Tag: overpaid wages

Top Posts of 2019

Top Posts of 2019

As the year ends, we again review the most viewed New York Management Law Blog posts from this year. Did you miss any of the top posts of 2019?

These posts reflect some topics that most interested New York employers in 2019. Do they also suggest what will be top of mind in 2020?

Curious about last year? Click to see what posts made the list in 2018.

2020 New York Minimum Wage

Our annual post reminding employers of increases to both minimum wage and the salary threshold for overtime exemptions under state law remained a must-read.

Remember, these changes take effect on December 31, 2019, not January 1st. If you haven’t adjusted accordingly yet, now’s the time!

The required pay levels will continue to rise in the coming years. This post includes charts showing those planned increases.

Recovering Overpaid Wages in New York

Beyond addressing how much you have to pay them, New York also has strict rules about making deductions from employee compensation. Employers can withhold pay to recoup overpaid wages, but must satisfy detailed requirements to do so.

This post provides the basics of when and how employers can get their money back through payroll deductions. Don’t try it without this guidance. Even then, be cautious and seek professional assistance.

Readers were also quite interested in this more general review of the New York Wage Deduction Rules.

How Far Will New York Go?

2019 featured the extensive expansion of employee rights, and we expect more in 2020.

In addition to broader employment discrimination laws, New York imposed a statewide salary history ban. As of January 6, 2020, New York employers may not “seek, request, or require the wage or salary history from an applicant or current employee as a condition”:

  • to be interviewed,
  • of continuing to be considered for an offer of employment, or
  • of employment or promotion.

The State Legislature also passed legislation that would have permitted employees to use Paid Family Leave Benefits for bereavement leave. Governor Cuomo vetoed that law in 2019. But there are indications that the State will revisit the subject in 2020.

Workplace bullying was another item of notable interest among our readers. We wouldn’t be surprised to see New York add new protections in this area in the foreseeable future.

What’s Changing Under the FLSA?

The federal Fair Labor Standards Act governs minimum wage and overtime requirements throughout the United States.

In 2019, the U.S. Department of Labor finalized a rule that changes how some companies will calculate their employees’ overtime pay. The rule takes effect on January 15, 2020. It will generally act to decrease overtime rates.

The U.S. DOL also addressed who qualifies for exemptions from overtime pay in the first place. Beginning January 1, 2020, the weekly salary requirement for the FLSA administrative, executive, and professional exemptions will increase from $455 to $684. However, this probably won’t change much in New York, where the exemption threshold is already higher.

Employers Regain Control Over Company Email Use

As in recent years, the National Labor Relations Board has issued several significant decisions at year-end. Our readers have been most interested in this one about whether employees have the right to use company email for nonwork purposes.

For five years, most non-supervisory employees at private companies had that right. Now, most don’t.

Find out more about why the NLRB reinstated employer control over company property here.

Don’t Stop at the Top Posts of 2019!

I hope you find it helpful to look back at what happened last year, but you should also look forward. For some of the reasons stated above, and others, 2020 could be another big year in employment law. Please continue to follow the New York Management Law Blog for updates.

One great way to keep up with emerging topics in New York labor and employment law is to subscribe to our monthly email newsletter. If you want more frequent news and insights, be sure to follow us on LinkedIn!

See you in 2020!

Overpaid Wages Recovery

Recovering Overpaid Wages in New York

New York has restrictive prohibitions against making deductions from employees’ pay. For example, employers cannot deduct money from paychecks to recover the cost of damage caused by employees, cash register shortages, or even theft. However, special rules allow employers to recoup overpaid wages in some situations. But employers must comply with a series of procedural requirements to do so. These rules apply to all non-governmental businesses in New York.

Overpayment of Wages Due to Mathematical or Other Clerical Error

New York law only permits paycheck deductions for overpaid wages that result from “a mathematical or other clerical error by the employer.”

Surprisingly, the extensive New York State Department of Labor rules on deductions for overpayments don’t further explain what “mathematical or other clerical error” means. Many examples are obvious. If payroll misinterpreted handwritten numbers or added or left off a digit, then it’s almost certainly a clerical error. But is it a clerical error if the company included overtime pay for an employee who wasn’t entitled to it?

What’s most likely not covered is any situation where the company knowingly paid an employee one amount and later decided they should have paid less. Employers can’t reduce pay after the fact, such as based on subsequent observations of performance or in light of business losses incurred by the employee.

Interestingly, the law also might not allow for recovery where wages were overpaid due to a mathematical or other clerical error by the employee. Or even outright employee dishonesty or fraud, such as the employee overstating their time worked through the company’s timekeeping system. Of course, the company can still discipline the employee and even ask for the money back or sue them, but they couldn’t lawfully deduct it from any future wages earned.

Rules for Overpaid Wage Recovery

Assuming recovery is allowed because the overpayment was due to a mathematical or other clerical error by the employer, the company must establish and follow specific procedures to make the recovery legal. Failure to satisfy all requirements could render the wage recoupment unlawful. That would subject the employer to civil and potentially even criminal penalties.

Timing, Duration, and Frequency

Employers can only use paycheck deductions to recover overpayments made in the past 8 weeks.

Only one recoupment deduction can be made per pay period. If necessary, the deductions can last for up to 6 years from the original overpayment to recover up to the full amount overpaid.

Method of Recovery

Employers can recover overpayments through wage deduction or by a separate transaction, as long as they satisfy all other requirements.

Periodic Amount of Recovery

If the overpayment was less than or equal to the net wages earned after other permissible deductions in the next wage payment, the employer can recover the entire amount in that next wage payment.

However, if the overpayment exceeds the net wages after other permissible deductions in the next wage payment, then the recovery may not exceed 12.5% of the gross wages earned in that wage payment. And, in this case, the recoupment deduction cannot reduce the employee’s effective hourly wage below the minimum wage.

Notice of Intent

Before making any recovery of overpaid wages, the employer must notify the employee. The notice must contain the total amount overpaid, broken down by pay period. It must also show the total amount of deductions intended and the date and amount of each deduction to recover the overpayment.

The notice must also inform the employee that they can contest the overpayment. This includes providing the deadline for filing a dispute and the relevant procedure for doing so.

If the entire amount will be recovered in the next paycheck, then the employer must notify the employee at least 3 days before the deduction. In all other cases, the employer must issue this notice at least 3 weeks before the deduction can start.

All notices may be in writing or electronic means, such as email. Employers must use “ordinary language readily understood.” Text can be no smaller than 12-point font.

Dispute Procedure

As mentioned in the notice requirement, the employer must establish a procedure for employees to contest a proposed recovery of overpaid wages.

Except where the employer proposes to make the full recovery in the next paycheck, the employee has one week from receipt of the notice of intent to contest any aspect of the recoupment. Then the employer must reply within one week of receiving the employee’s response.

The employer’s reply to the employee’s response must address all issues that the employee raised. If the employer disagrees with any point the employee raised, the employer must explain why it disagrees. The company must allow the opportunity for a meeting with the employee within a week to discuss any remaining disagreements.

Ultimately, the company must give written notice of its final determination. Any deduction to recover overpaid wages may not begin until at least 3 weeks after the final decision.

If the employer can make the recovery entirely in the next pay period, then the timing for this procedure changes. The employee only has 2 days to respond to the company’s notice of intent. Doing so will postpone the deduction during the above process.

Companies that recovery overpaid wages without following these procedural requirements will create a presumption that any challenged deduction was impermissible.

Be Cautious in Recovering Wage Overpayments

Having the option of recovery wage overpayments through payroll deductions is appealing. And this can work out beneficially for employers. However, missing any components of the procedural requirements could get companies in trouble.

New York law does not look favorably on employers who make improper deductions from employee wages. Even a single complaint from one employee could prompt a broad investigation from the state’s Department of Labor. The NYSDOL has jurisdiction over an extensive arrange of wage and hour requirements. Before tempting this fate, employers should ensure they’re proceeding lawfully. Working with an attorney familiar with New York labor and employment laws is the best way to do this.

 

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