After a long wait, the Department of Labor (DOL) released revisions to the white collar overtime exemption rules in the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Non-exempt, or "overtime eligible," workers in the United States are entitled to time-and-a-half pay for their hours worked after 40 hours in a week. The webinar will focus on the new standards for the "white collar" or "EAP" exemption that covers executive, administrative, professional, outside sales, and computer employees.
This webinar will:
This 60-minute basic webinar will help employers get up to date on the new FLSA rules that go into effect in December 2016.
PRESENTER
Jennifer Sandberg is a partner in the Atlanta office of Fisher Phillips. Employers, In-House Counsel, and Human Resource professionals view her as a trusted advisor providing solid business advice. She works to understand her clients' business and desired business outcomes in order to provide creative and cost-effective advice and counsel. Her advice is custom-tailored for employers wiht tens of thousands of employees or those with a mere handful of employees.
Jennifer delivers engaging and highly effective training for senior executives and managers on a diverse array of labor and employment topics. She conducts legal compliance audits of human resource functions, procedures and policies, and provides a triaged approach to audit findings. She prepares employee handbooks and policies for multi-state employers that are succinct and easy for employees to understand.
She frequently speaks to numerous business associations and human resource groups on topics related to all areas of employment law, such as hiring and firing workers, disability accommodations, employee leaves, workplace investigations and wage-hour issues.
Jennifer was selected for inclusion in The Legal 500 -- Workplace & Employment Counseling in 2016.
This webinar is 60 minutes long, and has been submitted to the Human Resource Certification Institute and the Society for Human Resource Management to qualify for 1 recertification credit.