HR Monthly Round Up - December 2023
Welcome, everyone! In the next few minutes, we’ll review the latest in HR news. Let’s get started.
On December 6, the U.S. Department of Labor released its semi-annual agenda which lists regulatory changes the agency is working on.
Included is a final rule about increasing the salary level for exempt employees. The rule is scheduled for April. If it proceeds as proposed, the federal minimum salary level would go from $684 to $1,059 per week. The salaries of highly compensated employees would increase as well. In addition, if the rule moves ahead as planned, salary levels would be updated every three years.
Also in the regulatory agenda, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced plans to update its posting regulations. The agency wants to clarify employer requirements that relate to electronic posting of the Know Your Rights poster, which must be posted by companies with 15 or more employees. The agency seeks to clear up confusion about posting requirements related to remote, telework, and hybrid workplaces. A proposed rule is scheduled to be released in March. If the proposed rule is released in spring, a final rule will likely take effect in late 2024 or early 2025, depending on public input and other considerations.
Switching gears to trucking, the First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on December 12 that motor carriers must pay over-the-road drivers for time spent in a sleeper berth beyond eight hours.
In an ongoing suit, a driver argued that being confined to the sleeper berth was restrictive and mainly benefited the carrier. In other words, time spent in the sleeper berth beyond eight hours should be considered work time and must be paid under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.
The carrier disagreed. However, the court sided with the driver. This means if a long-haul driver spends more than eight hours in a sleeper berth, carriers must pay the driver for the extra time spent there.
That’s all the HR news we have time for today. For more information on these topics, click the content links in the transcript below. Thanks for watching. See you next month!