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The clock is ticking, but what time is considered compensable?

July 2024 employment law letter
Authors: 

Margaret Lohmann, Steptoe & Johnson PLLC

Q          What’s considered compensable time during the onboarding process under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)—for example, time completing paperwork before the start date, as well as time reviewing policies and procedures and completing training?

Under the FLSA, employees must be compensated for all working time. Even if the employer didn’t specifically request that the employee perform the work, the employee’s time usually is still compensable under the FLSA’s broad definition of “employ,” which encompasses time the employee is “suffer[ed] or permit[ted] to work.”

Time spent on onboarding tasks like training programs, watching videos, and attending lectures and meetings is compensable. Under Department of Labor rules, time is noncompensable only if a task occurs outside normal working hours, isn’t job-related, isn’t concurrently performed with other work, and is voluntary. Most onboarding tasks won’t meet all of these requirements for noncompensability.

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