February lOt 2010
Re: Request for Opinion
Compensatory Time
RO-09-0083
Dear_:
I have been asked to respond to your letter regarding the use of language within a
collective bargaining agreement which provides for compensatory time in lieu ofovertime for
employees working for a not-for-profit agency in Buffalot New York. Please accept my apology
for the late response to your request. Your letter states that the employees covered by the
agreement are social workers and counselorst the majority ofwhom make less than $516.1 Ot
presumably per work week. Your letter first asks whether the language contained in the
agreementt providing for the accumulation of compensatory time in lieu ofovertime, is legal,
andt second, whether the employer is obligated to "payout or buy backU time earned when an
employee leaves the employer's service.
1. Permissibility of Compensatory Time.
In answering your first question, the use of compensatory time in lieu ofthe payment of
overtime may be in violation ofArticles 6 (Payment ofWages) and/or 19 (Minimum Wage Act)
depending on the factual circumstances: Please be advised that although the prohibitions on
compensatory time in lieu ofovertime in these two Articles are similart the prohibitions are
nevertheless independent of each other.
Labor Law Article 6 (Payment ofWages).
Article 6 ofthe Labor Law sets forth the requirements for the payment of wages for
employees working within the State ofNew York. Wagest for the purposes ofthat Articlet are
defined in Section 190(1) as follows:
Tel: (51
457-4380, Fax: (51
485-1819
W. Averell Harriman State Office Campus. Bldg. 12, Room 509, Albany, NY 12240
http://www.labor.state.ny.us bceBs@labor.state.ny.us
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1. "Wages" means the earnings ofan employee for labor or
services rendered, regardless ofwhether the amount ofearnings is
determined on a time, piece, commission or other basis. The term
"wages" also includes benefits or wage supplements as defined in
section one hundred ninety-eight-c ofthis article, except for the
purposes of sections one hundred ninety-one and one hundred
ninety-two of this article.
Overtime pay, as you can see, undoubtedly fits within the definition ofwages as it is the
"earnings of an employee for labor or services rendered."
Section 191 ofthe Labor Law requires the timely paYment in full oian employee's
agreed upon wages and sets forth the frequency of such paYments for particular categories of
employees. For example, manual workers must be paid weekly and not later than seven days
after the end ofthe week in which their wages are earned (Labor Law §191 (1)(a)(i», while
clerical and other workers must be paid in accordance with the agreed terms of emplOYment, but
not less than semi-monthly, on regular pay days designated by the employer (Labor Law
§19l(1)(d». However, it is worth noting that Section 191 does not specify a period of time in
which an employer is required to pay employees working in a bona fide executive,
administrative, or professional capacity earning in excess ofnine hundred dollars a week.
Nothing in Section 191 relieves the employer ofthe obligation to pay an employee's
wages, including any required overtime or hours worked, within the time period allotted.
Accordingly, an employee within the coverage of Section 191 ofthe Labor Law may not be
given compensatory time in lieu of the payment ofovertime. Unfortunately, your letter does not
sufficiently describe the nature of the work performed by the individual workers so as to permit a
determination to be made as to whether such workers fit within the coverage of Section 191 of
the Labor Law.
Additionally, it is worth noting that workers not considered to be "employees" under
Article 19 ofthe Labor Law (see below), who are nevertheless "employees" under Article 6 of
the Labor Law, which contains a much more expansive definition ofthat term, must be paid
within the time period allotted by Section 191. In such a situation, an individual outside ofthe
coverage ofthe overtime requirements ofArticle 19 ofthe Labor Law must nevertheless be paid
wages earned, at the applicable rate, for the hours worked within the period prescribed by
Section 191 ofthe Labor Law.
Labor Law Article 19 (Minimum Wage Act).
Article 19 ofthe State Labor Law (Minimum Wage Act) and the regulations adopted
thereunder, require that employees be paid at a rate not less than one and one-halftimes their
regular rate ofpay for all hours worked in excess of forty for non-residential employees, or fortyfour
for residential employees per workweek. (see, Labor Law §650 et seq.; 12 NYCRR §1423.2.)
Employees exempted from overtime coverage by Sections 7 and 13 ofthe Federal Fair
Labor Standards Act (FLSA) are similarly required to be paid overtime, but at a rate not less than
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one and one-halftimes the minimum wage rate. (Id.) Nothing in Article 19, or the regulations
adopted thereunder, permits the substitution of future time off in lieu ofthe payment ofovertime;
rather, 12 NYCRR §142-2.2 clearly mandates that "an employer shall pay an employee for
overtime." Accordingly, Article 19 prohibits the utilization of compensatory time in lieu of
overtime for an "employees" under Article 19, regardless of such employees' exempt status
under the FLSA. However, it must be noted that should a worker not fall within the definition of
"employee" under Article 19 of the Labor Law, the protections contained therein and the
prohibition on compensatory time in lieu of the payment ofovertime contained in that Article,
are inapplicable. (see Labor Law §651(5); 12 NYCRR §142-3.12.)
Your letter states that your members work as social workers and counselors, have both
Master's and Bachelor's degrees, and while some may make more than $516.10, the majority
make less. While such a description certainly does not provide a basis upon which this
Department may evaluate whether the individuals in question meet any of the exclusions from
the definition ofemployee; the work performed, educational background, and amount made by
some ofthe workers indicates that some ofthe workers may fit within the exclusion for work in a
bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity. (see, Labor Law §651 (5)(c); 12
NYCRR §142-2.14(4).)
Accordingly, while compensatory time in lieu ofovertime is not per se prohibited by the
New York State Labor Law, its use is limited by Articles 6 and 19 to the situations in which an
individual is neither an employee as defmed by Article 6 of the Labor Law nor works in a bona
fide executive, administrative or professional capacity making more than $900 per week under
Article 6, nor falls within the definition of"employee" under Article 19 ofthe Labor Law.
Since your question arises out of terms of a collective bargaining agreement, it is
necessary to determine whether such terms may constitute a valid waiver of the statutory
protections contained in the Labor Law which the above discussion concludes are being violated.
In American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. v. Roberts, 61 N.Y.2d 244 (1984), the New York
State Court ofAppeals held that provisions ofthe Labor Law are waivable through a bona fide
collective bargaining agreement in which the employee received a desired benefit in return for
the waiver, so long as the waiver or modification of the statutory intent does not contravene the
legislative purpose ofthe statute. The Court held that where there was no express legislative
indication that waiver was precluded, "a bona fide agreement by which the employee received a
desired benefit in return for the waiver, the complete absence ofduress, coercion or bad faith and
the open and knowing nature of the waiver's execution" may effectively waive or modify the
benefit provided by the statute to the employees.
As stated above, a waiver of a statutory guaranteed benefit to a worker is only
permissible where the waiver does not contravene the statutes legislative purpose. QQ.) The
purpose ofthe New York State Minimum Wage Act was announced by the Legislature through
Labor Law §650, which provides, in part, that "[e]mployment ofpersons at these [sub-minimum
wages] insufficient rates ofpay threatens the health and well-being ofthe people of this state and
injures the overall economy." Agreeing to receive a rate of pay deemed to be insufficient by the
Legislature, even in exchange for some other desired benefit in return for the waiver, contravenes
this purpose. Therefore, the provisions contained within the Minimum Wage Act (Article 19) of
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