On May 17, 2016, the U.S. Department of Labor ("DOL") announced the final rule updating the requirements for employees to qualify for exemptions from the overtime requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA"). The final rule, which takes effect on December 1, 2016, represents a dramatic change from the existing rule.

Under the existing rule, which has been in effect since 2004, employees must be paid a minimum salary of $455 per week ($23,600 annually) to qualify for the "EAP" – executive, administrative, professional – exemptions from the FLSA's overtime requirements. Under the new final rule, the salary level will increase to $913 per week ($47,476 annually). Beginning January 1, 2020, the salary level will update automatically every three years to the 40th percentile of full-time salaried workers in the lowest-wage U.S. Census region. The DOL estimates that this figure will be $51,168 in 2020. However, the final rule will allow up to 10 percent of the salary level threshold to be met through the payment of non-discretionary bonuses, incentive pay, or commissions. In order for these payments to count towards the salary level, they must be made on at least a quarterly basis.

The final rule also updates the total annual compensation level above which Highly Compensated Employees (HCE) are ineligible for overtime. The new level is $134,004 per year, which is up from the current $100,000 per year. The HCE threshold will automatically increase every three years to the 90th percentile of full-time salaried workers nationally, which the DOL estimates will be $147,524 in 2020.

The final rule made no changes to the "duties" test for employees to qualify for the EAP exemptions. Some believed that the DOL would include in the final rule the quantitative test from the California Labor Code that an employee must spend more than one-half of his or her time performing exempt duties in order to qualify for the EAP exemptions, but the DOL did not incorporate this test into the final rule. The DOL stated that the updated salary level, coupled with the automatic updates to the new salary level, will serve as the most effective way of determining which employees should be considered exempt.

The final rule reflects that the DOL took into consideration concerns from the business community raised in response to the proposed rule issued in June 2015. The final rule reduced the proposed salary level from $50,440 to $47,476, lengthened the implementation period from 60 days to six months, and left the duties test unchanged. However, there is no sugar coating the fact that six months from now, employees must be paid a salary of more than double the current salary level test in order to qualify for the EAP exemptions. Employers will have to raise the salaries of exempt employees to meet the new salary level, or re-classify exempt salaried employees to nonexempt hourly and manage the overtime they work.

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