Seriously – you need a new FLSA poster
There is a new version of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) poster and the Department of Labor (DOL) is making it clear that it’s required.
In a Field Assistance Bulletin published May 15, the DOL states that covered employers must follow posting requirements. It provides a link to the April 2023 version of the FLSA poster.
Rights of nursing mothers updated
The revised poster includes updated information relating to the rights of nursing mothers, who have the right to reasonable break time and a private space to express breast milk for a nursing child for up to a year after the child’s birth.
The Providing Urgent Maternal Protections for Nursing Mothers Act (PUMP Act), signed on December 29, 2022, expanded these rights to virtually all employees. Previously, they were only available to employees eligible for overtime.
The posting has been revised to indicate this. The section previously called Nursing Mothers is now called Pump at Work. In addition, because there are some exceptions for airline, railroad, and motorcoach carrier workers, it notes that some exceptions apply.
Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2023-2 outlines requirements
Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2023-2, Enforcement of Protections for Employees to Pump Breast Milk at Work, offers enforcement support and public guidance regarding the PUMP Act requirements, the DOL notes.
In addition, pointing out posting requirements and break and space time requirements, it states that workers are protected from retaliation.
There are remedies for workers whose rights are violated and experience economic loss or retaliation for asserting legal protections.
Another posting update on the way
While employers should waste no time in downloading and posting the April 2023 version of the FLSA poster, they may want to wait a little while before putting up a new all-in-one workplace poster.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is expected to revise its Know Your Rights posting after the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act takes effect on June 27. This would be a mandatory posting change for employers with 15 or more employees.
On the posting website for the FLSA poster, the DOL notes that employers may post the updated FLSA posting next to their current all-in-one poster and update the all-in-one poster after the EEOC update becomes available.
Key to remember: The DOL’s Field Assistance Bulletin makes it clear that previous versions of the poster are no longer compliant, and employers must display the April 2023 version of the FLSA poster. Employers who use all-in-one posters can post the 2023 FLSA poster next to their current poster and get a new all-in-one poster after the EEOC update becomes available after June 27.