By John E. Thompson
Recent U.S. Department of Labor news releases show something important about its current approach to enforcing the federal Fair Labor Standards Act:
As this reveals, the Department of Labor’s’s Wage and Hour Division is allocating substantial resources to broad-based regional, state, and local efforts centered around certain industries and employers. DOL probably feels it appropriate now to make full use of the hundreds of investigators it has hired in the last two years or so, viewing them as being experienced enough to take on these efforts.
The categories involved seem for now to be among those to which DOL has devoted heightened attention in the past, that is, agriculture, day-care/residential care, restaurants, garment manufacturing, guard services, healthcare, hotels and motels, janitorial services, and temporary workers. However, employers should not assume that the initiatives will be limited to these industries.
The Labor Department is no doubt scheduling selected employers for compliance audits even though no individual has made an FLSA complaint. And although the DOL sometimes undertakes “directed” audits to look into specific issues, management should not necessarily expect an investigator to limit his or her inquiries to these areas.
These efforts are also likely to include compliance reviews of at least some employers whom the labor Department has previously found to be in violation of the FLSA. And as the summaries above reveal, it is entirely possible (maybe even likely) that DOL will assert FLSA civil money penalties and/or will take more-serious action if these follow-on audits reveal additional shortcomings.
Employers should immediately confirm that they are fully in compliance with the FLSA and with all applicable state or local laws.
This was originally published on Fisher & Phillips’ Wage and Hour Laws blog.