With the holidays approaching, companies will be handling holiday pay procedures and vacation/paid time off requests. Many companies were forced by the pandemic to reduce wages for part of 2020. As human resource professionals handle the holidays and leave requests, the rate that employees are paid should be considered carefully. Here are some guidelines about paying for leave after a wage reduction. PLEASE NOTE: This is not legal advice and, as always, I recommend that you run your policy past a local employment lawyer to make sure it complies with all applicable laws.
- As a general rule, companies that reduce pay cannot retroactively apply that pay reduction to employee wages already earned.
- In most jurisdictions, accrued vacation leave is considered earned wages, so payment for those earned wages cannot be retroactively reduced.
- As it applies to holiday pay — the employees can receive holiday pay at the pay rate that they have at the time of the holiday.
- As it applies to vacation pay, this issue is more complicated. Each state will have its own law on the books, or case law developed through the courts, that will address the rate that leave should be paid out. Again, I recommend that you run your policy past a local employment lawyer to make sure it complies with all applicable wage laws.
To avoid allegations of wage theft and to support employee morale, I recommend taking the following approach to the payment of earned paid leave. This may not be required by law but is my recommendation even if not required.
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- If your company provides leave as a front-loaded deposit at the beginning of the year, that leave should be paid out at the wage rate in effect at the time the leave was placed in the employee’s leave balance.
- If your company uses an accrual system in which employees earn hours of leave with each pay cycle, the leave has been accrued at the wage rate in effect at that time of the accrual and should be paid out at whatever the rate was at the time the leave was earned.
- So, leave balances up to the time of the wage reduction should be paid at the regular (non-reduced) wage. The leave hours accrued after the wage reduction may be paid at the reduced rate.
- It would be wise to have someone take a look at leave balances ahead of time to calculate each employee’s leave balance up to the point of the wage reduction.
- Pay out the higher rate leave first in a “first in, first out” (FIFO) system. Once the pre-reduction balance has been exhausted, the remaining leave balance will be paid at the reduced rate.
- Example, using simple math:
- Employee has 20 hours of leave balance accrued at the time wages are reduced.
- Employee accrued 20 more hours of leave after the wage reduction.
- Employee has requested 40 hours of leave over the holidays.
- The first 20 hours of leave will be paid at the employee’s original wage rate (using FIFO).
- The remaining 20 hours of leave will be paid at the employee’s reduced wage rate.
Wage laws can be confusing and can be different from place to place. Be sure to find out what the laws are where your company is located, and again, checking in with a local employment attorney to verify would be a good strategy.
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- Business Management - HR
Adriane Harrison is Vice President, Human Relations Consulting at PRINTING United Alliance. Adriane assists members with a wide variety of HR matters involving statutes, regulations, policies, procedures, culture, and staffing, as well as the gamut of day-to-day HR issues. In addition, she supports professional development by conducting webinars, participating in panel discussions, and speaking at industry events on human resources issues. Currently, Adriane is the Chairperson of the Graphic Communications Workforce Coalition, a member of the Women in Print Alliance, and a founder of the Women’s Print Mentoring Network.
Adriane received a journalism degree from the University of Illinois and a law degree from DePaul University in Chicago. As an attorney, Adriane practiced in both the public and private sectors. Her work was in the areas of Constitutional, commercial, securities, and criminal law. Adriane and her family live in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.