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You're promoted as 'manager'. Forget about overtime pay

Business Standard

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March 09, 2023

For four years beginning in 2014, Tiffany Palliser worked at Panera Bread in South Florida, making salads and operating the register for shifts that began at 5 am.

- NOAM SCHEIBER

You're promoted as 'manager'. Forget about overtime pay

Palliser estimates that she worked at least 50 hours a week on average. But she says she did not receive overtime pay.

The reason?

Panera officially considered her a manager and paid her an annual salary rather than on an hourly basis. Palliser said she was often told that "this is what you signed up for" by becoming an assistant manager. Federal law requires employers to pay time-and-a-half overtime to hourly workers after 40 hours, and to most salaried workers whose salary is below a certain amount, currently about $35,500 a year. Companies need not pay overtime to salaried employees who make above that amount if they are bona fide managers.

Many employers say managers who earn relatively modest salaries have genuine responsibility and opportunities to advance. The National Retail Federation has written that such management positions are "key steps on the ladder of professional success, especially for many individuals who do not have college degrees".

But according to a recent paper, many companies provide salaries just above the federal cutoff to frontline workers and mislabel them as managers to deny them overtime.

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