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Salaried Employee Rights

Avanika Mote













An employee who is paid a monthly salary has some set of rights, terms and conditions. These rights are regarding pay, working hours, leaves and breaks. Here, we try to shed some light on the salaried employee rights in an organization.
A salaried employee is considered to be exempt from the Fair Labor Standard Act, under one of the four main classifications, according to the US Government.
At the first level, are the "Executives" who can be defined as employees who have an authority over two or more workers. Above executives, there are administrative staff members (employees), like office workers and secretaries. Above these levels are those professionals who perform duties that require higher technical knowledge.
Exempt salaried employees are often termed as "white-collar" employees. Following is a set of rights mandatory for salaried employees.

Remuneration

According to the FLSA, an employee gets the same amount of pay irrespective of the number of working hours he worked for. This also includes employees who are paid weekly, monthly or bi-weekly. The amount in his paycheck cannot be changed just because his employee performance was poor in the last week.
Remember that a salary is usually a yearly figure (for example: US $50,000 per year). To get a weekly salary amount, this yearly amount is divided by the number of weeks in every year. Some employees may get paid on a bi-weekly basis or on monthly basis.

Paid Leave

Under the Family Medical Leave Act, salaried employees who work for minimum 1250 hours, for more than 12 months for an employer having an employee strength of 50+, are entitled for paid leaves.
Salaried employees can also have up to 12 weeks of unpaid leaves either for himself or for some family related issues. This employee has been guaranteed unpaid leave which means he cannot lose his job for taking a leave for three months either for himself or his family. For example, if a female employee is pregnant, she can take this time off from work.

Breaks

In many states, you may find that it is mandatory to give breaks to the salaried employees. Surprisingly, the salaried employees of the U.S Government are not given any breaks for having lunch or other short breaks.
Employers will have to figure out a break-time that they can provide to their employees, so that they can have lunch. Several companies in the US make salaried employees work for an extra half hour, so as to compensate for the unpaid breaks.

Other Salaried Employees Rights

There are many other issues that affect the rights of salaried employees like if an employee is disabled or has a medical need that allows special accommodation as a pre-requisite, or if the employee has some kind of religious requirement.
In such cases, he has been given certain protections under the Americans with Disabilities Act, Civil Rights Act of 1964 (with reference to accommodation for religious observation) or Occupational Safety and Health Administration Rules.
Most employees are unaware of the outcomes on their paydays when their employer mismanages the exempt vs non-exempt, and the hourly vs salary equations. Some of the most horrible problems in organizations are their methods of calculating salaried worker rights which include vacations and sick-leaves.
Employees need to have complete and clear information on what it means to have a designation of a salaried employee or an hourly employee. You should also understand the difference between "exempt" and "non-exempt" according to FLSA standards.
Salaried employee rights imply how the pay or remuneration will be handled. The major difference is the rights that they enjoy and the conditions are different when it is their payday.