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Deducting pay for poor work performance can destroy employees' exempt status

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) sets strict rules for who can be classified as an exempt employee (i.e., not entitled to overtime pay). One of those rules is the so-called salary-basis test.

Exempt employees must be paid the same salary regardless of the quality or quantity of their work in any given pay period. In other words, employers can’t make deductions from pay for poor work.

That’s true even when the compensation comes in the form of an incentive plan, as in the following case.

Recent case:
Amy Baden-Winterwood and several other employees of Life Time Fitness, a health club chain, received salaries as exempt administrative employees. They also worked under a compensation plan that set certain goals for selling club memberships.

The company called this a “bonus plan,” and made payments under the plan each pay period. In other words, the bonus payments were included in the employees’ regular salaries.

The trouble began when the company started making deductions from regular pay when some employees didn’t meet their performance and membership goals.

Baden-Winterwood and other employees sued, alleging the deductions destroyed their exempt status. Thus, they argued, those employees should be entitled to overtime payments for hours worked beyond 40 in any workweek.

The company argued that the deductions weren’t made because of the “quality or quantity” of the work.

The 6th Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed. It said the bonus plan clearly was tied to individual performance and therefore making the deductions violated the salary-basis test and destroyed the exemption. (Baden-Winterwood, et al., v. Life Time Fitness, No. 07-4437, 6th Cir., 2009)

Policy wording: Improper deductions

Employers must let exempt employees know that they should notify a supervisor or HR if they believe an improper deduction has been made. The Department of Labor suggests the notice read as follows:

“It is our policy to comply with the salary-basis requirements of the FLSA. Therefore, we prohibit all company managers from making any improper deductions from the salaries of exempt employees. We want employees to be aware of this policy and that the company does not allow deductions that violate the FLSA."

5 legitimate salary deductions for exempt workers
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