Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Demystifying Equal Pay for Employers under Federal and California Regulations

Demystifying Equal Pay

Equal pay has been in the news often in recent months. Everyone from presidential candidates to Pope Francis and Jennifer Lawrence have been calling for pay equality. But what does it mean? And what does it mean for you, an employer?

The US Equal Pay Act was passed in 1963, but wage growth for women as been stagnant since the 1980s. In 2013, women in California earned a median of 84 cents for every dollar earned by a man. Federally the number was 79 cents for every dollar earned by a man.

The problem is even worse for most women of color: African American and Latina women in California made a median of just 64 cents and 44 cents, respectively, for every dollar earned by white men. California has the worst Latina gender wage gap in the nation.   

In order to help close the gap, the White House recently proposed increasing reporting to the EEOC. If the White House proposal become law, employers will have to report “W-2 earnings” and work hours for all employees on the EEO-1 reports starting in 2017.

The EEOC and OFCCP will use this pay data for targeted systemic pay investigations. The EEOC will publish pay data by industry and geography for employers to “benchmark” against.

California recently weighed in on the issue by passing the California Fair Pay Act. This Act differs from the Federal Equal Pay Act in the following ways:

  • Broadens the bands of comparison of positions:
    • Federal: Pay must be equal among employees in the same position
    • California: Pay must be equal among “substantially similar” employees when viewed as a composite of skill, effort, and responsibility

  • Broadens the geography:
    • Federal: Pay must be equal among employees in the same position in the same location
    • California: Compares employees across locations

  • Employers in California must explain “entire wage differentials,” meaning total compensation, not just base pay.

  • Employers in California will also be on the hook for attorneys’ fees for prevailing plaintiffs.

As an employer, how can you protect yourself against possible investigations and actions from the EEOC or California State?


Conduct a Pay Analysis

  1. Establish privilege- important that all data and findings be done under the umbrella of attorney-client privilege.
  2. Decide groupings for analysis
  3. Gather data to explain pay differences. Data to gather includes:
    1. Date of hire
    2. Date in position
    3. Time in grade
    4. Department
    5. Prior experience
    6. Education
    7. Salary at previous employer
    8. Starting salary
  4. If necessary, make equity adjustments

All this political and media exposure has led to the White House developing the “White House Equal Pay Pledge.” As of June 2016, 28 companies including Amazon, American Airlines, Dow Chemical, Gap Inc., Johnson & Johnson have signed the pledge.


Signatories pledge to conduct annual pay analysis across their entire workforce. The White House is seeking to achieve pay equality and pay transparency with public commitments from Corporate America.


Employers should develop the following best pay analysis practices:

  • Require supervisors and managers, who make decisions about compensation, to document the reasons employees are paid what they are paid

  • Create job descriptions, detail the skill required and responsibility given

  • Document seniority, merit, quantity and/or quality of work

  • Train supervisors and managers about the new law.


Lauren Sims is the author and a principal HR Consultant with eqHR Solutions.
When you require HR advice or help navigating the ever-changing landscape of California and Federal Employment Laws and Regulations, call us for a no obligation consultation.
eqHR Solutions is a leading human resources consulting firm providing tactical and strategic human resources support, plus ADP payroll product training, for all size businesses in Southern California and the San Francisco / Bay area.

Are you Putting your Exempt Employees Status in Jeopardy?

Deducting from an Exempt Employee’s Pay - When Can You Do it?



Most of us know that an exempt employee is someone who is paid on a salary basis, makes at least twice the minimum wage in California (currently $43,680 in California, going up federally to $47,476 on December 1) and performs exempt job duties that fall under the exempt job categories laid out by the Department of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) in California.


However, did you know that there are certain payroll practices that can put the exemption status of your exempt employees in jeopardy? Here are some things you should be careful of:


Deductions from Exempt Employees' Pay is not OK for:


  • Business Closures /Unavailability of Work
  • Safety Violations
  • Disciplinary Reasons
  • Arriving Late / Leaving Early
  • Sickness or Accident (unless company has bona-fide sick pay plan)
  • Jury Duty, Witness, Military Leave

Reducing an Exempt Employee's Pay (making them part-time) is only OK if:
  • Change is necessary and temporary
  • Employee still makes 2x the minimum wage


Managing Partial Exempt Employee's Day Absences:

  • Cannot dock from pay for partial day absences for illness or personal reasons
  • Deducting from time off banks is ok for partial day absences of four hours or more
  • If vacation, PTO, or sick are at zero or are insufficient the employee must be paid for full day
  
Example: An exempt employee works for two hours and only has four hours of paid leave available, four hours may be deducted from the leave bank and the employee would still need to be paid for the entire day
  
Example: An exempt employee works for two hours and has zero hours of paid leave available: the employee would need to be paid for the entire day


Managing Exempt Employees Absences for Illness:

  • If an exempt employee has a full day absence for illness the employee still must be paid for full day if time off balances are insufficient to cover the day.
  • If balances are at zero then the employee’s salary can be docked for the full day


Example: An exempt employee takes off eight hours due to illness and only has three hours of paid leave available: 3 hours may be deducted from the leave bank and the employee would still need to be paid for the entire day


Example: An exempt employee takes off eight hours due to illness and has zero hours of paid leave available: the employee can be docked for the full day absence


Strategies to stay compliant while preventing abuse from your exempt employees:
  • If exempt employee has insufficient hours in bank to cover a full day, require they take the full day off without pay
  • Require combination of vacation and sick time to cover absences
  • Allow negative balance in time off bank (beware on final paycheck- you are not allowed to deduct for negative vacation or PTO balances on the final paycheck)


Reminder - always add all new employment policy or procedure materials that you've implemented to your Employee Handbook!


Lauren Sims is the author and a principal HR Consultant with eqHR Solutions.
When you require HR advice or help navigating the ever-changing landscape of California and Federal Employment Laws and Regulations, call us for a no obligation consultation.
eqHR Solutions is a leading human resources consulting firm providing tactical and strategic human resources support, plus ADP payroll product training, for all size businesses in Southern California and the San Francisco / Bay area.