secs. 551.204,
551.205, and 551.206'' is deleted. At the end of paragraph (b) the
caveat is added that the exemption status of employees in positions
properly classified at GS-5 or above may be affected if the employee is
required to temporarily perform work or duties that are not consistent
with the employee's official position description or if the employee is
subject to the foreign exemption.
13. Section 551.204--Executive Exemption Criteria
The section is redesignated from Sec. 551.204 to Sec. 551.205.
In the introductory paragraph, the term ``executive employee'' is
italicized and the quotation marks removed. The title ``foreman'' is
deleted. The phrase ``regularly and customarily'' is changed to
``customarily and regularly'' to be consistent with the use of the
phrase elsewhere. The phrases ``at least three'' and ``(excluding
support personnel)'' are removed. The word ``both'' is substituted for
``all.'' There is no need to distinguish between General Schedule (or
equivalent) supervisors and Federal Wage System (or equivalent)
supervisors. The General Schedule Supervisory Guide published in April
1993 specifies no minimum number of employees to be supervised for a
position to be classified as supervisory.
In paragraph (a), the entire text is deleted and the phrase ``The
primary duty test is met if the employee--'' is substituted.
In paragraph (a)(1), the phrase ``select or remove, and advance in
pay and promote, or make any other status changes of'' is changed to
``make personnel changes that include, but are not limited to,
selecting, removing, advancing in pay, or promoting.''
In paragraph (b), the phrase ``supervisors in positions properly
classified in the Federal Wage System below situation 3 of Factor I of
the Federal Wage System Job Grading Standard for Supervisors'' is
substituted for ``foreman level supervisors in the Federal Wage
System'' to update the nomenclature. The word ``level'' is inserted
after the word ``equivalent,'' and the word ``comparable'' is inserted
before the phrase ``wage systems.'' The phrase ``employees at the GS-7
through GS-9 level'' is deleted and ``firefighting or law enforcement
employees in positions properly classified in the General Schedule at
GS-7, GS-8, or GS-9 that are'' is substituted to describe the types of
employees subject to 207(k) of title 29, United States Code. The phrase
``employees classified at'' is deleted and ``employees in positions
properly
[[Page 45066]]
classified in the General Schedule at'' is substituted. The words
``the'' and ``level'' are deleted from the phrase ``classified at the
GS-5 or GS-6 level'' and inserted in the parenthetical clause to read
``(or the equivalent level in other white-collar pay systems).'' The
phrase ``to meet the 80-percent test'' is added after ``closely related
work.'' Paragraph (b) is restructured to more clearly and easily
identify the types of employees to which the paragraph applies.
14. Section 551.205--Administrative Exemption Criteria
The section is redesignated from Sec. 551.205 to Sec. 551.206.
In the introductory paragraph, the term ``administrative employee''
is italicized. The words ``advisor, assistance,'' are deleted and the
phrase ``advisor or assistant to management'' is substituted. The
phrase ``who meets all'' is changed to ``and meets all four''.
In paragraph (a), the introductory text ``The employee's primary
duty consists of work that--'' is changed to ``The primary duty test is
met if the employee's work--''.
In paragraph (a)(1), the phrase ``management policies or programs''
is changed to ``management programs or policies.
In paragraph (a)(3), the spelling of the word ``management'' is
corrected.
In paragraph (c), the phrase ``must frequently exercise'' is
changed to the phrase ``frequently exercises'' to be consistent with
wording elsewhere.
In paragraph (d), the word ``level'' is inserted after the word
``equivalent,'' the word ``pay'' is inserted after the word ``collar,''
and the phrase ``to meet the 80-percent test'' is added to the end of
the sentence.
15. Section 551.206--Professional Exemption Criteria
The section is redesignated from Sec. 551.206 to Sec. 551.207.
In the introductory paragraph, the term ``professional employee''
is italicized.
In paragraph (a), the introductory text ``The employee's primary
duty consists of--'' is replaced with ``The primary duty test is met if
the employee's work consists of--''.
At the end of paragraph (a)(2), the period is replaced with a
semicolon followed by the word ``or.''
Paragraph (a)(3) is added and adds certain work in the computer
software field to the types of work meeting the primary duty test. This
change brings OPM's regulations into conformance with those of the
Department of Labor which implemented the provisions of Pub. L. 101-
583, enacted November 15, 1990. That law required the issuance of
regulations to permit computer systems analysts, computer programmers,
software engineers, and other similarly skilled professional workers to
qualify for exemption from the minimum wage and overtime compensation
requirements of the Act under section 13(a)(1), the executive,
administrative, and professional exemption.
In paragraph (d), the spelling of the word ``employees'' is
corrected, the word ``level'' is inserted after the word
``equivalent,'' the phrase ``white-collar pay'' is inserted after the
word ``other,'' and the word ``in'' is changed to ``on'' after the word
``workweek'' to make this paragraph consistent with published
Sec. 551.204(b) and 551.205(d).
16. Section 551.207--Foreign Exemption
The section is redesignated from Sec. 551.207 to Sec. 551.209 and
retitled ``Foreign exemption criteria.'' The section is reorganized for
clarity and rewritten in plain English.
17. Section 551.208--Application of the Executive, Administrative, and
Professional Exemption Criteria for Periods of Temporary Duty
The section title is changed from ``Application of the executive,
administrative, and professional exemption criteria for periods of
temporary duty'' to ``Effect of temporary work or duties on FLSA
exemption status.'' The section is reorganized for clarity and
rewritten in plain English. The changes include the following.
The phrase ``temporary work or duties'' is substituted for the
phrase ``temporary duty'' to make clear that the subject is the work an
employee is performing on a temporary basis. The change emphasizes that
an employee's FLSA exemption status may change when an employee is
temporarily required to perform work or duties not consistent with the
employee's official position description and eliminates confusion with
the term ``TDY'' (temporary duty). TDY is commonly used to refer to an
employee in travel status or located somewhere on a temporary basis. To
further emphasize this point, a sentence is added that states ``The
period of temporary work or duties may or may not involve a different
geographic duty location.''
To focus attention on the tasks an employee is being asked to
perform temporarily, rather than the type of appointment (permanent
appointment, temporary appointment, or term appointment) or the
temporariness or permanence of a personnel action (detail or temporary
promotion), the phrases ``consistent with the employee's official
position description'' or ``not consistent with the employee's official
position description'' are used in lieu of ``duties which are not
included in the employee's representative workweek'' and ``permanent
position.''
Nomenclature is updated and phrasing is revised to parallel earlier
sections. For example, the phrase ``in the Federal Wage System at
situation 3 or 4 of Factor I of the Federal Wage System Job Grading
Standard for Supervisors'' is substituted for ``General Foreman''; the
phrase ``in the Federal Wage System below situation 3 of Factor I of
the Federal Wage System Job Grading Standard for Supervisors'' is
substituted for ``below General Foreman''; and the phrase ``80 percent
or more of the worktime in a given workweek'' is substituted for ``more
than 80 percent of a given workweek''.
18. Section 551.209--Exemption of Criminal Investigators Receiving
Availability Pay
The section is redesignated from Sec. 551.209 to Sec. 551.110 and
retitled ``Exemption of employees receiving availability pay.''
Paragraph (a) addresses the exemption of criminal investigators
receiving availability pay.
Paragraph (b) addresses the exemption of pilots employed by the
United States Customs Service who are law enforcement officers and also
receive availability pay. Pub. L. 104-19, July 27, 1995, amended
section 5545a of title 5, United States Code (U.S.C.), and provided
that the provisions of subsections (a)-(h) providing for availability
pay apply to a pilot employed by the United States Customs Service who
is a law enforcement officer as defined under 5 U.S.C. 5541(3). For the
purposes of 5 U.S.C. 5545a, 5 U.S.C. 5542(d) and section 13(a)(16) and
(b)(30) of the FLSA (29 U.S.C. 213(a)(16) and (b)(30)), such pilots are
deemed to be criminal investigators as defined in 5 U.S.C. 5545a.
19. Subpart F--Child Labor
This new subpart sets forth the minimum age standards and
delineates the respective responsibilities of an agency and OPM
regarding the child labor provisions of the Act.
20. Subpart G--FLSA Claims and Compliance
This new subpart describes the applicability of OPM's FLSA claims
regulations, time limits that must be observed, avenues of review, the
claimant's right to designate a representative, the form and content of
[[Page 45067]]
an FLSA claim, responsibilities of claimants and agencies, the
circumstances under which an FLSA claim may be withdrawn or denied, the
finality and effect of an OPM FLSA claim decision, the availability of
information from an FLSA claim file, and where to file an FLSA claim
with OPM.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not have significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities because they affect
only Federal employees and agencies.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 551
Government employees, Wages.
U.S. Office of Personnel Management.
James B. King,
Director.
Accordingly, OPM is proposing to amend 5 CFR part 551 as follows:
PART 551--PAY ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT
1. The authority citation for part 551 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5542(c); sec. 4(f) of the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938, as amended by Pub. L. 93-259, 88 Stat. 55 (29
U.S.C. 204f).
2. Subpart A is revised to read as follows:
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
551.101 General.
551.102 Authority and administration.
551.103 Coverage.
551.104 Definitions.
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 551.101 General.
(a) The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended (referred to
as ``the Act'' or ``FLSA''), provides for minimum standards for both
wages and overtime entitlement, and delineates administrative
procedures by which covered worktime must be compensated. Included in
the Act are provisions related to child labor, equal pay, and portal-
to-portal activities. In addition, the Act exempts specified employees
or groups of employees from the application of certain of its
provisions. It prescribes penalties for the commission of specifically
prohibited acts.
(b) This part contains the regulations, criteria, and conditions
that the Office of Personnel Management has prescribed for the
administration of the Act. This part supplements and implements the
Act, and must be read in conjunction with it.
Sec. 551.102 Authority and administration.
(a) Office of Personnel Management. Section 3(e)(2) of the Act
authorizes the application of the provisions of the Act to any person
employed by the Government of the United States, as specified in that
section. Section 4(f) of the Act authorizes the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) to administer the provisions of the Act. OPM is the
administrator of the provisions of the Act with respect to any person
employed by an agency, except as specified in paragraphs (b), (c), and
(d) of this section.
(b) The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission administers the
equal pay provisions contained in section 6(d) of the Act.
(c) The Department of Labor administers the Act for the following
United States Government entities:
(1) The Library of Congress;
(2) The United States Postal Service;
(3) The Postal Rate Commission; and
(4) The Tennessee Valley Authority.
(d) The Office of Compliance administers the Act for the following
United States Government entities:
(1) The United States House of Representatives;
(2) The United States Senate;
(3) The Capitol Guide Service;
(4) The Capitol Police;
(5) The Congressional Budget Office;
(6) The Office of the Architect of the Capitol;
(7) The Office of the Attending Physician;
(8) The Office of Compliance; and
(9) The Office of Technology Assessment.
Sec. 551.103 Coverage.
(a) Covered. Any employee of an agency who is not specifically
excluded by another statute is covered by the Act. This includes any
person who is--
(1) Defined as an employee in section 2105 of title 5, United
States Code;
(2) Appointed under other appropriate authority; or
(3) Suffered or permitted to work by an agency whether or not
formally appointed.
(b) Not covered. The following persons are not covered under the
Act:
(1) A person appointed under appropriate authority without
compensation;
(2) A trainee; or
(3) A volunteer.
Sec. 551.104 Definitions.
In this part--
Act or FLSA means the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended
(29 U.S.C. 201 et seq.).
Administrative employee means an employee who meets the criteria in
Sec. 551.206 of this part.
Agency, for purposes of OPM's administration of the Act, means any
instrumentality of the United States Government, or any constituent
element thereof acting directly or indirectly as an employer, as this
term is defined in section 3(d) of the Act and in this section, but
does not include the entities of the United States Government listed in
Sec. 551.102 for which the Department of Labor or the Office of
Compliance administer the Act.
Claim means a written allegation from a current or former employee
concerning his or her FLSA exemption status determination or
entitlement to minimum wage or overtime pay for work performed under
the Act.
Claim period means the time during which the cause or basis of the
claim occurred.
Claimant means a current or former employee who files an FLSA
claim.
Customarily and regularly means a frequency which must be greater
than occasional but which may be less than constant. For example, the
requirement in Sec. 551.205(a)(2) of this part will be met by an
employee who normally and recurrently exercises discretion and
independent judgment in the day-to-day performance of duties.
De minimis activity or worktime means an activity or worktime of
less than 10 minutes a day.
Discretion and independent judgment means work that involves
comparing and evaluating possible courses of conduct, interpreting
results or implications, and independently taking action or making a
decision after considering the various possibilities. However, firm
commitments or final decisions are not necessary to support exemption.
The ``decisions'' made as a result of the exercise of independent
judgment may consist of recommendations for action rather than the
actual taking of action. The fact that an employee's decisions are
subject to review, and that on occasion the decisions are revised or
reversed after review, does not mean that the employee is not
exercising discretion and independent judgment of the level required
for exemption. Work reflective of discretion and independent judgment
must meet the three following criteria:
(1) The work must be sufficiently complex and varied so as to
customarily and regularly require discretion and independent judgment
in determining the approaches and techniques to be used, and in
evaluating results. This precludes exempting an employee who performs
work primarily requiring skill
[[Page 45068]]
in applying standardized techniques or knowledge of established
procedures, precedents, or other guidelines which specifically govern
the employee's action.
(2) The employee must have the authority to make such
determinations during the course of assignments. This precludes
exempting trainees who are in a line of work which requires discretion
but who have not been given authority to decide discretionary matters
independently.
(3) The decisions made independently must be significant. The term
``significant'' is not so restrictive as to include only the kinds of
decisions made by employees who formulate policies or exercise broad
commitment authority. However, the term does not extend to the kinds of
decisions that affect only the procedural details of the employee's own
work, or to such matters as deciding whether a situation does or does
not conform to clearly applicable criteria.
Emergency means a temporary condition that poses a direct threat to
human life or safety, serious damage to property, or serious disruption
to the operations of an activity, as determined by the employing
agency.
Employ means to engage a person in an activity that is for the
benefit of an agency, and includes any hours of work that are suffered
or permitted.
Employee means a person who is employed--
(1) In an executive agency as defined in section 105 of title 5,
United States Code;
(2) As a civilian in a military department as defined in section
102 of title 5, United States Code;
(3) In a nonappropriated fund instrumentality of an executive
agency or a military department; or
(4) In a unit of the judicial branch of the Government that has
positions in the competitive service.
Employer, as defined in section 3(d) of the Act, means any person
acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in
relation to an employee and includes a public agency, but does not
include any labor organization (other than when acting as an employer)
or anyone acting in the capacity of officer or agent of such labor
organization.
Essential part of administrative or professional functions means
work that is included as an integral part of administrative or
professional exempt work. This work is identified by examining the
processes involved in performing the exempt function. For example, the
processes involved in evaluating a body of information include
collecting and organizing information; analyzing, evaluating, and
developing conclusions; and frequently, preparing a record of findings
and conclusions. Often collecting or compiling information and
preparing reports or other records, if divorced from the evaluative
function, are nonexempt tasks. When an employee who performs the
evaluative functions also performs some or all of these related steps,
all such work (for example, collecting background information,
recording test results, tabulating data, or typing reports) is included
in the employee's exempt duties.
Executive employee means an employee who meets the criteria in
section 551.205 of this part.
Exempt area means any foreign country, or any territory under the
jurisdiction of the United States other than the following locations:
(1) A State of the United States;
(2) The District of Columbia;
(3) Puerto Rico;
(4) The U.S. Virgin Islands;
(5) Outer Continental Shelf Lands as defined in the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (67 Stat. 462);
(6) American Samoa;
(7) Guam;
(8) Midway Atoll;
(9) Wake Island;
(10) Johnston Island; and
(11) Palmyra.
FLSA exempt means not covered by the minimum wage and overtime
provisions of the Act.
FLSA exemption status means an employee's designation by the
employing agency as either FLSA exempt or FLSA nonexempt from the
minimum wage and overtime provisions of the Act.
FLSA exemption status determination claim means a claim from a
current or former employee challenging the correctness of his or her
FLSA exemption status determination.
FLSA nonexempt means covered by the minimum wage and overtime
provisions of the Act.
FLSA overtime pay, for the purpose of Sec. 551.208 of this part,
means overtime pay under this part.
FLSA pay claim means a claim from a current or former employee
concerning his or her entitlement to minimum wage or overtime pay for
work performed under the Act.
Foreign exemption means a provision of the Act under which the
minimum wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of the Act do not
apply to any employee who spends all hours of work in a given workweek
in an exempt area.
Formulation or execution of management programs or policies means
work that involves management programs and policies which range from
broad national goals expressed in statutes or Executive orders to
specific objectives of a small field office. Employees make policy
decisions or participate indirectly, through developing or recommending
proposals that are acted on by others. Employees significantly affect
the execution of management programs or policies typically when the
work involves obtaining compliance with such policies by other
individuals or organizations, within or outside of the Federal
Government, or making significant determinations furthering the
operation of programs and accomplishment of program objectives.
Administrative employees engaged in such work typically perform one or
more phases of program management (that is, planning, developing,
promoting, coordinating, controlling, or evaluating operating programs
of the employing organization or of other organizations subject to
regulation or other controls).
Hours of work means all time spent by an employee performing an
activity for the benefit of an agency and under the control or
direction of the agency. Hours of work are creditable for the purposes
of determining overtime pay under subpart D of this part. Section
551.401 of subpart D further explains this term. However, whether time
is credited as hours of work is determined by considering many factors,
such as the rules in subparts D and E of this part, provisions of law,
Comptroller General decisions, OPM policy guidance, agency policy and
regulations, negotiated agreements, the rules in part 550 of this
chapter (for hours of work for travel), and the rules in part 410 of
this chapter (for hours of work for training).
Management or general business function or supporting service, as
distinguished from production functions, means the work of employees
who provide support to line managers.
(1) These employees furnish such support by--
(i) Providing expert advice in specialized subject matter fields,
such as that provided by management consultants or systems analysts;
(ii) Assuming facets of the overall management function, such as
safety management, personnel management, or budgeting and financial
management;
(iii) Representing management in such business functions as
negotiating and administering contracts, determining acceptability of
goods or services, or authorizing payments; or
[[Page 45069]]
(iv) Providing supporting services, such as automated data
processing, communications, or procurement and distribution of
supplies.
(2) Neither the organizational location nor the number of employees
performing identical or similar work changes general management,
business, or servicing functions into production functions. The work,
however, must involve substantial discretion on matters of enough
importance that the employee's actions and decisions have a noticeable
impact on the effectiveness of the organization advised, represented,
or serviced.
Nonexempt area means any of the following locations:
(1) A State of the United States;
(2) The District of Columbia;
(3) Puerto Rico;
(4) The U.S. Virgin Islands;
(5) Outer Continental Shelf Lands as defined in the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (67 Stat. 462);
(6) American Samoa;
(7) Guam;
(8) Midway Atoll;
(9) Wake Island;
(10) Johnston Island; and
(11) Palmyra.
Participation in the executive or administrative functions of a
management official means the participation of employees, variously
identified as secretaries, administrative or executive assistants,
aides, etc., in portions of the managerial or administrative functions
of a supervisor whose scope of responsibility precludes personally
attending to all aspects of the work. To support exemption, such
employees must be delegated and exercise substantial authority to act
for the supervisor in the absence of specific instructions or
procedures, and take actions which significantly affect the
supervisor's effectiveness.
Perform work in connection with an emergency means to perform work
that is directly related to resolving or coping with an emergency, or
its immediate aftermath, as determined by the employing agency.
Preserve the claim period means to establish the period of possible
entitlement to back pay by filing a written claim with either the
agency employing the claimant during the claim period or with OPM. The
date the agency or OPM receives the claim is the date that determines
the period of possible entitlement to back pay.
Primary duty typically means the duty that constitutes the major
part (over 50 percent) of an employee's work. A duty constituting less
than 50 percent of the work may be credited as the primary duty for
exemption purposes provided that duty--
(1) Constitutes a substantial, regular part of a position;
(2) Governs the classification and qualification requirements of
the position; and
(3) Is clearly exempt work in terms of the basic nature of the
work, the frequency with which the employee must exercise discretion
and independent judgment, and the significance of the decisions made.
Professional employee means an employee who meets the criteria in
section 551.207 of this part.
Reckless disregard of the requirements of the Act means failure to
make adequate inquiry into whether conduct is in compliance with the
Act.
Recognized organizational unit means an established and defined
organizational entity which has regularly assigned employees and for
which a supervisor is responsible for planning and accomplishing a
continuing workload. This distinguishes supervisors from leaders who
head temporary groups formed to perform assignments of limited
duration.
Situations 1 through 4 means the four basic situations described
under Factor I, Nature of Supervisory Responsibility, in the Federal
Wage System Job Grading Standard for Supervisors. The situations depict
successively higher levels of supervisory responsibility and authority
for scheduling work operations, planning use of resources to accomplish
work, directing subordinates in performing work assignments, and
carrying out administrative duties.
Statute of limitations means the time frame within which an FLSA
pay claim must be filed, starting from the date the right accrued. All
FLSA pay claims filed on or after June 30, 1994, are subject to a 2-
year statute of limitations, except in cases of willful violation where
the statute of limitations is 3 years.
Suffered or permitted work means any work performed by an employee
for the benefit of an agency, whether requested or not, provided the
employee's supervisor knows or has reason to believe that the work is
being performed and has an opportunity to prevent the work from being
performed.
Supervisory and closely related work means work that is included in
the calculation of exempt work for supervisory positions.
(1) Work is considered closely related to exempt supervisory work
if it contributes to the effective supervision of subordinate workers,
or the smooth functioning of the unit supervised, or both. Examples of
closely related work include the following:
(i) Maintaining various records pertaining to workload or employee
performance;
(ii) Performing setup work that requires special skills, typically
is not performed by production employees in the occupation, and does
not approach the volume that would justify hiring a specially trained
employee to perform; and
(iii) Performing infrequently recurring or one-time tasks which are
impractical to delegate because they would disrupt normal operations or
take longer to explain than to perform.
(2) Activities in which both workers and supervisors are required
to engage themselves are considered to be closely related to the
primary duty of the position, for example, physical training during
tours of duty for firefighting and law enforcement personnel.
Temporary work or duties means work or duties an employee must
temporarily perform that are not consistent with the employee's
official position description. The period of temporary work or duties
may or may not involve a different geographic duty location.
Title 5 overtime pay, for the purpose of Sec. 551.208 of this part,
means overtime pay under part 550 of this chapter.
Trainee means a person who does not meet the definition of employee
in this section and who is assigned or attached to a Federal activity
primarily for training. A person who attends a training program under
the following conditions is considered a trainee and, therefore, is not
an employee of the Government of the United States for purposes of the
Act:
(1) The training, even though it includes actual operation of the
facilities of the Federal activity, is similar to that given in a
vocational school or other institution of learning;
(2) The training is for the benefit of the individual;
(3) The trainee does not displace regular employees, but, rather,
is supervised by them;
(4) The Federal activity which provides the training derives no
immediate advantage from the activities of the trainee; on occasion its
operations may actually be impeded;
(5) The trainee is not necessarily entitled to a job with the
Federal activity at the completion of the training period; and
(6) The agency and the trainee understand that the trainee is not
entitled to the payment of wages from the agency for the time spent in
training.
Volunteer means a person who does not meet the definition of
employee in this section and who volunteers or
[[Page 45070]]
donates his or her service, the primary benefit of which accrues to the
performer of the service or to someone other than the agency. Under
such circumstances there is neither an expressed nor an implied
compensation agreement. Services performed by such a volunteer include
personal services that, if left unperformed, would not necessitate the
assignment of an employee to perform them.
Willful violation means a violation in circumstances where the
agency knew that its conduct was prohibited by the Act or showed
reckless disregard of the requirements of the Act. All of the facts and
circumstances surrounding the violation are taken into account in
determining whether a violation was willful.
Work of an intellectual nature means work requiring general
intellectual abilities, such as perceptiveness, analytical reasoning,
perspective, and judgment applied to a variety of subject matter
fields, or work requiring mental processes which involve substantial
judgment based on considering, selecting, adapting, and applying
principles to numerous variables. The employee cannot rely on
standardized application of established procedures or precedents, but
must recognize and evaluate the effect of a continual variety of
conditions or requirements in selecting, adapting, or innovating
techniques and procedures, interpreting findings, and selecting and
recommending the best alternative from among a broad range of possible
actions.
Work of a specialized or technical nature means work which requires
substantial specialized knowledge of a complex subject matter and of
the principles, techniques, practices, and procedures associated with
that subject matter field. This knowledge characteristically is
acquired through considerable on-the-job training and experience in the
specialized subject matter field, as distinguished from professional
knowledge characteristically acquired through specialized academic
education.
Workday means the period between the commencement of the principal
activities that an employee is engaged to perform on a given day and
the cessation of the principal activities for that day. The term is
further explained in Sec. 551.411 of this part.
Worktime, for the purpose of determining FLSA exemption status,
means time spent actually performing work. This excludes periods of
time during which an employee performs no work, such as standby time,
sleep time, meal periods, and paid leave.
Worktime in a representative workweek means the average percentages
of worktime over a period long enough to even out normal fluctuations
in workloads and be representative of the job as a whole.
Workweek means a fixed and recurring period of 168 hours--seven
consecutive 24-hour periods. It need not coincide with the calendar
week but may begin on any day and at any hour of a day. For employees
subject to part 610 of this chapter, the workweek shall be the same as
the administrative workweek defined in Sec. 610.102 of this chapter.
Workweek basis means the unit of time used as the basis for
applying overtime standards under the Act and, for employees under
flexible or compressed work schedules, under 5 U.S.C. 6121(6) or (7).
The Act takes a single workweek as its standard and does not permit
averaging of hours over two or more weeks, except for employees engaged
in fire protection or law enforcement activities under section 7(k) of
the Act.
3. Subpart B is revised to read as follows:
Subpart B--Exemptions and Exclusions
Sec.
551.201 Agency authority.
551.202 General principles governing exemptions.
551.203 Exemption of General Schedule employees.
551.204 Exemption of Federal Wage System employees.
551.205 Executive exemption criteria.
551.206 Administrative exemption criteria.
551.207 Professional exemption criteria.
551.208 Effect of performing temporary work or duties on FLSA
exemption status.
551.209 Foreign exemption criteria.
551.210 Exemption of employees receiving availability pay.
551.211 Statutory exclusion.
Subpart B--Exemptions and Exclusions
Sec. 551.201 Agency authority.
All employees are presumed to be FLSA nonexempt unless the
employing agency makes a determination that the position meets one or
more of the exemption criteria of this subpart. The employing agency
must exempt from the overtime provisions of the Act any employee who
meets the exemption criteria of this subpart and such supplemental
interpretations or instructions issued by OPM.
Sec. 551.202 General principles governing exemptions.
In all exemption determinations, the agency must observe the
following principles:
(a) Exemption criteria must be narrowly construed to apply only to
those employees who are clearly within the terms and spirit of the
exemption.
(b) The burden of proof rests with the agency that asserts the
exemption.
(c) All employees who clearly meet the criteria for exemption must
be designated FLSA exempt. If there is a reasonable doubt as to whether
an employee meets the criteria for exemption, the employee should be
designated FLSA nonexempt.
(d) There are groups of General Schedule employees who are FLSA
nonexempt because they do not fit any of the exemption categories.
These groups include the following:
(1) Nonsupervisory General Schedule employees in equipment
operating and protective occupations, and most clerical occupations
(see the definition of participation in the executive or administrative
functions of a management official in subpart A of this part);
(2) Nonsupervisory General Schedule employees performing technician
work in positions properly classified below GS-9 (or the equivalent
level in other white-collar pay systems) and many, but not all, of
those positions properly classified at GS-9 or above (or the equivalent
level in other white-collar pay systems); and
(3) Nonsupervisory General Schedule employees at any grade level in
occupations requiring highly specialized technical skills and
knowledges that can be acquired only through prolonged job training and
experience, such as the Air Traffic Control series, GS-2152, or the
Aircraft Operations series, GS-2181, unless such employees are
performing predominantly administrative functions rather than the
technical work of the occupation.
(e) Although separate criteria are provided for the exemption of
executive, administrative, and professional employees, those categories
are not mutually exclusive. All exempt work, regardless of category,
must be considered. The only restriction is that, when the requirements
of one category are more stringent, the combination of exempt work must
meet the more stringent requirements.
(f) Failure to meet the criteria for exemption under what might
appear to be the most appropriate criteria does not preclude exemption
under another category. For example, an engineering technician who
fails to meet the professional exemption criteria may be performing
exempt administrative work, or an administrative officer who fails to
[[Page 45071]]
meet the administrative criteria may be performing exempt executive
work.
(g) Although it is normally feasible and more convenient to
identify the exemption category, this is not essential. An exemption
may be based on a combination of functions, no one of which constitutes
the primary duty, or the employee's primary duty may involve two
categories which are intermingled and difficult to segregate. This does
not preclude exempting the employee, provided the work as a whole
clearly meets the other exemption criteria.
(h) The designation of an employee as FLSA exempt or nonexempt
ultimately rests on the duties actually performed by the employee.
Sec. 551.203 Exemption of General Schedule employees.
(a) GS-4 or below. Any employee in a position properly classified
at GS-4 or below (or the equivalent level in other white-collar pay
systems) is nonexempt, unless the employee is subject to the foreign
exemption in Sec. 551.209.
(b) GS-5 or above. Any employee in a position properly classified
at GS-5 or above (or the equivalent level in other white-collar pay
systems) is exempt only if the employee is an executive,
administrative, or professional employee as defined in this subpart,
unless the employee is subject to Sec. 551.208 (the effect of
performing temporary work or duties on FLSA exemption status) or
Sec. 551.209 (the foreign exemption).
Sec. 551.204 Exemption of Federal Wage System employees.
(a) Nonsupervisory. A nonsupervisory employee in the Federal Wage
System or under other comparable wage systems is nonexempt, unless the
employee is subject to Sec. 551.208 (the effect of performing temporary
work or duties on FLSA exemption status) or Sec. 551.209 (the foreign
exemption).
(b) Supervisory. A supervisory employee in the Federal Wage System
or under other comparable wage systems is exempt only if the employee
is an executive employee as defined in Sec. 551.205, unless the
employee is subject to Sec. 551.208 (the effect of performing temporary
work or duties on FLSA exemption status) or Sec. 551.209 (the foreign
exemption).
Sec. 551.205 Executive exemption criteria.
An executive employee is a supervisor or manager who manages a
Federal agency or any subdivision thereof (including the lowest
recognized organizational unit with a continuing function) and
customarily and regularly directs the work of subordinate employees and
meets both of the following criteria:
(a) Primary duty test. The primary duty test is met if the
employee--
(1) Has authority to make personnel changes that include, but are
not limited to, selecting, removing, advancing in pay, or promoting
subordinate employees, or has authority to suggest or recommend such
actions with particular consideration given to these suggestions and
recommendations; and
(2) Customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent
judgment in such activities as work planning and organization; work
assignment, direction, review, and evaluation; and other aspects of
management of subordinates, including personnel administration.
(b) 80-percent test. In addition to the primary duty test that
applies to all employees, the following employees must spend 80 percent
or more of the worktime in a representative workweek on supervisory and
closely related work to meet the 80-percent test:
(1) Employees in positions properly classified in the General
Schedule at GS-5 or GS-6 (or the equivalent level in other white-collar
pay systems);
(2) Firefighting or law enforcement employees in positions properly
classified in the General Schedule at GS-7, GS-8, or GS-9 who are
subject to section 207(k) of title 29, United States Code; and
(3) Supervisors in positions properly classified in the Federal
Wage System below situation 3 of Factor I of the Federal Wage System
Job Grading Standard for Supervisors (or the equivalent level in other
comparable wage systems).
Sec. 551.206 Administrative exemption criteria.
An administrative employee is an advisor or assistant to
management, a representative of management, or a specialist in a
management or general business function or supporting service and meets
all four of the following criteria:
(a) Primary duty test. The primary duty test is met if the
employee's work--
(1) Significantly affects the formulation or execution of
management programs or policies; or
(2) Involves general management or business functions or supporting
services of substantial importance to the organization serviced; or
(3) Involves substantial participation in the executive or
administrative functions of a management official.
(b) Nonmanual work. The employee performs office or other
predominantly nonmanual work which is--
(1) Intellectual and varied in nature; or
(2) Of a specialized or technical nature that requires considerable
special training, experience, and knowledge.
(c) Discretion and independent judgment. The employee frequently
exercises discretion and independent judgment, under only general
supervision, in performing the normal day-to-day work.
(d) 80-percent test. In addition to the primary duty test that
applies to all employees, General Schedule employees in positions
properly classified at GS-5 or GS-6 (or the equivalent level in other
white-collar pay systems) must spend 80 percent or more of the worktime
in a representative workweek on administrative functions and work that
is an essential part of those functions to meet the 80-percent test.
Sec. 551.207 Professional exemption criteria.
A professional employee is an employee who meets all of the
following criteria, or any teacher who is engaged in the imparting of
knowledge or in the administration of an academic program in a school
system or educational establishment.
(a) Primary duty test. The primary duty test is met if the
employee's work consists of--
(1) Work that requires knowledge in a field of science or learning
customarily and characteristically acquired through education or
training that meets the requirements for a bachelor's or higher degree,
with major study in or pertinent to the specialized field as
distinguished from general education; or is performing work, comparable
to that performed by professional employees, on the basis of
specialized education or training and experience which has provided
both theoretical and practical knowledge of the specialty, including
knowledge of related disciplines and of new developments in the field;
or
(2) Work in a recognized field of artistic endeavor that is
original or creative in nature (as distinguished from work which can be
produced by a person endowed with general manual or intellectual
ability and training) and the result of which depends on the invention,
imagination, or talent of the employee; or
(3) Work that requires theoretical and practical application of
highly-specialized knowledge in computer systems, analysis,
programming, and software engineering or other similar work in the
computer software field.
[[Page 45072]]
The work must consist of one or more of the following:
(i) The application of systems analysis techniques and procedures,
including consulting with users, to determine hardware, software, or
system functional specifications; or
(ii) The design, development, documentation, analysis, creation,
testing, or modification of computer systems or programs, including
prototypes, based on and related to user or system design
specifications; or
(iii) The design, documentation, testing, creation, or modification
of computer programs related to machine operating systems; or
(iv) A combination of the duties described in paragraphs (a)(3)(i),
(3)(ii), and (3)(iii) of this section, the performance of which
requires the same level of skills.
(b) Intellectual and varied in nature. The employee's work is
predominantly intellectual and varied in nature, requiring creative,
analytical, evaluative, or interpretative thought processes for
satisfactory performance.
(c) Discretion and independent judgment. The employee frequently
exercises discretion and independent judgment, under only general
supervision, in performing the normal day-to-day work.
(d) 80-percent test. In addition to the primary duty test that
applies to all employees, General Schedule employees in positions
properly classified at GS-5 or GS-6 (or the equivalent level in other
white-collar pay systems), must spend 80 percent or more of the
worktime in a representative workweek on professional functions and
work that is an essential part of those functions to meet the 80-
percent test.
Sec. 551.208 Effect of performing temporary work or duties on FLSA
exemption status.
(a) Applicability.--(1) When applicable. This section applies only
when an employee must temporarily perform work or duties that are not
consistent with the employee's official position description. The
period of temporary work or duties may or may not involve a different
geographic duty location. The FLSA exemption status of employees during
a period of temporary work or duties must be determined as described in
this section.
(2) When not applicable. This section does not apply when an
employee is detailed to an identical additional position as the
employee's position or to a position of the same grade, series code,
basic duties, and FLSA exemption status as the employee's position.
(b) Effect on nonexempt employees. (1) A nonexempt employee who
must temporarily perform work or duties that are not consistent with
the employee's official position description remains nonexempt for the
entire period of temporary work or duties unless all three of the
following conditions are met:
(i) 30-day test. The period of temporary work or duties exceeds 30
days; and
(ii) Exempt work or duty. The employee's primary duty for the
period of temporary work or duties is exempt work or duty as defined in
this part; and
(iii) Positions at GS-7 or above, or at situations 3 or 4. The
employee's position (including a position to which the employee is
temporarily promoted) is properly classified in the General Schedule at
GS-7 or above (or the equivalent level in other white-collar pay
systems) or properly classified in the Federal Wage System as a
supervisor at situation 3 or 4 of Factor I of the Federal Wage System
Job Grading Standard for Supervisors (or the equivalent level in other
comparable wage systems).
(2) If a nonexempt employee becomes exempt under the criteria in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section--
(i) The employee must be considered exempt for the entire period of
temporary work or duties; and
(ii) If the employee received FLSA overtime pay for work performed
during the first 30 days of the temporary work or duties, the agency
must recalculate the employee's total pay retroactive to the beginning
of that period because the employee is now not entitled to the FLSA
overtime pay received but may be owed title 5 overtime pay.
(c) Effect on exempt employees. (1) An exempt employee not covered
by the special provision of paragraph (c)(3) of this section who must
temporarily perform work or duties that are not consistent with the
employee's official position description remains exempt for the entire
period of temporary work or duties unless all three of the following
conditions are met:
(i) 30-day test. The period of temporary work or duties exceeds 30
days; and
(ii) Not exempt work. The employee's primary duty for the period of
temporary work or duties is not exempt work or duty as defined in this
part; and
(iii) Positions at GS-7 or above, or at situation 3 or 4. The
employee's position (including a position to which the employee is
temporarily promoted) is properly classified in the General Schedule at
GS-7 or above (or the equivalent level in other white-collar pay
systems) or properly classified in the Federal Wage System as a
supervisor at situation 3 or 4 of Factor I of the Federal Wage System
Job Grading Standard for Supervisors (or the equivalent level in other
comparable wage systems).
(2) If an exempt employee becomes nonexempt under the criteria in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section--
(i) The employee must be considered nonexempt for the entire period
of temporary work or duties; and
(ii) If the employee received title 5 overtime pay for work
performed during the first 30 days of the temporary work or duties, the
agency must recalculate the employee's total pay retroactive to the
beginning of that period because the employee may now not be entitled
to some or all of the title 5 overtime pay received but may be owed
FLSA overtime pay.
(3) Special provision for exempt employees at GS-5 or GS-6, or
below situation 3: The exemption status of certain exempt employees who
must temporarily perform work or duties that are not consistent with
their official position description must be determined on a workweek
basis for the period of temporary work or duties. Such employees are
exempt employees whose positions (including a position to which the
employee is temporarily promoted) are properly classified in the
General Schedule at GS-5 or GS-6 (or the equivalent level in other
white-collar pay systems), or are properly classified in the Federal
Wage System below situation 3 of Factor I of the Federal Wage System
Job Grading Standard for Supervisors (or the equivalent level in other
comparable wage systems). The exemption status determination of these
employees will result in the employee either remaining exempt or
becoming nonexempt for that workweek, as described in paragraphs
(c)(3)(i) and (c)(3)(ii) of this section.
(i) Remain exempt. An exempt employee remains exempt for a given
workweek only if the employee performs exempt work or duties for 80
percent or more of the worktime in that workweek.
(ii) Become nonexempt. An exempt employee becomes nonexempt for a
given workweek only if the employee performs nonexempt work or duties
for more than 20 percent of the worktime in that workweek.
(d) Emergency situation. Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this section, and regardless of an employee's grade level, the agency
may determine that an emergency situation exists that directly
threatens human life or safety, serious damage to property, or serious
disruption to the operations of an activity, and there is no recourse
[[Page 45073]]
other than to assign qualified employees to temporarily perform work or
duties in connection with the emergency. In such a designated
emergency--
(1) The exemption status of a nonexempt employee remains nonexempt
whether the employee performs nonexempt work or exempt work during the
emergency; and
(2) The exemption status of an exempt employee must be determined
on a workweek basis. The exemption status determination of exempt
employees will result in the employee either remaining exempt or
becoming nonexempt for that workweek, as described in paragraphs
(d)(2)(i) and (d)(2)(ii) of this section.
(i) Remain exempt. An exempt employee remains exempt for any
workweek in which the employee performs exempt work or duties for 80
percent or more of the worktime in a given workweek.
(ii) Become nonexempt. An exempt employee becomes nonexempt for any
workweek in which the employee performs nonexempt work or duties for
more than 20 percent of the worktime in a given workweek.
Sec. 551.209 Foreign exemption criteria.
(a) Application. When the foreign exemption applies, the minimum
wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of the Act do not apply to
any employee who spends all hours of work in a given workweek in an
exempt area. When an employee meets one of the two criteria in
paragraph (b) of this section, the foreign exemption applies until the
employee spends any hours of work in any nonexempt area as defined in
Sec. 551.102 of this part.
(b) Foreign exemption applies. If an employee meets one of the two
following criteria, the employee is subject to the foreign exemption of
the Act and the minimum wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of
the Act do not apply.
(1) The employee is permanently stationed in an exempt area and
spends all hours of work in a given workweek in one or more exempt
areas; or
(2) The employee is not permanently stationed in an exempt area,
but spends all hours of work in a given workweek in one or more exempt
areas.
(c) Foreign exemption does not apply. For any given workweek, the
minimum wage, overtime, and child labor provisions of the Act apply to
an employee permanently stationed in an exempt area who spends any
hours of work in any nonexempt area. For that workweek, the employee is
not subject to the foreign exemption, and the agency must determine the
exemption status of such an employee as described paragraphs (c)(1) and
(c)(2) of this section. The foreign exemption does not resume until the
employee again meets one of the criteria in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(1) Same duties. If the duties performed during that workweek are
consistent with the employee's official position description, the
agency must designate the employee the same FLSA exemption status as if
the employee were permanently stationed in any nonexempt area.
(2) Different duties. If the duties performed during that workweek
are not consistent with the employee's official position description--
(i) The agency must first designate the employee the same FLSA
exemption status as the employee would have been designated based on
the duties included in the employee's official position description if
the employee were permanently stationed in any nonexempt area; and
(ii) The agency must determine the employee's exemption status for
that workweek by applying Sec. 551.208.
(d) Resumption of foreign exemption. When an employee returns to
any exempt area from performing any hours of work in any nonexempt
area, the employee is not subject to the foreign exemption until the
employee meets one of the criteria in paragraph (b) of this section.
Sec. 551.210 Exemption of employees receiving availability pay.
The following employees are exempt from the hours of work and
overtime pay provisions of the Act:
(a) A criminal investigator receiving availability pay under
section 550.181 of this chapter; and
(b) A pilot employed by the United States Customs Service who is a
law enforcement officer as defined in section 5541(3) of title 5,
United States Code, and who receives availability pay under section
5545a(i) of title 5, United States Code.
Sec. 551.211 Statutory exclusion.
Customs officers whose exclusive entitlement to overtime pay is
governed by section 5 of the Act of Feb. 13, 1911, as amended (19
U.S.C. 261 and 267), are excluded from the hours of work and overtime
pay provisions of the FLSA. As used in section 5, the term ``customs
officer'' means a customs inspector, a supervisory customs inspector, a
canine enforcement officer, or a supervisory canine enforcement
officer.
4. Subpart F is added to read as follows:
Subpart F--Child Labor
Sec.
551.601 Minimum age standards.
551.602 Responsibilities.
Subpart F--Child Labor
Sec. 551.601 Minimum age standards.
(a) 16-year minimum age. The Act, in section 3(l), sets a general
16-year minimum age, which applies to all employment subject to its
child labor provisions, with certain exceptions not applicable here.
(b) 18-year minimum age. The Act, in section 3(1), also sets an 18-
year minimum age with respect to employment in any occupation found and
declared by the Secretary of Labor to be particularly hazardous for the
employment of minors of such age or detrimental to their health or
well-being.
Sec. 551.602 Responsibilities.
(a) Agencies must remain cognizant of and abide by regulations and
orders published by the Secretary of Labor regarding the employment of
individuals under the age of 18 years. These regulations and orders
govern the minimum age at which persons under the age of 18 years may
be employed and the occupations in which they may be employed. Persons
under the age of 18 years must not be employed in occupations or engage
in work deemed hazardous by the Secretary of Labor.
(b) OPM will decide claims concerning the employment of persons
under the age of 18 years. Claims must be filed following the
procedures set forth in subpart G of this part.
5. Subpart G is added to read as follows:
Subpart G--FLSA Claims and Compliance
Sec.
551.701 Applicability.
551.702 Time limits.
551.703 Avenues of review.
551.704 Claimant's representative.
551.705 Form and content of an FLSA claim.
551.706 Responsibilities.
551.707 Withdrawal or denial of an FLSA claim.
551.708 Finality and effect of OPM FLSA claim decision.
551.709 Availability of information.
551.710 Where to file an FLSA claim with OPM.
Subpart G--FLSA Claims and Compliance
Sec. 551.701 Applicability.
(a) Applicable. This subpart applies to FLSA exemption status
determination claims, FLSA pay claims for minimum wage or overtime pay
for work performed under the Act, and claims
[[Page 45074]]
arising under the child labor provisions of the Act.
(b) Not applicable. This subpart does not apply to claims or
complaints arising under the equal pay provisions of the Act. The equal
pay provisions of the Act are administered by the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission.
Sec. 551.702 Time limits.
(a) Claims. A claimant may file an FLSA claim at any time under the
child labor provisions of the Act or challenging the correctness of his
or her FLSA exemption status determination. A claimant may also file an
FLSA claim concerning his or her entitlement to minimum wage or
overtime pay for work performed under the Act; however, time limits
apply to FLSA pay claims. All FLSA pay claims filed on or after June
30, 1994, are subject to a 2-year statute of limitations (3 years for
willful violations).
(b) Statute of limitations. An FLSA pay claim filed on or after
June 30, 1994, is subject to the statute of limitations contained in
the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947, as amended (section 255a of title 29,
United States Code), which imposes a 2-year statute of limitations,
except in cases of a willful violation where the statute of limitations
is 3 years. In deciding a claim, a determination must be made as to
whether the cause or basis of the claim was the result of a willful
violation on the part of the agency.
(c) Preserving the claim period. A claimant or a claimant's
designated representative may preserve the claim period by submitting a
written claim either to the agency employing the claimant during the
claim period or to OPM. The date the agency or OPM receives the claim
is the date that determines the period of possible entitlement to back
pay. The claimant is responsible for proving when the claim was
received by the agency or OPM. The claimant should retain documentation
to establish when the claim was received by the agency or OPM, such as
by filing the claim using certified, return receipt mail, or by
requesting that the agency or OPM provide written acknowledgment of
receipt of the claim. If a claim for back pay is established, the
claimant will be entitled to pay for a period of up to 2 years (3 years
for a willful violation) back from the date the claim was received.
Sec. 551.703 Avenues of review.
(a) Negotiated grievance procedure (NGP) as exclusive
administrative remedy. If at any time during the claim period, a
claimant was a member of a bargaining unit covered by a collective
bargaining agreement that did not specifically exclude matters under
the Act from the scope of the negotiated grievance procedure, the
claimant must use that negotiated grievance procedure as the exclusive
administrative remedy for all claims under the Act. There is no right
to further administrative review by the agency or by OPM. The remaining
sections in this subpart (that is, Secs. 551.704 through 551.711) do
not apply to such employees.
(b) Non-NGP administrative review by agency or OPM. A claimant may
file a claim with the agency employing the claimant during the claim
period or with OPM regarding matters arising under the Act if, during
the entire claim period, the claimant--
(1) Was not a member of a bargaining unit, or
(2) Was a member of a bargaining unit not covered by a collective
bargaining agreement, or
(3) Was a member of a bargaining unit covered by a collective
bargaining agreement that specifically excluded matters under the Act
from the scope of the negotiated grievance procedure.
(c) Judicial review. Nothing in this subpart limits the right of a
claimant to bring an action in an appropriate United States court. OPM
will not decide an FLSA claim that is in litigation.
Sec. 551.704 Claimant's representative.
A claimant may designate a representative to assist in preparing or
presenting a claim. The claimant must designate the representative in
writing. A representative has no right to participate in OPM fact-
finding. An agency may disallow a claimant's representative who is a
Federal employee in any of the following circumstances:
(a) When the individual's activities as a representative would
cause a conflict of interest or position;
(b) When the designated representative cannot be released from his
or her official duties because of the priority needs of the Government;
or
(c) When the release of the designated representative would give
rise to unreasonable costs to the Government.
Sec. 551.705 Form and content of an FLSA claim.
(a) FLSA claim filed with agency. An FLSA claim filed with an
agency should be made according to appropriate agency procedures. At
the discretion of the agency, the agency may forward the claim to OPM
on the claimant's behalf. The claimant is responsible for ensuring that
OPM receives all the information requested in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(b) FLSA claim filed with OPM. An FLSA claim filed with OPM must be
made in writing and must be signed by the claimant or the claimant's
representative. Relevant information may be submitted to OPM at any
time following the initial submission of a claim to OPM and prior to
OPM's decision on the claim. The claim must include the following:
(1) The identity of the claimant (see Sec. 551.706(a)(2) regarding
requesting confidentiality) and any designated representative, the
agency employing the claimant during the claim period, the position
(job title, series, and grade) occupied by the claimant during the
claim period, and the current mailing address, commercial telephone
number, and facsimile machine number, if available, of the claimant and
any designated representative;
(2) A description of the nature of the claim and the specific
issues or incidents giving rise to the claim, including the time period
covered by the claim;
(3) A description of actions taken by the claimant to resolve the
claim within the agency and the results of any actions taken;
(4) A copy of any relevant decision or written response by the
agency;
(5) Evidence available to the claimant or the claimant's designated
representative which supports the claim, including the identity,
commercial telephone number, and location of other individuals who may
be able to provide information relating to the claim;
(6) The remedy sought by the claimant;
(7) Evidence, if available, that the claim period was preserved in
accordance with Sec. 551.702. The date the claim is received by the
agency or OPM becomes the date on which the claim period is preserved;
(8) A statement from the claimant that he or she was or was not a
member of a collective bargaining unit at any time during the claim
period;
(9) If the claimant was a member of a bargaining unit, a statement
from the claimant that he or she was or was not covered by a negotiated
grievance procedure at any time during the claim period, and if
covered, whether that procedure specifically excluded the claim from
the scope of the negotiated grievance procedure;
(10) A statement from the claimant that he or she has or has not
filed an action in an appropriate United States court; and
(11) Any other information that the claimant believes OPM should
consider.
[[Page 45075]]
Sec. 551.706 Responsibilities.
(a) Claimant.-- (1) Providing information to OPM. For all FLSA
claims, the claimant or claimant's designated representative must
provide any additional information requested by OPM within 15 workdays
after the date of the request, unless OPM grants a longer period of
time in which to provide the requested information. The disclosure of
information by a claimant is voluntary. However, OPM may be unable to
render a decision on a claim without the information requested. In such
a case, the claim will be denied without further action being taken by
OPM. In the case of an FLSA pay claim, it is the claimant's
responsibility to provide evidence that the claim period was preserved
in accordance with Sec. 551.702 and of the liability of the agency and
the claimant's right to payment.
(2) Requesting confidentiality. If the claimant wishes the claim to
be treated confidentially, the claim must specifically request that the
identity of the claimant not be revealed to the agency. Witnesses or
other sources may also request confidentiality. OPM will make every
effort to conduct its investigation in a way to maintain
confidentiality. If OPM is unable to obtain sufficient information to
render a decision and preserve the requested confidentiality, OPM will
notify the claimant that the claim will be denied with no further
action by OPM unless the claimant voluntarily provides written
authorization for his or her name to be revealed.
(b) Agency. (1) In FLSA exemption status determination claims, the
burden of proof rests with the agency that asserts the FLSA exemption.
(2) The agency must provide the claimant with a written
acknowledgment of the date the claim was received.
(3) The agency must provide any information requested by OPM within
15 workdays after the date of the request, unless OPM grants a longer
period of time in which to provide the requested information.
Sec. 551.707 Withdrawal or denial of an FLSA claim.
(a) Withdrawal. A claimant or the claimant's representative may
withdraw a claim at any time prior to the issuance of an OPM FLSA claim
decision by providing written notice to the OPM office where the claim
was filed.
(b) Denial. OPM may, at its discretion, deny an FLSA claim if the
claimant or the claimant's designated representative fails to provide
requested information within 15 workdays after the date of the request,
unless OPM grants a longer period of time in which to provide the
requested information. OPM may, at its discretion, reconsider a denied
claim on a showing that circumstances beyond the claimant's control
prevented pursuit of the claim.
Sec. 551.708 Finality and effect of OPM FLSA claim decision.
OPM will send an FLSA claim decision to the claimant or the
claimant's representative and the agency. An FLSA claim decision made
by OPM is final. There is no further right of administrative appeal. At
its discretion, OPM may reconsider a decision upon a showing that
material information was not considered or there was a material error
of law, regulation, or fact in the original decision. A decision by OPM
under the Act is binding on all administrative, certifying, payroll,
disbursing, and accounting officials of agencies for which OPM
administers the Act. Upon receipt of a decision, the agency employing
the claimant during the claim period must take all necessary steps to
comply with the decision, including adherence with compliance
instructions provided with the decision. All compliance actions must be
completed within the time specified in the decision, unless an
extension of time is requested by the agency and granted by OPM. The
agency should identify all similarly situated current and, to the
extent possible, former employees, ensure that they are treated in a
manner consistent with the decision, and inform them in writing of
their right to file an FLSA claim with the agency or OPM.
Sec. 551.709 Availability of information.
(a) Except when the claimant has requested confidentiality, the
agency and the claimant must provide to each other a copy of all
information submitted with respect to the claim.
(b) When a claimant has not requested confidentiality, OPM will
disclose to the parties concerned the information contained in an FLSA
claim file. When a claimant has requested confidentiality, OPM will
delete any information identifying the claimant. For the purposes of
this subpart, the parties concerned means the claimant, any
representative designated in writing, and any representative of the
agency or OPM involved in the proceeding.
(c) Except when the claimant has requested confidentiality or the
disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy, OPM, upon a request which identifies the individual from whose
file the information is sought, will disclose the following information
from a claim file to a member of the public:
(1) Confirmation of the name of the individual from whose file the
information is sought and the names of the other parties concerned;
(2) The remedy sought;
(3) The status of the claim;
(4) The decision on the claim; and
(5) With the consent of the parties concerned, other reasonably
identified information from the file.
Sec. 551.710 Where to file an FLSA claim with OPM.
An FLSA claim must be filed with the OPM office serving the area
where the cause or basis of the claim occurred. Following are OPM
addresses and service areas.
OPM Atlanta Oversight Division
75 Spring Street SW., Suite 972, Atlanta, GA 30303-3109.
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia (except the Virginia locations listed
under the Washington, DC Oversight Division).
OPM Chicago Oversight Division
230 S. Dearborn Street, DPN 30-6, Chicago, IL 60604-1687.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, West Virginia,
Wisconsin.
OPM Dallas Oversight Division
1100 Commerce Street, Room 4C22, Dallas, TX 75242-9968.
Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Wyoming.
OPM Philadelphia Oversight Division
600 Arch Street, Room 3400, Philadelphia, PA 19106-1596.
Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland (except the Maryland
locations listed under the Washington, DC Oversight Division),
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, Vermont, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands.
OPM San Francisco Oversight Division
120 Howard Street, Room 760, San Francisco, CA 94105-0001.
Alaska, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Washington,
Pacific Ocean Area
OPM Washington, DC Oversight Division
1900 E Street NW., Room 7675, Washington, DC 20415-0001.
The District of Columbia
In Maryland: the counties of Charles, Montgomery, and Prince
George's.
In Virginia: the counties of Arlington, Fairfax, King George,
Loudoun, Prince William, and Stafford; the cities of Alexandria,
Fairfax, Falls Church, Manassas, and Manassas Park; and any overseas
area
[[Page 45076]]
not listed in the service area of another Oversight division.
[FR Doc. 97-22390 Filed 8-22-97; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325-01-P