201.
Short title.
202.
Congressional finding and
declaration of policy.
203.
Definitions.
204.
Administration.
(a) Creation of Wage and Hour
Division in Department of Labor;
Administrator.
(b) Appointment, selection,
classification, and promotion of
employees by Administrator.
(c) Principal office of
Administrator; jurisdiction.
(d) Biennial report to Congress;
studies of exemptions to hour and
wage provisions and means to prevent
curtailment of employment
opportunities.
(e) Study of effects of foreign
production on unemployment; report
to President and Congress.
(f) Employees of Library of
Congress; administration of
provisions by Office of Personnel
Management.
205. Special industry
committees for American Samoa.
(a) Establishment; residents as
members of committees.
(b) Appointment of committee
without regard to other laws
pertaining to the appointment and
compensation of employees of the
United States; composition of
committees.
(c) Quorum; compensation;
employees.
(d) Submission of data to
committees.
206. Minimum wage.
(a) Employees engaged in commerce;
home workers in Puerto Rico and
Virgin Islands; employees in
American Samoa; seamen on American
vessels; agricultural employees.
(b) Additional applicability to
employees pursuant to subsequent
amendatory provisions.
(c) Repealed.
(d) Prohibition of sex
discrimination.
(e) Employees of employers
providing contract services to
United States.
(f) Employees in domestic service.
(g) Newly hired employees who are
less than 20 years old.
207. Maximum hours.
(a) Employees engaged in interstate
commerce; additional applicability
to employees pursuant to subsequent
amendatory provisions.
(b) Employment pursuant to
collective bargaining agreement;
employment by independently owned
and controlled local enterprise
engaged in distribution of petroleum
products.
(c), (d) Repealed.
(e) "Regular rate" defined.
(f) Employment necessitating
irregular hours of work.
(g) Employment at piece rates.
(h) Credit toward minimum wage or
overtime compensation of amounts
excluded from regular rate.
(i) Employment by retail or service
establishment.
(j) Employment in hospital or
establishment engaged in care of
sick, aged, or mentally ill.
(k) Employment by public agency
engaged in fire protection or law
enforcement activities.
(l) Employment in domestic service
in one or more households.
(m) Employment in tobacco industry.
(n) Employment by street, suburban,
or interurban electric railway, or
local trolley or motorbus carrier.
(o) Compensatory time.
(p) Special detail work for fire
protection and law enforcement
employees; occasional or sporadic
employment; substitution.
(q) Maximum hour exemption for
employees receiving remedial
education.
208. Wage orders in American
Samoa.
(a) Congressional policy;
recommendation of wage rate by
industry committee.
(b) Investigation of industry
condition by industry committee;
matters considered.
(c) Classifications within
industry; recommendation of wage
rate.
(d) Report by industry committee;
publication in Federal Register.
(e) Orders.
(f) Due notice of hearings by
publication in Federal Register.
209. Attendance of witnesses.
210. Court review of wage
orders in Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands.
211. Collection of data.
(a) Investigations and inspections.
(b) State and local agencies and
employees.
(c) Records.
(d) Homework regulations.
212. Child labor provisions.
(a) Restrictions on shipment of
goods; prosecution; conviction.
(b) Investigations and inspections.
(c) Oppressive child labor.
(d) Proof of age.
213. Exemptions.
(a) Minimum wage and maximum hour
requirements.
(b) Maximum hour requirements.
(c) Child labor requirements.
(d) Delivery of newspapers and
wreathmaking.
(e) Maximum hour requirements and
minimum wage employees.
(f) Employment in foreign countries
and certain United States
territories.
(g) Certain employment in retail or
service establishments, agriculture.
(h) Maximum hour requirement:
fourteen workweek limitation.
(i) Cotton ginning.
(j) Processing of sugar beets,
sugar beet molasses, or sugar cane.
214. Employment under special
certificates.
(a) Learners, apprentices,
messengers.
(b) Students.
(c) Handicapped workers.
(d) Employment by schools.
215. Prohibited acts; prima
facie evidence.
216. Penalties.
(a) Fines and imprisonment.
(b) Damages; right of action;
attorney's fees and costs;
termination of right of action.
(c) Payment of wages and
compensation; waiver of claims;
actions by the Secretary; limitation
of actions.
(d) Savings provisions.
(e) Civil penalties for child labor
violations.
216a. Repealed.
216b. Liability for overtime
work performed prior to July 20,
1949.
217. Injunction proceedings.
218. Relation to other laws.
219. Separability.
Sec. 201. Short
title
This chapter may be cited as the
"Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938".
Sec. 202.
Congressional finding and
declaration of policy
(a) The Congress finds that the
existence, in industries engaged in
commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce, of labor
conditions detrimental to the
maintenance of the minimum standard
of living necessary for health,
efficiency, and general well-being
of workers
(1) causes commerce and the
channels and instrumentalities of
commerce to be used to spread and
perpetuate such labor conditions
among the workers of the several
States;
(2) burdens commerce and the free
flow of goods in commerce;
(3) constitutes an unfair method of
competition in commerce;
(4) leads to labor disputes
burdening and obstructing commerce
and the free flow of goods in
commerce; and
(5) interferes with the orderly and
fair marketing of goods in commerce.
That Congress further finds that the
employment of persons in domestic
service in households affects
commerce.
(b) It is declared to be the policy
of this chapter, through the
exercise by Congress of its power to
regulate commerce among the several
States and with foreign nations, to
correct and as rapidly as
practicable to eliminate the
conditions above referred to in such
industries without substantially
curtailing employment or earning
power.
Sec. 203.
Definitions
As used in this chapter:
(a) "Person" means an individual,
partnership, association,
corporation, business trust, legal
representative, or any organized
group of persons.
(b) "Commerce" means trade,
commerce, transportation,
transmission, or communication among
the several States or between any
State and any place outside thereof.
(c) "State" means any State of the
United States or the District of
Columbia or any Territory or
possession of the United States.
(d) "Employer" includes any person
acting directly or indirectly in the
interest of an employer in relation
to an employee and includes a public
agency, but does not include any
labor organization (other than when
acting as an employer) or anyone
acting in the capacity of officer or
agent of such labor organization.
(e)
(1) Except as provided in
paragraphs (2), (3), and (4), the
term "employee" means any individual
employed by an employer.
(2) In the case of an individual
employed by a public agency, such
term means:
(A) any individual employed by the
Government of the United States:
(i) as a civilian in the military
departments (as defined in section
102 of title 5),
(ii) in any executive agency (as
defined in section 105 of such
title),
(iii) in any unit of the judicial
branch of the Government which has
positions in the competitive
service,
(iv) in a nonappropriated fund
instrumentality under the
jurisdiction of the Armed Forces,
(v) in the Library of Congress,
or
(vi) the [1] Government Printing
Office;
(B) any individual employed by the
United States Postal Service or the
Postal Rate Commission; and
(C) any individual employed by a
State, political subdivision of a
State, or an interstate governmental
agency, other than such an
individual:
(i) who is not subject to the
civil service laws of the State,
political subdivision, or agency
which employs him; and
(ii) who:
(I) holds a public elective
office of that State, political
subdivision, or agency,
(II) is selected by the holder
of such an office to be a member of
his personal staff,
(III) is appointed by such an
officeholder to serve on a
policymaking level,
(IV) is an immediate adviser to
such an officeholder with respect to
the constitutional or legal powers
of his office, or
(V) is an employee in the
legislative branch or legislative
body of that State, political
subdivision, or agency and is not
employed by the legislative library
of such State, political
subdivision, or agency.
(3) For purposes of subsection (u)
of this section, such term does not
include any individual employed by
an employer engaged in agriculture
if such individual is the parent,
spouse, child, or other member of
the employer's immediate family.
(4)
(A) The term "employee" does not
include any individual who
volunteers to perform services for a
public agency which is a State, a
political subdivision of a State, or
an interstate governmental agency,
if:
(i) the individual receives no
compensation or is paid expenses,
reasonable benefits, or a nominal
fee to perform the services for
which the individual volunteered;
and
(ii) such services are not the
same type of services which the
individual is employed to perform
for such public agency.
(B) An employee of a public agency
which is a State, political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency may
volunteer to perform services for
any other State, political
subdivision, or interstate
governmental agency, including a
State, political subdivision or
agency with which the employing
State, political subdivision, or
agency has a mutual aid agreement.
(5) The term "employee" does not
include individuals who volunteer
their services solely for
humanitarian purposes to private
non-profit food banks and who
receive from the food banks
groceries.
(f) "Agriculture" includes farming
in all its branches and among other
things includes the cultivation and
tillage of the soil, dairying, the
production, cultivation, growing,
and harvesting of any agricultural
or horticultural commodities
(including commodities defined as
agricultural commodities in section
1141j (g) of title 12), the raising
of livestock, bees, fur-bearing
animals, or poultry, and any
practices (including any forestry or
lumbering operations) performed by a
farmer or on a farm as an incident
to or in conjunction with such
farming operations, including
preparation for market, delivery to
storage or to market or to carriers
for transportation to market.
(g) "Employ" includes to suffer or
permit to work.
(h) "Industry" means a trade,
business, industry, or other
activity, or branch or group
thereof, in which individuals are
gainfully employed.
(i) "Goods" means goods (including
ships and marine equipment), wares,
products, commodities, merchandise,
or articles or subjects of commerce
of any character, or any part or
ingredient thereof, but does not
include goods after their delivery
into the actual physical possession
of the ultimate consumer thereof
other than a producer, manufacturer,
or processor thereof.
(j) "Produced" means produced,
manufactured, mined, handled, or in
any other manner worked on in any
State; and for the purposes of this
chapter an employee shall be deemed
to have been engaged in the
production of goods if such employee
was employed in producing,
manufacturing, mining, handling,
transporting, or in any other manner
working on such goods, or in any
closely related process or
occupation directly essential to the
production thereof, in any State.
(k) "Sale" or "sell" includes any
sale, exchange, contract to sell,
consignment for sale, shipment for
sale, or other disposition.
(l) "Oppressive child labor" means a
condition of employment under which
(1) any employee under the age of
sixteen years is employed by an
employer (other than a parent or a
person standing in place of a parent
employing his own child or a child
in his custody under the age of
sixteen years in an occupation other
than manufacturing or mining or an
occupation found by the Secretary of
Labor to be particularly hazardous
for the employment of children
between the ages of sixteen and
eighteen years or detrimental to
their health or well-being) in any
occupation, or
(2) any employee between the ages
of sixteen and eighteen years is
employed by an employer in any
occupation which the Secretary of
Labor shall find and by order
declare to be particularly hazardous
for the employment of children
between such ages or detrimental to
their health or well-being; but
oppressive child labor shall not be
deemed to exist by virtue of the
employment in any occupation of any
person with respect to whom the
employer shall have on file an
unexpired certificate issued and
held pursuant to regulations of the
Secretary of Labor certifying that
such person is above the oppressive
child-labor age. The Secretary of
Labor shall provide by regulation or
by order that the employment of
employees between the ages of
fourteen and sixteen years in
occupations other than manufacturing
and mining shall not be deemed to
constitute oppressive child labor if
and to the extent that the Secretary
of Labor determines that such
employment is confined to periods
which will not interfere with their
schooling and to conditions which
will not interfere with their health
and well-being.
(m) "Wage" paid to any employee
includes the reasonable cost, as
determined by the Administrator, to
the employer of furnishing such
employee with board, lodging, or
other facilities, if such board,
lodging or other facilities are
customarily furnished by such
employer to his employees: Provided,
That the cost of board, lodging, or
other facilities shall not be
included as a part of the wage paid
to any employee to the extent it is
excluded therefrom under the terms
of a bona fide collective-bargaining
agreement applicable to the
particular employee: Provided
further, That the Secretary is
authorized to determine the fair
value of such board, lodging, or
other facilities for defined classes
of employees and in defined areas,
based on average cost to the
employer or to groups of employers
similarly situated, or average value
to groups of employees, or other
appropriate measures of fair value.
Such evaluations, where applicable
and pertinent, shall be used in lieu
of actual measure of cost in
determining the wage paid to any
employee. In determining the wage an
employer is required to pay a tipped
employee, the amount paid such
employee by the employee's employer
shall be an amount equal to:
(1) the cash wage paid such
employee which for purposes of such
determination shall be not less than
the cash wage required to be paid
such an employee on August 20, 1996;
and
(2) an additional amount on account
of the tips received by such
employee which amount is equal to
the difference between the wage
specified in paragraph (1) and the
wage in effect under section 206
(a)(1) of this title.
The additional amount on account of
tips may not exceed the value of the
tips actually received by an
employee. The preceding 2 sentences
shall not apply with respect to any
tipped employee unless such employee
has been informed by the employer of
the provisions of this subsection,
and all tips received by such
employee have been retained by the
employee, except that this
subsection shall not be construed to
prohibit the pooling of tips among
employees who customarily and
regularly receive tips.
(n) "Resale" shall not include the
sale of goods to be used in
residential or farm building
construction, repair, or
maintenance: Provided, That the sale
is recognized as a bona fide retail
sale in the industry.
(o) Hours Worked.: In determining
for the purposes of sections 206 and
207 of this title the hours for
which an employee is employed, there
shall be excluded any time spent in
changing clothes or washing at the
beginning or end of each workday
which was excluded from measured
working time during the week
involved by the express terms of or
by custom or practice under a bona
fide collective-bargaining agreement
applicable to the particular
employee.
(p) "American vessel" includes any
vessel which is documented or
numbered under the laws of the
United States.
(q) "Secretary" means the Secretary
of Labor.
(r)
(1) "Enterprise" means the related
activities performed (either through
unified operation or common control)
by any person or persons for a
common business purpose, and
includes all such activities whether
performed in one or more
establishments or by one or more
corporate or other organizational
units including departments of an
establishment operated through
leasing arrangements, but shall not
include the related activities
performed for such enterprise by an
independent contractor. Within the
meaning of this subsection, a retail
or service establishment which is
under independent ownership shall
not be deemed to be so operated or
controlled as to be other than a
separate and distinct enterprise by
reason of any arrangement, which
includes, but is not necessarily
limited to, an agreement,
(A) that it will sell, or sell
only, certain goods specified by a
particular manufacturer,
distributor, or advertiser, or
(B) that it will join with other
such establishments in the same
industry for the purpose of
collective purchasing, or
(C) that it will have the
exclusive right to sell the goods or
use the brand name of a
manufacturer, distributor, or
advertiser within a specified area,
or by reason of the fact that it
occupies premises leased to it by a
person who also leases premises to
other retail or service
establishments.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (1),
the activities performed by any
person or persons:
(A) in connection with the
operation of a hospital, an
institution primarily engaged in the
care of the sick, the aged, the
mentally ill or defective who reside
on the premises of such institution,
a school for mentally or physically
handicapped or gifted children, a
preschool, elementary or secondary
school, or an institution of higher
education (regardless of whether or
not such hospital, institution, or
school is operated for profit or not
for profit), or
(B) in connection with the
operation of a street, suburban or
interurban electric railway, or
local trolley or motorbus carrier,
if the rates and services of such
railway or carrier are subject to
regulation by a State or local
agency (regardless of whether or not
such railway or carrier is public or
private or operated for profit or
not for profit), or
(C) in connection with the
activities of a public agency,
shall be deemed to be activities
performed for a business purpose.
(s)
(1) "Enterprise engaged in commerce
or in the production of goods for
commerce" means an enterprise that:
(A)
(i) has employees engaged in
commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce, or that has
employees handling, selling, or
otherwise working on goods or
materials that have been moved in or
produced for commerce by any person;
and
(ii) is an enterprise whose
annual gross volume of sales made or
business done is not less than
$500,000 (exclusive of excise taxes
at the retail level that are
separately stated);
(B) is engaged in the operation of
a hospital, an institution primarily
engaged in the care of the sick, the
aged, or the mentally ill or
defective who reside on the premises
of such institution, a school for
mentally or physically handicapped
or gifted children, a preschool,
elementary or secondary school, or
an institution of higher education
(regardless of whether or not such
hospital, institution, or school is
public or private or operated for
profit or not for profit); or
(C) is an activity of a public
agency.
(2) Any establishment that has as
its only regular employees the owner
thereof or the parent, spouse,
child, or other member of the
immediate family of such owner shall
not be considered to be an
enterprise engaged in commerce or in
the production of goods for commerce
or a part of such an enterprise. The
sales of such an establishment shall
not be included for the purpose of
determining the annual gross volume
of sales of any enterprise for the
purpose of this subsection.
(t) "Tipped employee" means any
employee engaged in an occupation in
which he customarily and regularly
receives more than $30 a month in
tips.
(u) "Man-day" means any day during
which an employee performs any
agricultural labor for not less than
one hour.
(v) "Elementary school" means a day
or residential school which provides
elementary education, as determined
under State law.
(w) "Secondary school" means a day
or residential school which provides
secondary education, as determined
under State law.
(x) "Public agency" means the
Government of the United States; the
government of a State or political
subdivision thereof; any agency of
the United States (including the
United States Postal Service and
Postal Rate Commission), a State, or
a political subdivision of a State;
or any interstate governmental
agency.
(y) "Employee in fire protection
activities" means an employee,
including a firefighter, paramedic,
emergency medical technician, rescue
worker, ambulance personnel, or
hazardous materials worker, who:
(1) is trained in fire suppression,
has the legal authority and
responsibility to engage in fire
suppression, and is employed by a
fire department of a municipality,
county, fire district, or State; and
(2) is engaged in the prevention,
control, and extinguishment of fires
or response to emergency situations
where life, property, or the
environment is at risk.
Sec. 204.
Administration
(a) Creation of Wage and Hour
Division in Department of Labor;
Administrator
There is created in the Department
of Labor a Wage and Hour Division
which shall be under the direction
of an Administrator, to be known as
the Administrator of the Wage and
Hour Division (in this chapter
referred to as the "Administrator").
The Administrator shall be appointed
by the President, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate.
(b) Appointment, selection,
classification, and promotion of
employees by Administrator
The Administrator may, subject to
the civil-service laws, appoint such
employees as he deems necessary to
carry out his functions and duties
under this chapter and shall fix
their compensation in accordance
with chapter 51 and subchapter III
of chapter 53 of title 5. The
Administrator may establish and
utilize such regional, local, or
other agencies, and utilize such
voluntary and uncompensated
services, as may from time to time
be needed. Attorneys appointed under
this section may appear for and
represent the Administrator in any
litigation, but all such litigation
shall be subject to the direction
and control of the Attorney General.
In the appointment, selection,
classification, and promotion of
officers and employees of the
Administrator, no political test or
qualification shall be permitted or
given consideration, but all such
appointments and promotions shall be
given and made on the basis of merit
and efficiency.
(c) Principal office of
Administrator; jurisdiction
The principal office of the
Administrator shall be in the
District of Columbia, but he or his
duly authorized representative may
exercise any or all of his powers in
any place.
(d) Biennial report to Congress;
studies of exemptions to hour and
wage provisions and means to prevent
curtailment of employment
opportunities
(1) The Secretary shall submit
biennially in January a report to
the Congress covering his activities
for the preceding two years and
including such information, data,
and recommendations for further
legislation in connection with the
matters covered by this chapter as
he may find advisable. Such report
shall contain an evaluation and
appraisal by the Secretary of the
minimum wages and overtime coverage
established by this chapter,
together with his recommendations to
the Congress. In making such
evaluation and appraisal, the
Secretary shall take into
consideration any changes which may
have occurred in the cost of living
and in productivity and the level of
wages in manufacturing, the ability
of employers to absorb wage
increases, and such other factors as
he may deem pertinent. Such report
shall also include a summary of the
special certificates issued under
section 214 (b) of this title.
(2) The Secretary shall conduct
studies on the justification or lack
thereof for each of the special
exemptions set forth in section 213
of this title, and the extent to
which such exemptions apply to
employees of establishments
described in subsection (g) of such
section and the economic effects of
the application of such exemptions
to such employees. The Secretary
shall submit a report of his
findings and recommendations to the
Congress with respect to the studies
conducted under this paragraph not
later than January 1, 1976.
(3) The Secretary shall conduct a
continuing study on means to prevent
curtailment of employment
opportunities for manpower groups
which have had historically high
incidences of unemployment (such as
disadvantaged minorities, youth,
elderly, and such other groups as
the Secretary may designate). The
first report of the results of such
study shall be transmitted to the
Congress not later than one year
after the effective date of the Fair
Labor Standards Amendments of 1974.
Subsequent reports on such study
shall be transmitted to the Congress
at two-year intervals after such
effective date. Each such report
shall include suggestions respecting
the Secretary's authority under
section 214 of this title.
(e) Study of effects of foreign
production on unemployment; report
to President and Congress
Whenever the Secretary has reason to
believe that in any industry under
this chapter the competition of
foreign producers in United States
markets or in markets abroad, or
both, has resulted, or is likely to
result, in increased unemployment in
the United States, he shall
undertake an investigation to gain
full information with respect to the
matter. If he determines such
increased unemployment has in fact
resulted, or is in fact likely to
result, from such competition, he
shall make a full and complete
report of his findings and
determinations to the President and
to the Congress: Provided, That he
may also include in such report
information on the increased
employment resulting from additional
exports in any industry under this
chapter as he may determine to be
pertinent to such report.
(f) Employees of Library of
Congress; administration of
provisions by Office of Personnel
Management
The Secretary is authorized to enter
into an agreement with the Librarian
of Congress with respect to
individuals employed in the Library
of Congress to provide for the
carrying out of the Secretary's
functions under this chapter with
respect to such individuals.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of this chapter, or any other law,
the Director of the Office of
Personnel Management is authorized
to administer the provisions of this
chapter with respect to any
individual employed by the United
States (other than an individual
employed in the Library of Congress,
United States Postal Service, Postal
Rate Commission, or the Tennessee
Valley Authority). Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to
affect the right of an employee to
bring an action for unpaid minimum
wages, or unpaid overtime
compensation, and liquidated damages
under section 216 (b) of this title.
Sec. 205. Special
industry committees for American
Samoa
(a) Establishment; residents as
members of committees
The Administrator shall as soon as
practicable appoint a special
industry committee to recommend the
minimum rate or rates of wages to be
paid under section 206 of this title
to employees in American Samoa
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce or
employed in any enterprise engaged
in commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce or the
Administrator may appoint separate
industry committees to recommend the
minimum rate or rates of wages to be
paid under said section to employees
therein engaged in commerce or in
the production of goods for commerce
or employed in any enterprise
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce in
particular industries. An industry
committee appointed under this
subsection shall be composed of
residents of American Samoa where
the employees with respect to whom
such committee was appointed are
employed and residents of the United
States outside of American Samoa. In
determining the minimum rate or
rates of wages to be paid, and in
determining classifications, such
industry committees shall be subject
to the provisions of section 208 of
this title.
(b) Appointment of committee without
regard to other laws pertaining to
the appointment and compensation of
employees of the United States;
composition of committees
An industry committee shall be
appointed by the Administrator
without regard to any other
provisions of law regarding the
appointment and compensation of
employees of the United States. It
shall include a number of
disinterested persons representing
the public, one of whom the
Administrator shall designate as
chairman, a like number of persons
representing employees in the
industry, and a like number
representing employers in the
industry. In the appointment of the
persons representing each group, the
Administrator shall give due regard
to the geographical regions in which
the industry is carried on.
(c) Quorum; compensation; employees
Two-thirds of the members of an
industry committee shall constitute
a quorum, and the decision of the
committee shall require a vote of
not less than a majority of all its
members. Members of an industry
committee shall receive as
compensation for their services a
reasonable per diem, which the
Administrator shall by rules and
regulations prescribe, for each day
actually spent in the work of the
committee, and shall in addition be
reimbursed for their necessary
traveling and other expenses. The
Administrator shall furnish the
committee with adequate legal,
stenographic, clerical, and other
assistance, and shall by rules and
regulations prescribe the procedure
to be followed by the committee.
(d) Submission of data to committees
The Administrator shall submit to an
industry committee from time to time
such data as he may have available
on the matters referred to it, and
shall cause to be brought before it
in connection with such matters any
witnesses whom he deems material. An
industry committee may summon other
witnesses or call upon the
Administrator to furnish additional
information to aid it in its
deliberations.
Sec. 206. Minimum
wage
(a) Employees engaged in
commerce; home workers in Puerto
Rico and Virgin Islands; employees
in American Samoa; seamen on
American vessels; agricultural
employees
Every employer shall pay to each of
his employees who in any workweek is
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce, or
is employed in an enterprise engaged
in commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce, wages at the
following rates:
(1) except as otherwise provided in
this section, not less than $4.25 an
hour during the period ending on
September 30, 1996, not less than
$4.75 an hour during the year
beginning on October 1, 1996, and
not less than $5.15 an hour
beginning September 1, 1997;
(2) if such employee is a home
worker in Puerto Rico or the Virgin
Islands, not less than the minimum
piece rate prescribed by regulation
or order; or, if no such minimum
piece rate is in effect, any piece
rate adopted by such employer which
shall yield, to the proportion or
class of employees prescribed by
regulation or order, not less than
the applicable minimum hourly wage
rate. Such minimum piece rates or
employer piece rates shall be
commensurate with, and shall be paid
in lieu of, the minimum hourly wage
rate applicable under the provisions
of this section. The Administrator,
or his authorized representative,
shall have power to make such
regulations or orders as are
necessary or appropriate to carry
out any of the provisions of this
paragraph, including the power
without limiting the generality of
the foregoing, to define any
operation or occupation which is
performed by such home work
employees in Puerto Rico or the
Virgin Islands; to establish minimum
piece rates for any operation or
occupation so defined; to prescribe
the method and procedure for
ascertaining and promulgating
minimum piece rates; to prescribe
standards for employer piece rates,
including the proportion or class of
employees who shall receive not less
than the minimum hourly wage rate;
to define the term "home worker";
and to prescribe the conditions
under which employers, agents,
contractors, and subcontractors
shall cause goods to be produced by
home workers;
(3) if such employee is employed in
American Samoa, in lieu of the rate
or rates provided by this subsection
or subsection (b) of this section,
not less than the applicable rate
established by the Secretary of
Labor in accordance with
recommendations of a special
industry committee or committees
which he shall appoint pursuant to
sections 205 and 208 of this title.
The minimum wage rate thus
established shall not exceed the
rate prescribed in paragraph (1) of
this subsection;
(4) if such employee is employed as
a seaman on an American vessel, not
less than the rate which will
provide to the employee, for the
period covered by the wage payment,
wages equal to compensation at the
hourly rate prescribed by paragraph
(1) of this subsection for all hours
during such period when he was
actually on duty (including periods
aboard ship when the employee was on
watch or was, at the direction of a
superior officer, performing work or
standing by, but not including
off-duty periods which are provided
pursuant to the employment
agreement); or
(5) if such employee is employed in
agriculture, not less than the
minimum wage rate in effect under
paragraph (1) after December 31,
1977.
(b) Additional applicability to
employees pursuant to subsequent
amendatory provisions
Every employer shall pay to each of
his employees (other than an
employee to whom subsection (a)(5)
of this section applies) who in any
workweek is engaged in commerce or
in the production of goods for
commerce, or is employed in an
enterprise engaged in commerce or in
the production of goods for
commerce, and who in such workweek
is brought within the purview of
this section by the amendments made
to this chapter by the Fair Labor
Standards Amendments of 1966, title
IX of the Education Amendments of
1972 [20 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.], or
the Fair Labor Standards Amendments
of 1974, wages at the following
rate: Effective after December 31,
1977, not less than the minimum wage
rate in effect under subsection
(a)(1) of this section.
(c) Repealed. Pub. L. 104-188,
[title II], Section 2104(c), Aug.
20, 1996, 110 Stat. 1929
(d) Prohibition of sex
discrimination
(1) No employer having employees
subject to any provisions of this
section shall discriminate, within
any establishment in which such
employees are employed, between
employees on the basis of sex by
paying wages to employees in such
establishment at a rate less than
the rate at which he pays wages to
employees of the opposite sex in
such establishment for equal work on
jobs the performance of which
requires equal skill, effort, and
responsibility, and which are
performed under similar working
conditions, except where such
payment is made pursuant to
(i) a seniority system;
(ii) a merit system;
(iii) a system which measures
earnings by quantity or quality of
production; or
(iv) a differential based on any
other factor other than sex:
Provided, That an employer who is
paying a wage rate differential in
violation of this subsection shall
not, in order to comply with the
provisions of this subsection,
reduce the wage rate of any
employee.
(2) No labor organization, or its
agents, representing employees of an
employer having employees subject to
any provisions of this section shall
cause or attempt to cause such an
employer to discriminate against an
employee in violation of paragraph
(1) of this subsection.
(3) For purposes of
administration and enforcement, any
amounts owing to any employee which
have been withheld in violation of
this subsection shall be deemed to
be unpaid minimum wages or unpaid
overtime compensation under this
chapter.
(4) As used in this subsection,
the term "labor organization" means
any organization of any kind, or any
agency or employee representation
committee or plan, in which
employees participate and which
exists for the purpose, in whole or
in part, of dealing with employers
concerning grievances, labor
disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours
of employment, or conditions of
work.
(e) Employees of employers providing
contract services to United States
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions
of section 213 of this title (except
subsections (a)(1) and (f) thereof),
every employer providing any
contract services (other than linen
supply services) under a contract
with the United States or any
subcontract thereunder shall pay to
each of his employees whose rate of
pay is not governed by the Service
Contract Act of 1965 (41 U.S.C.
351-357) or to whom subsection
(a)(1) of this section is not
applicable, wages at rates not less
than the rates provided for in
subsection (b) of this section.
(2) Notwithstanding the provisions
of section 213 of this title (except
subsections (a)(1) and (f) thereof)
and the provisions of the Service
Contract Act of 1965 [41 U.S.C. 351
et seq.] every employer in an
establishment providing linen supply
services to the United States under
a contract with the United States or
any subcontract thereunder shall pay
to each of his employees in such
establishment wages at rates not
less than those prescribed in
subsection (b) of this section,
except that if more than 50 per
centum of the gross annual dollar
volume of sales made or business
done by such establishment is
derived from providing such linen
supply services under any such
contracts or subcontracts, such
employer shall pay to each of his
employees in such establishment
wages at rates not less than those
prescribed in subsection (a)(1) of
this section.
(f) Employees in domestic service
Any employee:
(1) who in any workweek is employed
in domestic service in a household
shall be paid wages at a rate not
less than the wage rate in effect
under subsection (b) of this section
unless such employee's compensation
for such service would not because
of section 209(a)(6) of the Social
Security Act [42 U.S.C. 409 (a)(6)]
constitute wages for the purposes of
title II of such Act [42 U.S.C. 401
et seq.], or
(2) who in any workweek:
(A) is employed in domestic
service in one or more households,
and
(B) is so employed for more than 8
hours in the aggregate,
shall be paid wages for such
employment in such workweek at a
rate not less than the wage rate in
effect under subsection (b) of this
section.
(g) Newly hired employees who are
less than 20 years old
(1) In lieu of the rate prescribed
by subsection (a)(1) of this
section, any employer may pay any
employee of such employer, during
the first 90 consecutive calendar
days after such employee is
initially employed by such employer,
a wage which is not less than $4.25
an hour.
(2) No employer may take any action
to displace employees (including
partial displacements such as
reduction in hours, wages, or
employment benefits) for purposes of
hiring individuals at the wage
authorized in paragraph (1).
(3) Any employer who violates this
subsection shall be considered to
have violated section 215 (a)(3) of
this title.
(4) This subsection shall only
apply to an employee who has not
attained the age of 20 years.
Sec. 207. Maximum
hours
(a) Employees engaged in
interstate commerce; additional
applicability to employees pursuant
to subsequent amendatory provisions
(1) Except as otherwise provided in
this section, no employer shall
employ any of his employees who in
any workweek is engaged in commerce
or in the production of goods for
commerce, or is employed in an
enterprise engaged in commerce or in
the production of goods for
commerce, for a workweek longer than
forty hours unless such employee
receives compensation for his
employment in excess of the hours
above specified at a rate not less
than one and one-half times the
regular rate at which he is
employed.
(2) No employer shall employ any of
his employees who in any workweek is
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce, or
is employed in an enterprise engaged
in commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce, and who in such
workweek is brought within the
purview of this subsection by the
amendments made to this chapter by
the Fair Labor Standards Amendments
of 1966:
(A) for a workweek longer than
forty-four hours during the first
year from the effective date of the
Fair Labor Standards Amendments of
1966,
(B) for a workweek longer than
forty-two hours during the second
year from such date, or
(C) for a workweek longer than
forty hours after the expiration of
the second year from such date,
unless such employee receives
compensation for his employment in
excess of the hours above specified
at a rate not less than one and
one-half times the regular rate at
which he is employed.
(b) Employment pursuant to
collective bargaining agreement;
employment by independently owned
and controlled local enterprise
engaged in distribution of petroleum
products
No employer shall be deemed to have
violated subsection (a) of this
section by employing any employee
for a workweek in excess of that
specified in such subsection without
paying the compensation for overtime
employment prescribed therein if
such employee is so employed:
(1) in pursuance of an agreement,
made as a result of collective
bargaining by representatives of
employees certified as bona fide by
the National Labor Relations Board,
which provides that no employee
shall be employed more than one
thousand and forty hours during any
period of twenty-six consecutive
weeks; or
(2) in pursuance of an agreement,
made as a result of collective
bargaining by representatives of
employees certified as bona fide by
the National Labor Relations Board,
which provides that during a
specified period of fifty-two
consecutive weeks the employee shall
be employed not more than two
thousand two hundred and forty hours
and shall be guaranteed not less
than one thousand eight hundred and
forty-hours (or not less than
forty-six weeks at the normal number
of hours worked per week, but not
less than thirty hours per week) and
not more than two thousand and
eighty hours of employment for which
he shall receive compensation for
all hours guaranteed or worked at
rates not less than those applicable
under the agreement to the work
performed and for all hours in
excess of the guaranty which are
also in excess of the maximum
workweek applicable to such employee
under subsection (a) of this section
or two thousand and eighty in such
period at rates not less than one
and one-half times the regular rate
at which he is employed; or
(3) by an independently owned and
controlled local enterprise
(including an enterprise with more
than one bulk storage establishment)
engaged in the wholesale or bulk
distribution of petroleum products
if:
(A) the annual gross volume of
sales of such enterprise is less
than $1,000,000 exclusive of excise
taxes,
(B) more than 75 per centum of
such enterprise's annual dollar
volume of sales is made within the
State in which such enterprise is
located, and
(C) not more than 25 per centum of
the annual dollar volume of sales of
such enterprise is to customers who
are engaged in the bulk distribution
of such products for resale,
and such employee receives
compensation for employment in
excess of forty hours in any
workweek at a rate not less than one
and one-half times the minimum wage
rate applicable to him under section
206 of this title,
and if such employee receives
compensation for employment in
excess of twelve hours in any
workday, or for employment in excess
of fifty-six hours in any workweek,
as the case may be, at a rate not
less than one and one-half times the
regular rate at which he is
employed.
(c) , (d) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259,
Section 19(e), Apr. 8, 1974, 88
Stat. 66
(e) "Regular rate" defined
As used in this section the "regular
rate" at which an employee is
employed shall be deemed to include
all remuneration for employment paid
to, or on behalf of, the employee,
but shall not be deemed to include:
(1) sums paid as gifts; payments in
the nature of gifts made at
Christmas time or on other special
occasions, as a reward for service,
the amounts of which are not
measured by or dependent on hours
worked, production, or efficiency;
(2) payments made for occasional
periods when no work is performed
due to vacation, holiday, illness,
failure of the employer to provide
sufficient work, or other similar
cause; reasonable payments for
traveling expenses, or other
expenses, incurred by an employee in
the furtherance of his employer's
interests and properly reimbursable
by the employer; and other similar
payments to an employee which are
not made as compensation for his
hours of employment;
(3) Sums [1] paid in recognition of
services performed during a given
period if either, (a) both the fact
that payment is to be made and the
amount of the payment are determined
at the sole discretion of the
employer at or near the end of the
period and not pursuant to any prior
contract, agreement, or promise
causing the employee to expect such
payments regularly; or (b) the
payments are made pursuant to a bona
fide profit-sharing plan or trust or
bona fide thrift or savings plan,
meeting the requirements of the
Administrator set forth in
appropriate regulations which he
shall issue, having due regard among
other relevant factors, to the
extent to which the amounts paid to
the employee are determined without
regard to hours of work, production,
or efficiency; or (c) the payments
are talent fees (as such talent fees
are defined and delimited by
regulations of the Administrator)
paid to performers, including
announcers, on radio and television
programs;
(4) contributions irrevocably made
by an employer to a trustee or third
person pursuant to a bona fide plan
for providing old-age, retirement,
life, accident, or health insurance
or similar benefits for employees;
(5) extra compensation provided by
a premium rate paid for certain
hours worked by the employee in any
day of workweek because such hours
are hours worked in excess of eight
in a day or in excess of the maximum
workweek applicable to such employee
under subsection (a) of this section
or in excess of the employee's
normal working hours or regular
working hours, as the case may be;
(6) extra compensation provided by
a premium rate paid for work by the
employee on Saturdays, Sundays,
holidays, or regular days of rest,
or on the sixth or seventh day of
the workweek, where such premium
rate is not less than one and
one-half times the rate established
in good faith for like work
performed in nonovertime hours on
other days;
(7) extra compensation provided by
a premium rate paid to the employee,
in pursuance of an applicable
employment contract or
collective-bargaining agreement, for
work outside of the hours
established in good faith by the
contract or agreement as the basic,
normal, or regular workday (not
exceeding eight hours) or workweek
(not exceeding the maximum workweek
applicable to such employee under
subsection (a) of this section,[2]
where such premium rate is not less
than one and one-half times the rate
established in good faith by the
contract or agreement for like work
performed during such workday or
workweek; or
(8) any value or income derived
from employer-provided grants or
rights provided pursuant to a stock
option, stock appreciation right, or
bona fide employee stock purchase
program which is not otherwise
excludable under any of paragraphs
(1) through (7) if:
(A) grants are made pursuant to a
program, the terms and conditions of
which are communicated to
participating employees either at
the beginning of the employee's
participation in the program or at
the time of the grant;
(B) in the case of stock options
and stock appreciation rights, the
grant or right cannot be exercisable
for a period of at least 6 months
after the time of grant (except that
grants or rights may become
exercisable because of an employee's
death, disability, retirement, or a
change in corporate ownership, or
other circumstances permitted by
regulation), and the exercise price
is at least 85 percent of the fair
market value of the stock at the
time of grant;
(C) exercise of any grant or right
is voluntary; and
(D) any determinations regarding
the award of, and the amount of,
employer-provided grants or rights
that are based on performance are:
(i) made based upon meeting
previously established performance
criteria (which may include hours of
work, efficiency, or productivity)
of any business unit consisting of
at least 10 employees or of a
facility, except that, any
determinations may be based on
length of service or minimum
schedule of hours or days of work;
or
(ii) made based upon the past
performance (which may include any
criteria) of one or more employees
in a given period so long as the
determination is in the sole
discretion of the employer and not
pursuant to any prior contract.
(f) Employment necessitating
irregular hours of work
No employer shall be deemed to have
violated subsection (a) of this
section by employing any employee
for a workweek in excess of the
maximum workweek applicable to such
employee under subsection (a) of
this section if such employee is
employed pursuant to a bona fide
individual contract, or pursuant to
an agreement made as a result of
collective bargaining by
representatives of employees, if the
duties of such employee necessitate
irregular hours of work, and the
contract or agreement
(1) specifies a regular rate of pay
of not less than the minimum hourly
rate provided in subsection (a) or
(b) of section 206 of this title
(whichever may be applicable) and
compensation at not less than one
and one-half times such rate for all
hours worked in excess of such
maximum workweek, and
(2) provides a weekly guaranty of
pay for not more than sixty hours
based on the rates so specified.
(g) Employment at piece rates
No employer shall be deemed to have
violated subsection (a) of this
section by employing any employee
for a workweek in excess of the
maximum workweek applicable to such
employee under such subsection if,
pursuant to an agreement or
understanding arrived at between the
employer and the employee before
performance of the work, the amount
paid to the employee for the number
of hours worked by him in such
workweek in excess of the maximum
workweek applicable to such employee
under such subsection:
(1) in the case of an employee
employed at piece rates, is computed
at piece rates not less than one and
one-half times the bona fide piece
rates applicable to the same work
when performed during nonovertime
hours; or
(2) in the case of an employee
performing two or more kinds of work
for which different hourly or piece
rates have been established, is
computed at rates not less than one
and one-half times such bona fide
rates applicable to the same work
when performed during nonovertime
hours; or
(3) is computed at a rate not less
than one and one-half times the rate
established by such agreement or
understanding as the basic rate to
be used in computing overtime
compensation thereunder: Provided,
That the rate so established shall
be authorized by regulation by the
Administrator as being substantially
equivalent to the average hourly
earnings of the employee, exclusive
of overtime premiums, in the
particular work over a
representative period of time;
and if
(i) the employee's average hourly
earnings for the workweek exclusive
of payments described in paragraphs
(1) through (7) of subsection (e) of
this section are not less than the
minimum hourly rate required by
applicable law, and
(ii) extra overtime compensation
is properly computed and paid on
other forms of additional pay
required to be included in computing
the regular rate.
(h) Credit toward minimum wage or
overtime compensation of amounts
excluded from regular rate
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(2), sums excluded from the regular
rate pursuant to subsection (e) of
this section shall not be creditable
toward wages required under section
206 of this title or overtime
compensation required under this
section.
(2) Extra compensation paid as
described in paragraphs (5), (6),
and (7) of subsection (e) of this
section shall be creditable toward
overtime compensation payable
pursuant to this section.
(i) Employment by retail or service
establishment
No employer shall be deemed to have
violated subsection (a) of this
section by employing any employee of
a retail or service establishment
for a workweek in excess of the
applicable workweek specified
therein, if
(1) the regular rate of pay of such
employee is in excess of one and
one-half times the minimum hourly
rate applicable to him under section
206 of this title, and
(2) more than half his compensation
for a representative period (not
less than one month) represents
commissions on goods or services. In
determining the proportion of
compensation representing
commissions, all earnings resulting
from the application of a bona fide
commission rate shall be deemed
commissions on goods or services
without regard to whether the
computed commissions exceed the draw
or guarantee.
(j) Employment in hospital or
establishment engaged in care of
sick, aged, or mentally ill
No employer engaged in the operation
of a hospital or an establishment
which is an institution primarily
engaged in the care of the sick, the
aged, or the mentally ill or
defective who reside on the premises
shall be deemed to have violated
subsection (a) of this section if,
pursuant to an agreement or
understanding arrived at between the
employer and the employee before
performance of the work, a work
period of fourteen consecutive days
is accepted in lieu of the workweek
of seven consecutive days for
purposes of overtime computation and
if, for his employment in excess of
eight hours in any workday and in
excess of eighty hours in such
fourteen-day period, the employee
receives compensation at a rate not
less than one and one-half times the
regular rate at which he is
employed.
(k) Employment by public agency
engaged in fire protection or law
enforcement activities
No public agency shall be deemed to
have violated subsection (a) of this
section with respect to the
employment of any employee in fire
protection activities or any
employee in law enforcement
activities (including security
personnel in correctional
institutions) if:
(1) in a work period of 28
consecutive days the employee
receives for tours of duty which in
the aggregate exceed the lesser of
(A) 216 hours, or
(B) the average number of hours
(as determined by the Secretary
pursuant to section 6(c)(3) of the
Fair Labor Standards Amendments of
1974) in tours of duty of employees
engaged in such activities in work
periods of 28 consecutive days in
calendar year 1975; or
(2) in the case of such an employee
to whom a work period of at least 7
but less than 28 days applies, in
his work period the employee
receives for tours of duty which in
the aggregate exceed a number of
hours which bears the same ratio to
the number of consecutive days in
his work period as 216 hours (or if
lower, the number of hours referred
to in clause (B) of paragraph (1))
bears to 28 days,
compensation at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular
rate at which he is employed.
(l) Employment in domestic service
in one or more households
No employer shall employ any
employee in domestic service in one
or more households for a workweek
longer than forty hours unless such
employee receives compensation for
such employment in accordance with
subsection (a) of this section.
(m) Employment in tobacco industry
For a period or periods of not more
than fourteen workweeks in the
aggregate in any calendar year, any
employer may employ any employee for
a workweek in excess of that
specified in subsection (a) of this
section without paying the
compensation for overtime employment
prescribed in such subsection, if
such employee:
(1) is employed by such employer:
(A) to provide services (including
stripping and grading) necessary and
incidental to the sale at auction of
green leaf tobacco of type 11, 12,
13, 14, 21, 22, 23, 24, 31, 35, 36,
or 37 (as such types are defined by
the Secretary of Agriculture), or in
auction sale, buying, handling,
stemming, redrying, packing, and
storing of such tobacco,
(B) in auction sale, buying,
handling, sorting, grading, packing,
or storing green leaf tobacco of
type 32 (as such type is defined by
the Secretary of Agriculture), or
(C) in auction sale, buying,
handling, stripping, sorting,
grading, sizing, packing, or
stemming prior to packing, of
perishable cigar leaf tobacco of
type 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 51, 52,
53, 54, 55, 61, or 62 (as such types
are defined by the Secretary of
Agriculture); and
(2) receives for:
(A) such employment by such
employer which is in excess of ten
hours in any workday, and
(B) such employment by such
employer which is in excess of
forty-eight hours in any workweek,
compensation at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular
rate at which he is employed.
An employer who receives an
exemption under this subsection
shall not be eligible for any other
exemption under this section.
(n) Employment by street, suburban,
or interurban electric railway, or
local trolley or motorbus carrier
In the case of an employee of an
employer engaged in the business of
operating a street, suburban or
interurban electric railway, or
local trolley or motorbus carrier
(regardless of whether or not such
railway or carrier is public or
private or operated for profit or
not for profit), in determining the
hours of employment of such an
employee to which the rate
prescribed by subsection (a) of this
section applies there shall be
excluded the hours such employee was
employed in charter activities by
such employer if
(1) the employee's employment in
such activities was pursuant to an
agreement or understanding with his
employer arrived at before engaging
in such employment, and
(2) if employment in such
activities is not part of such
employee's regular employment.
(o) Compensatory time
(1) Employees of a public agency
which is a State, a political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency may
receive, in accordance with this
subsection and in lieu of overtime
compensation, compensatory time off
at a rate not less than one and
one-half hours for each hour of
employment for which overtime
compensation is required by this
section.
(2) A public agency may provide
compensatory time under paragraph
(1) only:
(A) pursuant to:
(i) applicable provisions of a
collective bargaining agreement,
memorandum of understanding, or any
other agreement between the public
agency and representatives of such
employees; or
(ii) in the case of employees not
covered by subclause (i), an
agreement or understanding arrived
at between the employer and employee
before the performance of the work;
and
(B) if the employee has not
accrued compensatory time in excess
of the limit applicable to the
employee prescribed by paragraph
(3).
In the case of employees described
in clause (A)(ii) hired prior to
April 15, 1986, the regular practice
in effect on April 15, 1986, with
respect to compensatory time off for
such employees in lieu of the
receipt of overtime compensation,
shall constitute an agreement or
understanding under such clause
(A)(ii). Except as provided in the
previous sentence, the provision of
compensatory time off to such
employees for hours worked after
April 14, 1986, shall be in
accordance with this subsection.
(3)
(A) If the work of an employee for
which compensatory time may be
provided included work in a public
safety activity, an emergency
response activity, or a seasonal
activity, the employee engaged in
such work may accrue not more than
480 hours of compensatory time for
hours worked after April 15, 1986.
If such work was any other work, the
employee engaged in such work may
accrue not more than 240 hours of
compensatory time for hours worked
after April 15, 1986. Any such
employee who, after April 15, 1986,
has accrued 480 or 240 hours, as the
case may be, of compensatory time
off shall, for additional overtime
hours of work, be paid overtime
compensation.
(B) If compensation is paid to an
employee for accrued compensatory
time off, such compensation shall be
paid at the regular rate earned by
the employee at the time the
employee receives such payment.
(4) An employee who has accrued
compensatory time off authorized to
be provided under paragraph (1)
shall, upon termination of
employment, be paid for the unused
compensatory time at a rate of
compensation not less than:
(A) the average regular rate
received by such employee during the
last 3 years of the employee's
employment, or
(B) the final regular rate
received by such employee,
whichever is higher [3]
(5) An employee of a public agency
which is a State, political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency:
(A) who has accrued compensatory
time off authorized to be provided
under paragraph (1), and
(B) who has requested the use of
such compensatory time,
shall be permitted by the employee's
employer to use such time within a
reasonable period after making the
request if the use of the
compensatory time does not unduly
disrupt the operations of the public
agency.
(6) The hours an employee of a
public agency performs court
reporting transcript preparation
duties shall not be considered as
hours worked for the purposes of
subsection (a) of this section if:
(A) such employee is paid at a
per-page rate which is not less
than:
(i) the maximum rate established
by State law or local ordinance for
the jurisdiction of such public
agency,
(ii) the maximum rate otherwise
established by a judicial or
administrative officer and in effect
on July 1, 1995, or
(iii) the rate freely negotiated
between the employee and the party
requesting the transcript, other
than the judge who presided over the
proceedings being transcribed, and
(B) the hours spent performing
such duties are outside of the hours
such employee performs other work
(including hours for which the
agency requires the employee's
attendance) pursuant to the
employment relationship with such
public agency.
For purposes of this section, the
amount paid such employee in
accordance with subparagraph (A) for
the performance of court reporting
transcript preparation duties, shall
not be considered in the calculation
of the regular rate at which such
employee is employed.
(7) For purposes of this
subsection:
(A) the term "overtime
compensation" means the compensation
required by subsection (a), and
(B) the terms "compensatory time"
and "compensatory time off" mean
hours during which an employee is
not working, which are not counted
as hours worked during the
applicable workweek or other work
period for purposes of overtime
compensation, and for which the
employee is compensated at the
employee's regular rate.
(p) Special detail work for fire
protection and law enforcement
employees; occasional or sporadic
employment; substitution
(1) If an individual who is
employed by a State, political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency in
fire protection or law enforcement
activities (including activities of
security personnel in correctional
institutions) and who, solely at
such individual's option, agrees to
be employed on a special detail by a
separate or independent employer in
fire protection, law enforcement, or
related activities, the hours such
individual was employed by such
separate and independent employer
shall be excluded by the public
agency employing such individual in
the calculation of the hours for
which the employee is entitled to
overtime compensation under this
section if the public agency:
(A) requires that its employees
engaged in fire protection, law
enforcement, or security activities
be hired by a separate and
independent employer to perform the
special detail,
(B) facilitates the employment of
such employees by a separate and
independent employer, or
(C) otherwise affects the
condition of employment of such
employees by a separate and
independent employer.
(2) If an employee of a public
agency which is a State, political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency
undertakes, on an occasional or
sporadic basis and solely at the
employee's option, part-time
employment for the public agency
which is in a different capacity
from any capacity in which the
employee is regularly employed with
the public agency, the hours such
employee was employed in performing
the different employment shall be
excluded by the public agency in the
calculation of the hours for which
the employee is entitled to overtime
compensation under this section.
(3) If an individual who is
employed in any capacity by a public
agency which is a State, political
subdivision of a State, or an
interstate governmental agency,
agrees, with the approval of the
public agency and solely at the
option of such individual, to
substitute during scheduled work
hours for another individual who is
employed by such agency in the same
capacity, the hours such employee
worked as a substitute shall be
excluded by the public agency in the
calculation of the hours for which
the employee is entitled to overtime
compensation under this section.
(q) Maximum hour exemption for
employees receiving remedial
education
Any employer may employ any employee
for a period or periods of not more
than 10 hours in the aggregate in
any workweek in excess of the
maximum workweek specified in
subsection (a) of this section
without paying the compensation for
overtime employment prescribed in
such subsection, if during such
period or periods the employee is
receiving remedial education that
is:
(1) provided to employees who lack
a high school diploma or educational
attainment at the eighth grade
level;
(2) designed to provide reading and
other basic skills at an eighth
grade level or below; and
(3) does not include job specific
training.
(1) So in original. Probably
should not be capitalized.
(2) So in original. The comma
probably should be preceded by a
closing parenthesis.
(3) So in original. Probably should
be followed by a period.
Sec. 208. Wage
orders in American Samoa
(a) Congressional policy;
recommendation of wage rate by
industry committee
The policy of this chapter with
respect to industries or enterprises
in American Samoa engaged in
commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce is to reach as
rapidly as is economically feasible
without substantially curtailing
employment the objective of the
minimum wage rate which would apply
in each such industry under
paragraph (1) or (5) of section 206
(a) of this title but for section
206 (c) [1] of this title. The
Administrator shall from time to
time convene an industry committee
or committees, appointed pursuant to
section 205 of this title, and any
such industry committee shall from
time to time recommend the minimum
rate or rates of wages to be paid
under section 206 of this title by
employers in American Samoa engaged
in commerce or in the production of
goods for commerce or in any
enterprise engaged in commerce or in
the production of goods for commerce
in any such industry or
classifications therein, and who but
for section 206 (a)(3) of this title
would be subject to the minimum wage
requirements of section 206 (a)(1)
of this title. Minimum rates of
wages established in accordance with
this section which are not equal to
the otherwise applicable minimum
wage rate in effect under paragraph
(1) or (5) of section 206 (a) of
this title shall be reviewed by such
a Committee once during each
biennial period, beginning with the
biennial period commencing July 1,
1958, except that the Secretary, in
his discretion, may order an
additional review during any such
biennial period.
(b) Investigation of industry
condition by industry committee;
matters considered
Upon the convening of any such
industry committee, the
Administrator shall refer to it the
question of the minimum wage rate or
rates to be fixed for such industry.
The industry committee shall
investigate conditions in the
industry and the committee, or any
authorized subcommittee thereof,
shall after due notice hear such
witnesses and receive such evidence
as may be necessary or appropriate
to enable the committee to perform
its duties and functions under this
chapter. The committee shall
recommend to the Administrator the
highest minimum wage rates for the
industry which it determines, having
due regard to economic and
competitive conditions, will not
substantially curtail employment in
the industry, and will not give any
industry in American Samoa a
competitive advantage over any
industry in the United States
outside of American Samoa; except
that the committee shall recommend
to the Secretary the minimum wage
rate prescribed in section 206 (a)
or 206 (b) of this title, which
would be applicable but for section
206 (a)(3) of this title, unless
there is evidence in the record
which establishes that the industry,
or a predominant portion thereof, is
unable to pay that wage due to such
economic and competitive conditions.
(c) Classifications within industry;
recommendation of wage rate
The industry committee shall
recommend such reasonable
classifications within any industry
as it determines to be necessary for
the purpose of fixing for each
classification within such industry
the highest minimum wage rate (not
in excess of that in effect under
paragraph (1) or (5) of section 206
(a) of this title (as the case may
be)) which
(1) will not substantially curtail
employment in such classification
and
(2) will not give a competitive
advantage to any group in the
industry, and shall recommend for
each classification in the industry
the highest minimum wage rate which
the committee determines will not
substantially curtail employment in
such classification. In determining
whether such classification should
be made in any industry, in making
such classifications, and in
determining the minimum wage rates
for such classifications, no
classifications shall be made, and
no minimum wage rate shall be fixed,
solely on a regional basis, but the
industry committee shall consider
among other relevant factors the
following:
(1) competitive conditions as
affected by transportation, living,
and production costs;
(2) the wages established for work
of like or comparable character by
collective labor agreements
negotiated between employers and
employees by representatives of
their own choosing; and
(3) the wages paid for work of like
or comparable character by employers
who voluntarily maintain minimum
wage standards in the industry.
No classification shall be made
under this section on the basis of
age or sex.
(d) Report by industry committee;
publication in Federal Register
The industry committee shall file
with the Secretary a report
containing its findings of fact and
recommendations with respect to the
matters referred to it. Upon the
filing of such report, the Secretary
shall publish such recommendations
in the Federal Register and shall
provide by order that the
recommendations contained in such
report shall take effect upon the
expiration of 15 days after the date
of such publication.
(e) Orders
Orders issued under this section
shall define the industries and
classifications therein to which
they are to apply, and shall contain
such terms and conditions as the
Administrator finds necessary to
carry out the purposes of such
orders, to prevent the circumvention
or evasion thereof, and to safeguard
the minimum wage rates established
therein.
(f) Due notice of hearings by
publication in Federal Register
Due notice of any hearing provided
for in this section shall be given
by publication in the Federal
Register and by such other means as
the Administrator deems reasonably
calculated to give general notice to
interested persons.
Sec. 209.
Attendance of witnesses
For the purpose of any hearing or
investigation provided for in this
chapter, the provisions of sections
49 and 50 of title 15 (relating to
the attendance of witnesses and the
production of books, papers, and
documents), are made applicable to
the jurisdiction, powers, and duties
of the Administrator, the Secretary
of Labor, and the industry
committees.
Sec. 210. Court
review of wage orders in Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands
(a) Any person aggrieved by an
order of the Secretary issued under
section 208 of this title may obtain
a review of such order in the United
States Court of Appeals for any
circuit wherein such person resides
or has his principal place of
business, or in the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, by filing in such court,
within 60 days after the entry of
such order a written petition
praying that the order of the
Secretary be modified or set aside
in whole or in part. A copy of such
petition shall forthwith be
transmitted by the clerk of the
court to the Secretary, and
thereupon the Secretary shall file
in the court the record of the
industry committee upon which the
order complained of was entered, as
provided in section 2112 of title
28. Upon the filing of such petition
such court shall have exclusive
jurisdiction to affirm, modify
(including provision for the payment
of an appropriate minimum wage
rate), or set aside such order in
whole or in part, so far as it is
applicable to the petitioner. The
review by the court shall be limited
to questions of law, and findings of
fact by such industry committee when
supported by substantial evidence
shall be conclusive. No objection to
the order of the Secretary shall be
considered by the court unless such
objection shall have been urged
before such industry committee or
unless there were reasonable grounds
for failure so to do. If application
is made to the court for leave to
adduce additional evidence, and it
is shown to the satisfaction of the
court that such additional evidence
may materially affect the result of
the proceeding and that there were
reasonable grounds for failure to
adduce such evidence in the
proceedings before such industry
committee, the court may order such
additional evidence to be taken
before an industry committee and to
be adduced upon the hearing in such
manner and upon such terms and
conditions as to the court may seem
proper. Such industry committee may
modify the initial findings by
reason of the additional evidence so
taken, and shall file with the court
such modified or new findings which
if supported by substantial evidence
shall be conclusive, and shall also
file its recommendation, if any, for
the modification or setting aside of
the original order. The judgment and
decree of the court shall be final,
subject to review by the Supreme
Court of the United States upon
certiorari or certification as
provided in section 1254 of title
28.
(b) The commencement of proceedings
under subsection (a) of this section
shall not, unless specifically
ordered by the court, operate as a
stay of the Administrator's order.
The court shall not grant any stay
of the order unless the person
complaining of such order shall file
in court an undertaking with a
surety or sureties satisfactory to
the court for the payment to the
employees affected by the order, in
the event such order is affirmed, of
the amount by which the compensation
such employees are entitled to
receive under the order exceeds the
compensation they actually receive
while such stay is in effect.
Sec. 211.
Collection of data
(a) Investigations and
inspections
The Administrator or his designated
representatives may investigate and
gather data regarding the wages,
hours, and other conditions and
practices of employment in any
industry subject to this chapter,
and may enter and inspect such
places and such records (and make
such transcriptions thereof),
question such employees, and
investigate such facts, conditions,
practices, or matters as he may deem
necessary or appropriate to
determine whether any person has
violated any provision of this
chapter, or which may aid in the
enforcement of the provisions of
this chapter. Except as provided in
section 212 of this title and in
subsection (b) of this section, the
Administrator shall utilize the
bureaus and divisions of the
Department of Labor for all the
investigations and inspections
necessary under this section. Except
as provided in section 212 of this
title, the Administrator shall bring
all actions under section 217 of
this title to restrain violations of
this chapter.
(b) State and local agencies and
employees
With the consent and cooperation of
State agencies charged with the
administration of State labor laws,
the Administrator and the Secretary
of Labor may, for the purpose of
carrying out their respective
functions and duties under this
chapter, utilize the services of
State and local agencies and their
employees and, notwithstanding any
other provision of law, may
reimburse such State and local
agencies and their employees for
services rendered for such purposes.
(c) Records
Every employer subject to any
provision of this chapter or of any
order issued under this chapter
shall make, keep, and preserve such
records of the persons employed by
him and of the wages, hours, and
other conditions and practices of
employment maintained by him, and
shall preserve such records for such
periods of time, and shall make such
reports therefrom to the
Administrator as he shall prescribe
by regulation or order as necessary
or appropriate for the enforcement
of the provisions of this chapter or
the regulations or orders
thereunder. The employer of an
employee who performs substitute
work described in section 207 (p)(3)
of this title may not be required
under this subsection to keep a
record of the hours of the
substitute work.
(d) Homework regulations
The Administrator is authorized to
make such regulations and orders
regulating, restricting, or
prohibiting industrial homework as
are necessary or appropriate to
prevent the circumvention or evasion
of and to safeguard the minimum wage
rate prescribed in this chapter, and
all existing regulations or orders
of the Administrator relating to
industrial homework are continued in
full force and effect.
Sec. 212. Child
labor provisions
(a) Restrictions on shipment of
goods; prosecution; conviction
No producer, manufacturer, or dealer
shall ship or deliver for shipment
in commerce any goods produced in an
establishment situated in the United
States in or about which within
thirty days prior to the removal of
such goods therefrom any oppressive
child labor has been employed:
Provided, That any such shipment or
delivery for shipment of such goods
by a purchaser who acquired them in
good faith in reliance on written
assurance from the producer,
manufacturer, or dealer that the
goods were produced in compliance
with the requirements of this
section, and who acquired such goods
for value without notice of any such
violation, shall not be deemed
prohibited by this subsection: And
provided further, That a prosecution
and conviction of a defendant for
the shipment or delivery for
shipment of any goods under the
conditions herein prohibited shall
be a bar to any further prosecution
against the same defendant for
shipments or deliveries for shipment
of any such goods before the
beginning of said prosecution.
(b) Investigations and inspections
The Secretary of Labor or any of his
authorized representatives, shall
make all investigations and
inspections under section 211 (a) of
this title with respect to the
employment of minors, and, subject
to the direction and control of the
Attorney General, shall bring all
actions under section 217 of this
title to enjoin any act or practice
which is unlawful by reason of the
existence of oppressive child labor,
and shall administer all other
provisions of this chapter relating
to oppressive child labor.
(c) Oppressive child labor
No employer shall employ any
oppressive child labor in commerce
or in the production of goods for
commerce or in any enterprise
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce.
(d) Proof of age
In order to carry out the objectives
of this section, the Secretary may
by regulation require employers to
obtain from any employee proof of
age.
Sec. 213.
Exemptions
(a) Minimum wage and maximum hour
requirements
The provisions of sections 206
(except subsection (d) in the case
of paragraph (1) of this subsection)
and 207 of this title shall not
apply with respect to:
(1) any employee employed in a bona
fide executive, administrative, or
professional capacity (including any
employee employed in the capacity of
academic administrative personnel or
teacher in elementary or secondary
schools), or in the capacity of
outside salesman (as such terms are
defined and delimited from time to
time by regulations of the
Secretary, subject to the provisions
of subchapter II of chapter 5 of
title 5, except that an employee of
a retail or service establishment
shall not be excluded from the
definition of employee employed in a
bona fide executive or
administrative capacity because of
the number of hours in his workweek
which he devotes to activities not
directly or closely related to the
performance of executive or
administrative activities, if less
than 40 per centum of his hours
worked in the workweek are devoted
to such activities); or
(2) Repealed. Pub. L. 101-157, §
3(c)(1), Nov. 17, 1989, 103 Stat.
939.
(3) any employee employed by an
establishment which is an amusement
or recreational establishment,
organized camp, or religious or
non-profit educational conference
center, if
(A) it does not operate for more
than seven months in any calendar
year, or
(B) during the preceding calendar
year, its average receipts for any
six months of such year were not
more than 331/3 per centum of its
average receipts for the other six
months of such year, except that the
exemption from sections 206 and 207
of this title provided by this
paragraph does not apply with
respect to any employee of a private
entity engaged in providing services
or facilities (other than, in the
case of the exemption from section
206 of this title, a private entity
engaged in providing services and
facilities directly related to
skiing) in a national park or a
national forest, or on land in the
National Wildlife Refuge System,
under a contract with the Secretary
of the Interior or the Secretary of
Agriculture; or
(4) Repealed. Pub. L. 101-157, §
3(c)(1), Nov. 17, 1989, 103 Stat.
939.
(5) any employee employed in the
catching, taking, propagating,
harvesting, cultivating, or farming
of any kind of fish, shellfish,
crustacea, sponges, seaweeds, or
other aquatic forms of animal and
vegetable life, or in the first
processing, canning or packing such
marine products at sea as an
incident to, or in conjunction with,
such fishing operations, including
the going to and returning from work
and loading and unloading when
performed by any such employee; or
(6) any employee employed in
agriculture
(A) if such employee is employed
by an employer who did not, during
any calendar quarter during the
preceding calendar year, use more
than five hundred man-days of
agricultural labor,
(B) if such employee is the
parent, spouse, child, or other
member of his employer's immediate
family,
(C) if such employee
(i) is employed as a hand harvest
laborer and is paid on a piece rate
basis in an operation which has
been, and is customarily and
generally recognized as having been,
paid on a piece rate basis in the
region of employment,
(ii) commutes daily from his
permanent residence to the farm on
which he is so employed, and
(iii) has been employed in
agriculture less than thirteen weeks
during the preceding calendar year,
(D) if such employee (other than
an employee described in clause (C)
of this subsection)
(i) is sixteen years of age or
under and is employed as a hand
harvest laborer, is paid on a piece
rate basis in an operation which has
been, and is customarily and
generally recognized as having been,
paid on a piece rate basis in the
region of employment,
(ii) is employed on the same farm
as his parent or person standing in
the place of his parent, and
(iii) is paid at the same piece
rate as employees over age sixteen
are paid on the same farm, or
(E) if such employee is
principally engaged in the range
production of livestock; or
(7) any employee to the extent that
such employee is exempted by
regulations, order, or certificate
of the Secretary issued under
section 214 of this title; or
(8) any employee employed in
connection with the publication of
any weekly, semiweekly, or daily
newspaper with a circulation of less
than four thousand the major part of
which circulation is within the
county where published or counties
contiguous thereto; or
(9) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259, §
23(a)(1), Apr. 8, 1974, 88 Stat. 69.
(10) any switchboard operator
employed by an independently owned
public telephone company which has
not more than seven hundred and
fifty stations; or
(11) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259, §
10(a), Apr. 8, 1974, 88 Stat. 63.
(12) any employee employed as a
seaman on a vessel other than an
American vessel; or
(13) , (14) Repealed. Pub. L.
93-259, §§ 9(b)(1), 23 (b)(1), Apr.
8, 1974, 88 Stat. 63, 69.
(15) any employee employed on a
casual basis in domestic service
employment to provide babysitting
services or any employee employed in
domestic service employment to
provide companionship services for
individuals who (because of age or
infirmity) are unable to care for
themselves (as such terms are
defined and delimited by regulations
of the Secretary); or
(16) a criminal investigator who is
paid availability pay under section
5545a of title 5; or
(17) any employee who is a computer
systems analyst, computer
programmer, software engineer, or
other similarly skilled worker,
whose primary duty is:
(A) the application of systems
analysis techniques and procedures,
including consulting with users, to
determine hardware, software, or
system functional specifications;
(B) the design, development,
documentation, analysis, creation,
testing, or modification of computer
systems or programs, including
prototypes, based on and related to
user or system design
specifications;
(C) the design, documentation,
testing, creation, or modification
of computer programs related to
machine operating systems; or
(D) a combination of duties
described in subparagraphs (A), (B),
and (C) the performance of which
requires the same level of skills,
and
who, in the case of an employee who
is compensated on an hourly basis,
is compensated at a rate of not less
than $27.63 an hour.
(b) Maximum hour requirements
The provisions of section 207 of
this title shall not apply with
respect to:
(1) any employee with respect to
whom the Secretary of Transportation
has power to establish
qualifications and maximum hours of
service pursuant to the provisions
of section 31502 of title 49; or
(2) any employee of an employer
engaged in the operation of a rail
carrier subject to part A of
subtitle IV of title 49; or
(3) any employee of a carrier by
air subject to the provisions of
title II of the Railway Labor Act
[45 U.S.C. 181 et seq.]; or
(4) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259, §
11(c), Apr. 8, 1974, 88 Stat. 64.
(5) any individual employed as an
outside buyer of poultry, eggs,
cream, or milk, in their raw or
natural state; or
(6) any employee employed as a
seaman; or
(7) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259, §
21(b)(3), Apr. 8, 1974, 88 Stat. 68.
(8) Repealed. Pub. L. 95-151, §
14(b), Nov. 1, 1977, 91 Stat. 1252.
(9) any employee employed as an
announcer, news editor, or chief
engineer by a radio or television
station the major studio of which is
located
(A) in a city or town of one
hundred thousand population or less,
according to the latest available
decennial census figures as compiled
by the Bureau of the Census, except
where such city or town is part of a
standard metropolitan statistical
area, as defined and designated by
the Office of Management and Budget,
which has a total population in
excess of one hundred thousand, or
(B) in a city or town of
twenty-five thousand population or
less, which is part of such an area
but is at least 40 airline miles
from the principal city in such
area; or
(10)
(A) any salesman, partsman, or
mechanic primarily engaged in
selling or servicing automobiles,
trucks, or farm implements, if he is
employed by a nonmanufacturing
establishment primarily engaged in
the business of selling such
vehicles or implements to ultimate
purchasers; or
(B) any salesman primarily engaged
in selling trailers, boats, or
aircraft, if he is employed by a
nonmanufacturing establishment
primarily engaged in the business of
selling trailers, boats, or aircraft
to ultimate purchasers; or
(11) any employee employed as a
driver or driver's helper making
local deliveries, who is compensated
for such employment on the basis of
trip rates, or other delivery
payment plan, if the Secretary shall
find that such plan has the general
purpose and effect of reducing hours
worked by such employees to, or
below, the maximum workweek
applicable to them under section 207
(a) of this title; or
(12) any employee employed in
agriculture or in connection with
the operation or maintenance of
ditches, canals, reservoirs, or
waterways, not owned or operated for
profit, or operated on a sharecrop
basis, and which are used
exclusively for supply and storing
of water, at least 90 percent of
which was ultimately delivered for
agricultural purposes during the
preceding calendar year; or
(13) any employee with respect to
his employment in agriculture by a
farmer, notwithstanding other
employment of such employee in
connection with livestock auction
operations in which such farmer is
engaged as an adjunct to the raising
of livestock, either on his own
account or in conjunction with other
farmers, if such employee
(A) is primarily employed during
his workweek in agriculture by such
farmer, and
(B) is paid for his employment in
connection with such livestock
auction operations at a wage rate
not less than that prescribed by
section 206 (a)(1) of this title; or
(14) any employee employed within
the area of production (as defined
by the Secretary) by an
establishment commonly recognized as
a country elevator, including such
an establishment which sells
products and services used in the
operation of a farm, if no more than
five employees are employed in the
establishment in such operations; or
(15) any employee engaged in the
processing of maple sap into sugar
(other than refined sugar) or syrup;
or
(16) any employee engaged
(A) in the transportation and
preparation for transportation of
fruits or vegetables, whether or not
performed by the farmer, from the
farm to a place of first processing
or first marketing within the same
State, or
(B) in transportation, whether or
not performed by the farmer, between
the farm and any point within the
same State of persons employed or to
be employed in the harvesting of
fruits or vegetables; or
(17) any driver employed by an
employer engaged in the business of
operating taxicabs; or
(18) , (19) Repealed. Pub. L.
93-259, §§ 15(c), 16 (b), Apr. 8,
1974, 88 Stat. 65.
(20) any employee of a public
agency who in any workweek is
employed in fire protection
activities or any employee of a
public agency who in any workweek is
employed in law enforcement
activities (including security
personnel in correctional
institutions), if the public agency
employs during the workweek less
than 5 employees in fire protection
or law enforcement activities, as
the case may be; or
(21) any employee who is employed
in domestic service in a household
and who resides in such household;
or
(22) Repealed. Pub. L. 95-151, § 5,
Nov. 1, 1977, 91 Stat. 1249.
(23) Repealed. Pub. L. 93-259, §
10(b)(3), Apr. 8, 1974, 88 Stat. 64.
(24) any employee who is employed
with his spouse by a nonprofit
educational institution to serve as
the parents of children:
(A) who are orphans or one of
whose natural parents is deceased,
or
(B) who are enrolled in such
institution and reside in
residential facilities of the
institution,
while such children are in residence
at such institution, if such
employee and his spouse reside in
such facilities, receive, without
cost, board and lodging from such
institution, and are together
compensated, on a cash basis, at an
annual rate of not less than
$10,000; or
(25) , (26) Repealed. Pub. L.
95-151, §§ 6(a), 7 (a), Nov. 1,
1977, 91 Stat. 1249, 1250.
(27) any employee employed by an
establishment which is a motion
picture theater; or
(28) any employee employed in
planting or tending trees, cruising,
surveying, or felling timber, or in
preparing or transporting logs or
other forestry products to the mill,
processing plant, railroad, or other
transportation terminal, if the
number of employees employed by his
employer in such forestry or
lumbering operations does not exceed
eight;
(29) any employee of an amusement
or recreational establishment
located in a national park or
national forest or on land in the
National Wildlife Refuge System if
such employee
(A) is an employee of a private
entity engaged in providing services
or facilities in a national park or
national forest, or on land in the
National Wildlife Refuge System,
under a contract with the Secretary
of the Interior or the Secretary of
Agriculture, and
(B) receives compensation for
employment in excess of fifty-six
hours in any workweek at a rate not
less than one and one-half times the
regular rate at which he is
employed; or
(30) a criminal investigator who is
paid availability pay under section
5545a of title 5.
(c) Child labor requirements
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(2) or (4), the provisions of
section 212 of this title relating
to child labor shall not apply to
any employee employed in agriculture
outside of school hours for the
school district where such employee
is living while he is so employed,
if such employee:
(A) is less than twelve years of
age and
(i) is employed by his parent, or
by a person standing in the place of
his parent, on a farm owned or
operated by such parent or person,
or
(ii) is employed, with the
consent of his parent or person
standing in the place of his parent,
on a farm, none of the employees of
which are (because of subsection
(a)(6)(A) of this section) required
to be paid at the wage rate
prescribed by section 206 (a)(5) of
this title,
(B) is twelve years or thirteen
years of age and
(i) such employment is with the
consent of his parent or person
standing in the place of his parent,
or
(ii) his parent or such person is
employed on the same farm as such
employee, or
(C) is fourteen years of age or
older.
(2) The provisions of section 212
of this title relating to child
labor shall apply to an employee
below the age of sixteen employed in
agriculture in an occupation that
the Secretary of Labor finds and
declares to be particularly
hazardous for the employment of
children below the age of sixteen,
except where such employee is
employed by his parent or by a
person standing in the place of his
parent on a farm owned or operated
by such parent or person.
(3) The provisions of section 212
of this title relating to child
labor shall not apply to any child
employed as an actor or performer in
motion pictures or theatrical
productions, or in radio or
television productions.
(4)
(A) An employer or group of
employers may apply to the Secretary
for a waiver of the application of
section 212 of this title to the
employment for not more than eight
weeks in any calendar year of
individuals who are less than twelve
years of age, but not less than ten
years of age, as hand harvest
laborers in an agricultural
operation which has been, and is
customarily and generally recognized
as being, paid on a piece rate basis
in the region in which such
individuals would be employed. The
Secretary may not grant such a
waiver unless he finds, based on
objective data submitted by the
applicant, that:
(i) the crop to be harvested is
one with a particularly short
harvesting season and the
application of section 212 of this
title would cause severe economic
disruption in the industry of the
employer or group of employers
applying for the waiver;
(ii) the employment of the
individuals to whom the waiver would
apply would not be deleterious to
their health or well-being;
(iii) the level and type of
pesticides and other chemicals used
would not have an adverse effect on
the health or well-being of the
individuals to whom the waiver would
apply;
(iv) individuals age twelve and
above are not available for such
employment; and
(v) the industry of such employer
or group of employers has
traditionally and substantially
employed individuals under twelve
years of age without displacing
substantial job opportunities for
individuals over sixteen years of
age.
(B) Any waiver granted by the
Secretary under subparagraph (A)
shall require that:
(i) the individuals employed
under such waiver be employed
outside of school hours for the
school district where they are
living while so employed;
(ii) such individuals while so
employed commute daily from their
permanent residence to the farm on
which they are so employed; and
(iii) such individuals be
employed under such waiver
(I) for not more than eight
weeks between June 1 and October 15
of any calendar year, and
(II) in accordance with such
other terms and conditions as the
Secretary shall prescribe for such
individuals' protection.
(5)
(A) In the administration and
enforcement of the child labor
provisions of this chapter,
employees who are 16 and 17 years of
age shall be permitted to load
materials into, but not operate or
unload materials from, scrap paper
balers and paper box compactors:
(i) that are safe for 16- and
17-year-old employees loading the
scrap paper balers or paper box
compactors; and
(ii) that cannot be operated
while being loaded.
(B) For purposes of subparagraph
(A), scrap paper balers and paper
box compactors shall be considered
safe for 16- or 17-year-old
employees to load only if:
(i)
(I) the scrap paper balers and
paper box compactors meet the
American National Standards
Institute's Standard ANSI
Z245.5-1990 for scrap paper balers
and Standard ANSI Z245.2-1992 for
paper box compactors; or
(II) the scrap paper balers and
paper box compactors meet an
applicable standard that is adopted
by the American National Standards
Institute after August 6, 1996, and
that is certified by the Secretary
to be at least as protective of the
safety of minors as the standard
described in subclause (I);
(ii) the scrap paper balers and
paper box compactors include an
on-off switch incorporating a
key-lock or other system and the
control of the system is maintained
in the custody of employees who are
18 years of age or older;
(iii) the on-off switch of the
scrap paper balers and paper box
compactors is maintained in an off
position when the scrap paper balers
and paper box compactors are not in
operation; and
(iv) the employer of 16- and
17-year-old employees provides
notice, and posts a notice, on the
scrap paper balers and paper box
compactors stating that:
(I) the scrap paper balers and
paper box compactors meet the
applicable standard described in
clause (i);
(II) 16- and 17-year-old
employees may only load the scrap
paper balers and paper box
compactors; and
(III) any employee under the age
of 18 may not operate or unload the
scrap paper balers and paper box
compactors.
The Secretary shall publish in the
Federal Register a standard that is
adopted by the American National
Standards Institute for scrap paper
balers or paper box compactors and
certified by the Secretary to be
protective of the safety of minors
under clause (i)(II).
(C)
(i) Employers shall prepare and
submit to the Secretary reports:
(I) on any injury to an employee
under the age of 18 that requires
medical treatment (other than first
aid) resulting from the employee's
contact with a scrap paper baler or
paper box compactor during the
loading, operation, or unloading of
the baler or compactor; and
(II) on any fatality of an
employee under the age of 18
resulting from the employee's
contact with a scrap paper baler or
paper box compactor during the
loading, operation, or unloading of
the baler or compactor.
(ii) The reports described in
clause (i) shall be used by the
Secretary to determine whether or
not the implementation of
subparagraph (A) has had any effect
on the safety of children.
(iii) The reports described in
clause (i) shall provide:
(I) the name, telephone number,
and address of the employer and the
address of the place of employment
where the incident occurred;
(II) the name, telephone number,
and address of the employee who
suffered an injury or death as a
result of the incident;
(III) the date of the incident;
(IV) a description of the injury
and a narrative describing how the
incident occurred; and
(V) the name of the manufacturer
and the model number of the scrap
paper baler or paper box compactor
involved in the incident.
(iv) The reports described in
clause (i) shall be submitted to the
Secretary promptly, but not later
than 10 days after the date on which
an incident relating to an injury or
death occurred.
(v) The Secretary may not rely
solely on the reports described in
clause (i) as the basis for making a
determination that any of the
employers described in clause (i)
has violated a provision of section
212 of this title relating to
oppressive child labor or a
regulation or order issued pursuant
to section 212 of this title. The
Secretary shall, prior to making
such a determination, conduct an
investigation and inspection in
accordance with section 212 (b) of
this title.
(vi) The reporting requirements
of this subparagraph shall expire 2
years after August 6, 1996.
(6) In the administration and
enforcement of the child labor
provisions of this chapter,
employees who are under 17 years of
age may not drive automobiles or
trucks on public roadways. Employees
who are 17 years of age may drive
automobiles or trucks on public
roadways only if:
(A) such driving is restricted to
daylight hours;
(B) the employee holds a State
license valid for the type of
driving involved in the job
performed and has no records of any
moving violation at the time of
hire;
(C) the employee has successfully
completed a State approved driver
education course;
(D) the automobile or truck is
equipped with a seat belt for the
driver and any passengers and the
employee's employer has instructed
the employee that the seat belts
must be used when driving the
automobile or truck;
(E) the automobile or truck does
not exceed 6,000 pounds of gross
vehicle weight;
(F) such driving does not involve:
(i) the towing of vehicles;
(ii) route deliveries or route
sales;
(iii) the transportation for hire
of property, goods, or passengers;
(iv) urgent, time-sensitive
deliveries;
(v) more than two trips away from
the primary place of employment in
any single day for the purpose of
delivering goods of the employee's
employer to a customer (other than
urgent, time-sensitive deliveries);
(vi) more than two trips away
from the primary place of employment
in any single day for the purpose of
transporting passengers (other than
employees of the employer);
(vii) transporting more than
three passengers (including
employees of the employer); or
(viii) driving beyond a 30 mile
radius from the employee's place of
employment; and
(G) such driving is only
occasional and incidental to the
employee's employment.
For purposes of subparagraph (G),
the term "occasional and incidental"
is no more than one-third of an
employee's worktime in any workday
and no more than 20 percent of an
employee's worktime in any workweek.
(d) Delivery of newspapers and
wreathmaking
The provisions of sections 206, 207,
and 212 of this title shall not
apply with respect to any employee
engaged in the delivery of
newspapers to the consumer or to any
homeworker engaged in the making of
wreaths composed principally of
natural holly, pine, cedar, or other
evergreens (including the harvesting
of the evergreens or other forest
products used in making such
wreaths).
(e) Maximum hour requirements and
minimum wage employees
The provisions of section 207 of
this title shall not apply with
respect to employees for whom the
Secretary of Labor is authorized to
establish minimum wage rates as
provided in section 206 (a)(3) of
this title, except with respect to
employees for whom such rates are in
effect; and with respect to such
employees the Secretary may make
rules and regulations providing
reasonable limitations and allowing
reasonable variations, tolerances,
and exemptions to and from any or
all of the provisions of section 207
of this title if he shall find,
after a public hearing on the
matter, and taking into account the
factors set forth in section 206
(a)(3) of this title, that economic
conditions warrant such action.
(f) Employment in foreign countries
and certain United States
territories
The provisions of sections 206, 207,
211, and 212 of this title shall not
apply with respect to any employee
whose services during the workweek
are performed in a workplace within
a foreign country or within
territory under the jurisdiction of
the United States other than the
following: a State of the United
States; the District of Columbia;
Puerto Rico; the Virgin Islands;
outer Continental Shelf lands
defined in the Outer Continental
Shelf Lands Act (ch. 345, 67 Stat.
462) [43 U.S.C. 1331 et seq.];
American Samoa; Guam; Wake Island;
Eniwetok Atoll; Kwajalein Atoll; and
Johnston Island.
(g) Certain employment in retail or
service establishments, agriculture
The exemption from section 206 of
this title provided by paragraph (6)
of subsection (a) of this section
shall not apply with respect to any
employee employed by an
establishment
(1) which controls, is controlled
by, or is under common control with,
another establishment the activities
of which are not related for a
common business purpose to, but
materially support the activities of
the establishment employing such
employee; and
(2) whose annual gross volume of
sales made or business done, when
combined with the annual gross
volume of sales made or business
done by each establishment which
controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with, the
establishment employing such
employee, exceeds $10,000,000
(exclusive of excise taxes at the
retail level which are separately
stated).
(h) Maximum hour requirement:
fourteen workweek limitation
The provisions of section 207 of
this title shall not apply for a
period or periods of not more than
fourteen workweeks in the aggregate
in any calendar year to any employee
who:
(1) is employed by such employer:
(A) exclusively to provide
services necessary and incidental to
the ginning of cotton in an
establishment primarily engaged in
the ginning of cotton;
(B) exclusively to provide
services necessary and incidental to
the receiving, handling, and storing
of raw cotton and the compressing of
raw cotton when performed at a
cotton warehouse or
compress-warehouse facility, other
than one operated in conjunction
with a cotton mill, primarily
engaged in storing and compressing;
(C) exclusively to provide
services necessary and incidental to
the receiving, handling, storing,
and processing of cottonseed in an
establishment primarily engaged in
the receiving, handling, storing,
and processing of cottonseed; or
(D) exclusively to provide
services necessary and incidental to
the processing of sugar cane or
sugar beets in an establishment
primarily engaged in the processing
of sugar cane or sugar beets; and
(2) receives for:
(A) such employment by such
employer which is in excess of ten
hours in any workday, and
(B) such employment by such
employer which is in excess of
forty-eight hours in any workweek,
compensation at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular
rate at which he is employed.
Any employer who receives an
exemption under this subsection
shall not be eligible for any other
exemption under this section or
section 207 of this title.
(i) Cotton ginning
The provisions of section 207 of
this title shall not apply for a
period or periods of not more than
fourteen workweeks in the aggregate
in any period of fifty-two
consecutive weeks to any employee
who:
(1) is engaged in the ginning of
cotton for market in any place of
employment located in a county where
cotton is grown in commercial
quantities; and
(2) receives for any such
employment during such workweeks:
(A) in excess of ten hours in any
workday, and
(B) in excess of forty-eight hours
in any workweek,
compensation at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular
rate at which he is employed. No
week included in any fifty-two week
period for purposes of the preceding
sentence may be included for such
purposes in any other fifty-two week
period.
(j) Processing of sugar beets, sugar
beet molasses, or sugar cane
The provisions of section 207 of
this title shall not apply for a
period or periods of not more than
fourteen workweeks in the aggregate
in any period of fifty-two
consecutive weeks to any employee
who:
(1) is engaged in the processing of
sugar beets, sugar beet molasses, or
sugar cane into sugar (other than
refined sugar) or syrup; and
(2) receives for any such
employment during such workweeks:
(A) in excess of ten hours in any
workday, and
(B) in excess of forty-eight hours
in any workweek,
compensation at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular
rate at which he is employed. No
week included in any fifty-two week
period for purposes of the preceding
sentence may be included for such
purposes in any other fifty-two week
period.
Sec. 214.
Employment under special
certificates
(a) Learners, apprentices,
messengers
The Secretary, to the extent
necessary in order to prevent
curtailment of opportunities for
employment, shall by regulations or
by orders provide for the employment
of learners, of apprentices, and of
messengers employed primarily in
delivering letters and messages,
under special certificates issued
pursuant to regulations of the
Secretary, at such wages lower than
the minimum wage applicable under
section 206 of this title and
subject to such limitations as to
time, number, proportion, and length
of service as the Secretary shall
prescribe.
(b) Students
(1)
(A) The Secretary, to the extent
necessary in order to prevent
curtailment of opportunities for
employment, shall by special
certificate issued under a
regulation or order provide, in
accordance with subparagraph (B),
for the employment, at a wage rate
not less than 85 per centum of the
otherwise applicable wage rate in
effect under section 206 of this
title or not less than $1.60 an
hour, whichever is the higher, of
full-time students (regardless of
age but in compliance with
applicable child labor laws) in
retail or service establishments.
(B) Except as provided in
paragraph (4)(B), during any month
in which full-time students are to
be employed in any retail or service
establishment under certificates
issued under this subsection the
proportion of student hours of
employment to the total hours of
employment of all employees in such
establishment may not exceed:
(i) in the case of a retail or
service establishment whose
employees (other than employees
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce)
were covered by this chapter before
the effective date of the Fair Labor
Standards Amendments of 1974:
(I) the proportion of student
hours of employment to the total
hours of employment of all employees
in such establishment for the
corresponding month of the
immediately preceding twelve-month
period,
(II) the maximum proportion for
any corresponding month of student
hours of employment to the total
hours of employment of all employees
in such establishment applicable to
the issuance of certificates under
this section at any time before the
effective date of the Fair Labor
Standards Amendments of 1974 for the
employment of students by such
employer, or
(III) a proportion equal to
one-tenth of the total hours of
employment of all employees in such
establishment,
whichever is greater;
(ii) in the case of retail or
service establishment whose
employees (other than employees
engaged in commerce or in the
production of goods for commerce)
are covered for the first time on or
after the effective date of the Fair
Labor Standards Amendments of 1974:
(I) the proportion of hours of
employment of students in such
establishment to the total hours of
employment of all employees in such
establishment for the corresponding
month of the twelve-month period
immediately prior to the effective
date of such Amendments,
(II) the proportion of student
hours of employment to the total
hours of employment of all employees
in such establishment for the
corresponding month of the
immediately preceding twelve-month
period, or
(III) a proportion equal to
one-tenth of the total hours of
employment of all employees in such
establishment,
whichever is greater; or
(iii) in the case of a retail or
service establishment for which
records of student hours worked are
not available, the proportion of
student hours of employment to the
total hours of employment of all
employees based on the practice
during the immediately preceding
twelve-month period in
(I) similar establishments of
the same employer in the same
general metropolitan area in which
such establishment is located,
(II) similar establishments of
the same or nearby communities if
such establishment is not in a
metropolitan area, or
(III) other establishments of
the same general character operating
in the community or the nearest
comparable community.
For purpose of clauses (i), (ii),
and (iii) of this subparagraph, the
term "student hours of employment"
means hours during which students
are employed in a retail or service
establishment under certificates
issued under this subsection.
(2) The Secretary, to the extent
necessary in order to prevent
curtailment of opportunities for
employment, shall by special
certificate issued under a
regulation or order provide for the
employment, at a wage rate not less
than 85 per centum of the wage rate
in effect under section 206 (a)(5)
of this title or not less than $1.30
an hour, whichever is the higher, of
full-time students (regardless of
age but in compliance with
applicable child labor laws) in any
occupation in agriculture.
(3) The Secretary, to the extent
necessary in order to prevent
curtailment of opportunities for
employment, shall by special
certificate issued under a
regulation or order provide for the
employment by an institution of
higher education, at a wage rate not
less than 85 per centum of the
otherwise applicable wage rate in
effect under section 206 of this
title or not less than $1.60 an
hour, whichever is the higher, of
full-time students (regardless of
age but in compliance with
applicable child labor laws) who are
enrolled in such institution. The
Secretary shall by regulation
prescribe standards and requirements
to insure that this paragraph will
not create a substantial probability
of reducing the full-time employment
opportunities of persons other than
those to whom the minimum wage rate
authorized by this paragraph is
applicable.
(4)
(A) A special certificate issued
under paragraph (1), (2), or (3)
shall provide that the student or
students for whom it is issued
shall, except during vacation
periods, be employed on a part-time
basis and not in excess of twenty
hours in any workweek.
(B) If the issuance of a special
certificate under paragraph (1) or
(2) for an employer will cause the
number of students employed by such
employer under special certificates
issued under this subsection to
exceed six, the Secretary may not
issue such a special certificate for
the employment of a student by such
employer unless the Secretary finds
employment of such student will not
create a substantial probability of
reducing the full-time employment
opportunities of persons other than
those employed under special
certificates issued under this
subsection. If the issuance of a
special certificate under paragraph
(1) or (2) for an employer will not
cause the number of students
employed by such employer under
special certificates issued under
this subsection to exceed six:
(i) the Secretary may issue a
special certificate under paragraph
(1) or (2) for the employment of a
student by such employer if such
employer certifies to the Secretary
that the employment of such student
will not reduce the full-time
employment opportunities of persons
other than those employed under
special certificates issued under
this subsection, and
(ii) in the case of an employer
which is a retail or service
establishment, subparagraph (B) of
paragraph (1) shall not apply with
respect to the issuance of special
certificates for such employer under
such paragraph.
The requirement of this subparagraph
shall not apply in the case of the
issuance of special certificates
under paragraph (3) for the
employment of full-time students by
institutions of higher education;
except that if the Secretary
determines that an institution of
higher education is employing
students under certificates issued
under paragraph (3) but in violation
of the requirements of that
paragraph or of regulations issued
thereunder, the requirements of this
subparagraph shall apply with
respect to the issuance of special
certificates under paragraph (3) for
the employment of students by such
institution.
(C) No special certificate may be
issued under this subsection unless
the employer for whom the
certificate is to be issued provides
evidence satisfactory to the
Secretary of the student status of
the employees to be employed under
such special certificate.
(D) To minimize paperwork for, and
to encourage, small businesses to
employ students under special
certificates issued under paragraphs
(1) and (2), the Secretary shall, by
regulation or order, prescribe a
simplified application form to be
used by employers in applying for
such a certificate for the
employment of not more than six
full-time students. Such an
application shall require only:
(i) a listing of the name,
address, and business of the
applicant employer,
(ii) a listing of the date the
applicant began business, and
(iii) the certification that the
employment of such full-time
students will not reduce the
full-time employment opportunities
of persons other than persons
employed under special certificates.
(c) Handicapped workers
(1) The Secretary, to the extent
necessary to prevent curtailment of
opportunities for employment, shall
by regulation or order provide for
the employment, under special
certificates, of individuals
(including individuals employed in
agriculture) whose earning or
productive capacity is impaired by
age, physical or mental deficiency,
or injury, at wages which are:
(A) lower than the minimum wage
applicable under section 206 of this
title,
(B) commensurate with those paid
to nonhandicapped workers, employed
in the vicinity in which the
individuals under the certificates
are employed, for essentially the
same type, quality, and quantity of
work, and
(C) related to the individual's
productivity.
(2) The Secretary shall not issue a
certificate under paragraph (1)
unless the employer provides written
assurances to the Secretary that:
(A) in the case of individuals
paid on an hourly rate basis, wages
paid in accordance with paragraph
(1) will be reviewed by the employer
at periodic intervals at least once
every six months, and
(B) wages paid in accordance with
paragraph (1) will be adjusted by
the employer at periodic intervals,
at least once each year, to reflect
changes in the prevailing wage paid
to experienced nonhandicapped
individuals employed in the locality
for essentially the same type of
work.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1),
no employer shall be permitted to
reduce the hourly wage rate
prescribed by certificate under this
subsection in effect on June 1,
1986, of any handicapped individual
for a period of two years from such
date without prior authorization of
the Secretary.
(4) Nothing in this subsection
shall be construed to prohibit an
employer from maintaining or
establishing work activities centers
to provide therapeutic activities
for handicapped clients.
(5)
(A) Notwithstanding any other
provision of this subsection, any
employee receiving a special minimum
wage at a rate specified pursuant to
this subsection or the parent or
guardian of such an employee may
petition the Secretary to obtain a
review of such special minimum wage
rate. An employee or the employee's
parent or guardian may file such a
petition for and in behalf of the
employee or in behalf of the
employee and other employees
similarly situated. No employee may
be a party to any such action unless
the employee or the employee's
parent or guardian gives consent in
writing to become such a party and
such consent is filed with the
Secretary.
(B) Upon receipt of a petition
filed in accordance with
subparagraph (A), the Secretary
within ten days shall assign the
petition to an administrative law
judge appointed pursuant to section
3105 of title 5. The administrative
law judge shall conduct a hearing on
the record in accordance with
section 554 of title 5 with respect
to such petition within thirty days
after assignment.
(C) In any such proceeding, the
employer shall have the burden of
demonstrating that the special
minimum wage rate is justified as
necessary in order to prevent
curtailment of opportunities for
employment.
(D) In determining whether any
special minimum wage rate is
justified pursuant to subparagraph
(C), the administrative law judge
shall consider:
(i) the productivity of the
employee or employees identified in
the petition and the conditions
under which such productivity was
measured; and
(ii) the productivity of other
employees performing work of
essentially the same type and
quality for other employers in the
same vicinity.
(E) The administrative law judge
shall issue a decision within thirty
days after the hearing provided for
in subparagraph (B). Such action
shall be deemed to be a final agency
action unless within thirty days the
Secretary grants a request to review
the decision of the administrative
law judge. Either the petitioner or
the employer may request review by
the Secretary within fifteen days of
the date of issuance of the decision
by the administrative law judge.
(F) The Secretary, within thirty
days after receiving a request for
review, shall review the record and
either adopt the decision of the
administrative law judge or issue
exceptions. The decision of the
administrative law judge, together
with any exceptions, shall be deemed
to be a final agency action.
(G) A final agency action shall be
subject to judicial review pursuant
to chapter 7 of title 5. An action
seeking such review shall be brought
within thirty days of a final agency
action described in subparagraph
(F).
(d) Employment by schools
The Secretary may by regulation or
order provide that sections 206 and
207 of this title shall not apply
with respect to the employment by
any elementary or secondary school
of its students if such employment
constitutes, as determined under
regulations prescribed by the
Secretary, an integral part of the
regular education program provided
by such school and such employment
is in accordance with applicable
child labor laws.
Sec. 215.
Prohibited acts; prima facie
evidence
(a) After the expiration of one
hundred and twenty days from June
25, 1938, it shall be unlawful for
any person:
(1) to transport, offer for
transportation, ship, deliver, or
sell in commerce, or to ship,
deliver, or sell with knowledge that
shipment or delivery or sale thereof
in commerce is intended, any goods
in the production of which any
employee was employed in violation
of section 206 or section 207 of
this title, or in violation of any
regulation or order of the Secretary
issued under section 214 of this
title; except that no provision of
this chapter shall impose any
liability upon any common carrier
for the transportation in commerce
in the regular course of its
business of any goods not produced
by such common carrier, and no
provision of this chapter shall
excuse any common carrier from its
obligation to accept any goods for
transportation; and except that any
such transportation, offer,
shipment, delivery, or sale of such
goods by a purchaser who acquired
them in good faith in reliance on
written assurance from the producer
that the goods were produced in
compliance with the requirements of
this chapter, and who acquired such
goods for value without notice of
any such violation, shall not be
deemed unlawful;
(2) to violate any of the
provisions of section 206 or section
207 of this title, or any of the
provisions of any regulation or
order of the Secretary issued under
section 214 of this title;
(3) to discharge or in any other
manner discriminate against any
employee because such employee has
filed any complaint or instituted or
caused to be instituted any
proceeding under or related to this
chapter, or has testified or is
about to testify in any such
proceeding, or has served or is
about to serve on an industry
committee;
(4) to violate any of the
provisions of section 212 of this
title;
(5) to violate any of the
provisions of section 211 (c) of
this title, or any regulation or
order made or continued in effect
under the provisions of section 211
(d) of this title, or to make any
statement, report, or record filed
or kept pursuant to the provisions
of such section or of any regulation
or order thereunder, knowing such
statement, report, or record to be
false in a material respect.
(b) For the purposes of subsection
(a)(1) of this section proof that
any employee was employed in any
place of employment where goods
shipped or sold in commerce were
produced, within ninety days prior
to the removal of the goods from
such place of employment, shall be
prima facie evidence that such
employee was engaged in the
production of such goods.
Sec. 216.
Penalties
(a) Fines and imprisonment
Any person who willfully violates
any of the provisions of section 215
of this title shall upon conviction
thereof be subject to a fine of not
more than $10,000, or to
imprisonment for not more than six
months, or both. No person shall be
imprisoned under this subsection
except for an offense committed
after the conviction of such person
for a prior offense under this
subsection.
(b) Damages; right of action;
attorney's fees and costs;
termination of right of action
Any employer who violates the
provisions of section 206 or section
207 of this title shall be liable to
the employee or employees affected
in the amount of their unpaid
minimum wages, or their unpaid
overtime compensation, as the case
may be, and in an additional equal
amount as liquidated damages. Any
employer who violates the provisions
of section 215 (a)(3) of this title
shall be liable for such legal or
equitable relief as may be
appropriate to effectuate the
purposes of section 215 (a)(3) of
this title, including without
limitation employment,
reinstatement, promotion, and the
payment of wages lost and an
additional equal amount as
liquidated damages. An action to
recover the liability prescribed in
either of the preceding sentences
may be maintained against any
employer (including a public agency)
in any Federal or State court of
competent jurisdiction by any one or
more employees for and in behalf of
himself or themselves and other
employees similarly situated. No
employee shall be a party plaintiff
to any such action unless he gives
his consent in writing to become
such a party and such consent is
filed in the court in which such
action is brought. The court in such
action shall, in addition to any
judgment awarded to the plaintiff or
plaintiffs, allow a reasonable
attorney's fee to be paid by the
defendant, and costs of the action.
The right provided by this
subsection to bring an action by or
on behalf of any employee, and the
right of any employee to become a
party plaintiff to any such action,
shall terminate upon the filing of a
complaint by the Secretary of Labor
in an action under section 217 of
this title in which
(1) restraint is sought of any
further delay in the payment of
unpaid minimum wages, or the amount
of unpaid overtime compensation, as
the case may be, owing to such
employee under section 206 or
section 207 of this title by an
employer liable therefor under the
provisions of this subsection or
(2) legal or equitable relief is
sought as a result of alleged
violations of section 215 (a)(3) of
this title.
(c) Payment of wages and
compensation; waiver of claims;
actions by the Secretary; limitation
of actions
The Secretary is authorized to
supervise the payment of the unpaid
minimum wages or the unpaid overtime
compensation owing to any employee
or employees under section 206 or
section 207 of this title, and the
agreement of any employee to accept
such payment shall upon payment in
full constitute a waiver by such
employee of any right he may have
under subsection (b) of this section
to such unpaid minimum wages or
unpaid overtime compensation and an
additional equal amount as
liquidated damages. The Secretary
may bring an action in any court of
competent jurisdiction to recover
the amount of unpaid minimum wages
or overtime compensation and an
equal amount as liquidated damages.
The right provided by subsection (b)
of this section to bring an action
by or on behalf of any employee to
recover the liability specified in
the first sentence of such
subsection and of any employee to
become a party plaintiff to any such
action shall terminate upon the
filing of a complaint by the
Secretary in an action under this
subsection in which a recovery is
sought of unpaid minimum wages or
unpaid overtime compensation under
sections 206 and 207 of this title
or liquidated or other damages
provided by this subsection owing to
such employee by an employer liable
under the provisions of subsection
(b) of this section, unless such
action is dismissed without
prejudice on motion of the
Secretary. Any sums thus recovered
by the Secretary of Labor on behalf
of an employee pursuant to this
subsection shall be held in a
special deposit account and shall be
paid, on order of the Secretary of
Labor, directly to the employee or
employees affected. Any such sums
not paid to an employee because of
inability to do so within a period
of three years shall be covered into
the Treasury of the United States as
miscellaneous receipts. In
determining when an action is
commenced by the Secretary of Labor
under this subsection for the
purposes of the statutes of
limitations provided in section 255
(a) of this title, it shall be
considered to be commenced in the
case of any individual claimant on
the date when the complaint is filed
if he is specifically named as a
party plaintiff in the complaint, or
if his name did not so appear, on
the subsequent date on which his
name is added as a party plaintiff
in such action.
(d) Savings provisions
In any action or proceeding
commenced prior to, on, or after
August 8, 1956, no employer shall be
subject to any liability or
punishment under this chapter or the
Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947 [29
U.S.C. 251 et seq.] on account of
his failure to comply with any
provision or provisions of this
chapter or such Act
(1) with respect to work heretofore
or hereafter performed in a
workplace to which the exemption in
section 213 (f) of this title is
applicable,
(2) with respect to work performed
in Guam, the Canal Zone or Wake
Island before the effective date of
this amendment of subsection (d), or
(3) with respect to work performed
in a possession named in section 206
(a)(3) of this title at any time
prior to the establishment by the
Secretary, as provided therein, of a
minimum wage rate applicable to such
work.
(e) Civil penalties for child labor
violations
Any person who violates the
provisions of section 212 of this
title or section 213 (c)(5) of this
title, relating to child labor, or
any regulation issued under section
212 of this title or section 213
(c)(5) of this title, shall be
subject to a civil penalty of not to
exceed $10,000 for each employee who
was the subject of such a violation.
Any person who repeatedly or
willfully violates section 206 or
207 of this title shall be subject
to a civil penalty of not to exceed
$1,000 for each such violation. In
determining the amount of any
penalty under this subsection, the
appropriateness of such penalty to
the size of the business of the
person charged and the gravity of
the violation shall be considered.
The amount of any penalty under this
subsection, when finally determined,
may be:
(1) deducted from any sums owing by
the United States to the person
charged;
(2) recovered in a civil action
brought by the Secretary in any
court of competent jurisdiction, in
which litigation the Secretary shall
be represented by the Solicitor of
Labor; or
(3) ordered by the court, in an
action brought for a violation of
section 215 (a)(4) of this title or
a repeated or willful violation of
section 215 (a)(2) of this title, to
be paid to the Secretary.
Any administrative determination by
the Secretary of the amount of any
penalty under this subsection shall
be final, unless within fifteen days
after receipt of notice thereof by
certified mail the person charged
with the violation takes exception
to the determination that the
violations for which the penalty is
imposed occurred, in which event
final determination of the penalty
shall be made in an administrative
proceeding after opportunity for
hearing in accordance with section
554 of title 5, and regulations to
be promulgated by the Secretary.
Except for civil penalties collected
for violations of section 212 of
this title, sums collected as
penalties pursuant to this section
shall be applied toward
reimbursement of the costs of
determining the violations and
assessing and collecting such
penalties, in accordance with the
provisions of section 9a of this
title. Civil penalties collected for
violations of section 212 of this
title shall be deposited in the
general fund of the Treasury.
Sec. 216a.
Repealed. Oct. 26, 1949, ch. 736,
Sec. 16(f), 63 Stat. 920
Sec. 216b.
Liability for overtime work
performed prior to July 20, 1949
No employer shall be subject to
any liability or punishment under
this chapter (in any action or
proceeding commenced prior to or on
or after January 24, 1950), on
account of the failure of said
employer to pay an employee
compensation for any period of
overtime work performed prior to
July 20, 1949, if the compensation
paid prior to July 20, 1949, for
such work was at least equal to the
compensation which would have been
payable for such work had
subsections (d)(6), (7) and (g) of
section 207 of this title been in
effect at the time of such payment.
Sec. 217.
Injunction proceedings
The district courts, together
with the United States District
Court for the District of the Canal
Zone, the District Court of the
Virgin Islands, and the District
Court of Guam shall have
jurisdiction, for cause shown, to
restrain violations of section 215
of this title, including in the case
of violations of section 215 (a)(2)
of this title the restraint of any
withholding of payment of minimum
wages or overtime compensation found
by the court to be due to employees
under this chapter (except sums
which employees are barred from
recovering, at the time of the
commencement of the action to
restrain the violations, by virtue
of the provisions of section 255 of
this title).
Sec. 218. Relation
to other laws
(a) No provision of this chapter
or of any order thereunder shall
excuse noncompliance with any
Federal or State law or municipal
ordinance establishing a minimum
wage higher than the minimum wage
established under this chapter or a
maximum work week lower than the
maximum workweek established under
this chapter, and no provision of
this chapter relating to the
employment of child labor shall
justify noncompliance with any
Federal or State law or municipal
ordinance establishing a higher
standard than the standard
established under this chapter. No
provision of this chapter shall
justify any employer in reducing a
wage paid by him which is in excess
of the applicable minimum wage under
this chapter, or justify any
employer in increasing hours of
employment maintained by him which
are shorter than the maximum hours
applicable under this chapter.
(b) Notwithstanding any other
provision of this chapter (other
than section 213 (f) of this title)
or any other law:
(1) any Federal employee in the
Canal Zone engaged in employment of
the kind described in section 5102
(c)(7) of title 5, or
(2) any employee employed in a
nonappropriated fund instrumentality
under the jurisdiction of the Armed
Forces,
shall have his basic compensation
fixed or adjusted at a wage rate
that is not less than the
appropriate wage rate provided for
in section 206 (a)(1) of this title
(except that the wage rate provided
for in section 206 (b) of this title
shall apply to any employee who
performed services during the
workweek in a work place within the
Canal Zone), and shall have his
overtime compensation set at an
hourly rate not less than the
overtime rate provided for in
section 207 (a)(1) of this title.
Sec. 219.
Separability
If any provision of this chapter or
the application of such provision to
any person or circumstance is held
invalid, the remainder of this
chapter and the application of such
provision to other persons or
circumstances shall not be affected
thereby.