This paper discusses the Fair Labor Standard Act (FLSA) which was passed by Congress in 1938 to establish a minimum wage, overtime compensation standards, record keeping requirements, child labor provisions and other regulations that affect employers and labor. The law was enacted to meet the economics and social problems of that era. It examines how the intent of the law was to make overtime compensation expensive and to open up more employment opportunities to the working population. It outlines some of the issues relating to the act and some business impacts to consider including a case summary.
From the Paper:
"An employee is not entitled to compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act for overtime hours he claims he worked but never recorded in his payroll book or submitted to management. When he has not created factual issue that would allow finding that employer's time records, prepared by employee himself, were inaccurate or that employee worked more hours than he recorded, and even if his assertions are credited, he has failed to establish that employer knew he had performed uncompensated overtime. The employee claims he failed to record all overtime worked because the employer expected employees to work as long as necessary to complete assignments. Also, because he feared a "big hassle'' if he did report the overtime."
More papers on The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA):
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-The-Fair-Labor-Standards-Act-FLSA/26512