Wage Hour Recordkeeping: Are You In Compliance?
The article emphasizes the critical importance of meticulous wage hour recordkeeping for employers to ensure compliance with over 20 applicable laws, detailing specific employee data required under the FLSA, recommended retention periods for various records, and warning that inadequate documentation can lead to legal penalties even if the employer is otherwise compliant.
One vital element of regulatory compliance is proper recordkeeping. There are over 20 laws that affect employers and every one requires some form of personnel file maintenance.
Lax Recordkeeping Puts You in Legal Jeopardy
When an employee brings an action against an employer, courts usually rule in favor of the employee if there are inadequate records to substantiate the employer’s case. This results in situations where an employer is actually in compliance with the provisions of the law but is penalized for simply having inadequate records.
Would Your Records Stand Up To A DOL Audit?
Swipeclock recommends that business owners review their recordkeeping methods frequently to make sure they are in compliance. Most employers keep records of the obvious information—employee name, contact information, hire date—but what about the less obvious data?
Under the FLSA, employers must keep records with the following information for all non-exempt employees:
- Employee’s full name and social security number.
- Address, including zip code.
- Birth date, if younger than 19.
- Sex and occupation.
- Time and day of week when employee’s workweek begins.
- Hours worked daily.
- Total hours worked each workweek.
- Basis on which employee’s wages are paid (Hourly, weekly, piecework, etc.)
- Regular hourly pay rate.
- Total daily or weekly straight-time earnings.
- Total overtime earnings for the workweek.
- All additions to or deductions from the employee’s wages.
- Total wages paid each pay period.
- Date of payment and the pay period covered by the payment.
Keep For 3 Years:
- Payroll records
- Union contracts
- Sales records
- Purchase records
Keep for 2 Years:
- Time cards and piece work tickets
- Wage rate tables
- Work and time schedules
- Records of additions to or deductions from wages
It’s important to note that employers must also keep records for employees who have been terminated. When in doubt, keep the records until you verify the time requirement for all applicable laws.
Are Your Recordkeeping Procedures Sufficient?
- Are employee time and attendance records accurate and accessible?
- Are associates paid for all the time worked? (Employers should not require staff members to work before and after shifts, or at home off the clock.)
- Does the system accurately calculate PTO?
- Would the data stand up to a labor audit?
- Can employees cheat the system?
Do Employees and Managers Increase or Decrease Your Liability?
- Do employees know how to properly punch in/out for shifts, meals, and breaks?
- Do staff members know how to prepare timesheets?
- Do managers know federal, state, and local labor standards?
- Do managers know how to verify time cards?
- Do managers know how to approve shift change requests?
- Are managers educated about DOL provisions and company policies regarding overtime?
Do Your Employees Keep Records Better Than You Do?
Did you know that the Department of Labor has a time tracking app that anyone (think employee) can download from their site? With this free app, he or she can track their hours automatically and calculate their wages to the minute right on their smartphone. If you are still using pen and paper time and attendance systems and spreadsheet scheduling systems, you might not be tracking data as accurately as a staff member with an app designed by the very agency that enforces the recordkeeping laws.
Automated Workforce Management Solution
Now is the time to make comprehensive data management a priority. WorkforceHub is a powerful but easy-to-use cloud-based solution that automatically captures the documentation required for FLSA compliance. Easily track hours worked, overtime, schedules, job codes, and breaks to meet wage and hour standards.
Allow staff members to update contact information and manage their own time cards to prevent labor disputes. Automatically store records for verification, and have actionable data to better manage your most expensive asset. WorkforceHub paired with one of our biometric time clocks can substantially reduce your risk of being fined for FLSA noncompliance while simultaneously decreasing the time necessary to track employee time and attendance.
Swipeclock offers WorkforceHub, the powerful, fully-integrated WorkforceHub that makes it easy to optimize the performance of your managers, employees, and organization.
WorkforceHub includes TimeWorksPlus, TimeSimplicity, and TimeWorks Mobile. WorkforceHub is designed for busy employers like you who need to streamline scheduling, automate time and attendance tracking, maintain regulatory compliance, and reduce labor costs.
We can get you up and running with WorkforceHub immediately. Contact us today to request a demo.
Or are you interested in becoming a reseller? Check out the Swipeclock partner advantage now.
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