Policy and Legal
New Overtime Rule Will Cost Employers and Workers
A new final overtime rule from the U.S. Department of Labor will reduce flexibility for employees and could force manufacturers to make difficult choices about their workforces, the NAM said Tuesday.
What’s going on: The new regulation “changes the salary threshold used to determine whether a worker is exempt from overtime pay” so that, beginning Jan. 1, 2025, most employees earning less than $58,656 will be owed time-and-a-half wages for hours worked over 40 in a single workweek (Bloomberg Law, subscription).
- The current salary threshold is $35,568.
- The new rule will go into effect July 1, following publication in the Federal Register.
Why it’s problematic: The change promises to present significant challenges to employers and employees alike.
- “Quarter after quarter, manufacturers cite workforce issues, such as attracting and retaining skilled employees, as their biggest business challenge,” said NAM Managing Vice President of Policy Chris Netram. The “rule places new constraints on employers, reduces flexibility for the workers who will be reclassified and may force companies to make painful choices that limit both job creation and growth opportunities available to employees.”
What’s next: The NAM is weighing all actions to protect manufacturers across the country.