Comp Home | BLR Home | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com | Free Newsletters
Login Become a Member
BLR -- Business & Legal Reports Compensation.BLR.com -- Where Employers Go for Reliable Compensation Data and Tools
You are NOT logged in
 
Library
Salary Center

Benefits Center

Performance Appraisals
Advanced Search


Site Navigator
State-Specific Compensation Compliance Information


Compensation Topics
 
 A to Z Topic List
Topics by Category:
 • General
 • Minimum Wage
 • Overtime & Exemptions
 • Benefits
 • Wage & Payment Laws
 

Compensation Library
 
 Legal Analysis
 • State/Federal Differences
 Survey Reports
 • Pay Budgets
 • Exempt Compensation
 • Nonexempt Compensation
 

 
 Tools
 • Salary Center
 • Calculators
 • Job Descriptions
 • Performance Appraisals
 • Forms
 • Model Policies
 • Checklists
 

 
 Best Practices
 • Feature Articles
 • White Papers
 

 
 Daily News
 

 
 Compensation Ezine
 

 
 Compensation Links
 

Ask the Compensation Experts

RSS Compensation News Feed

HR Conferences

Tell a Friend

Related Websites
BLR
HR.BLR.com
Enviro.BLR.com
Safety.BLR.com
 
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)—News


04/21/2003
Public-Employee Leaders Warn About Comp-Time Bill

 Related Resources
White Papers
Feature Articles
Checklists
Policies
Questions & Answers
Send this article to a friend
Print this article
With Republicans in Congress once again introducing legislation that would allow employees to take time off for overtime rather than money, supporters of the idea are pointing to its track record in public sector, where agencies have been allowed to bank time for the past 18 years.

But the leaders of two government employee groups in Houston have told Houston Chronicle columnist L.M. Sixel that their experience has been anything but successful.

Deputy sheriffs in Harris County can bank up to 240 hours of comp time, but the department is so short-staffed that no one can take it when they want a day or two off, according to Ed Christensen, president of the Harris County Deputies Organization, which has more than 2,000 members.

It's only when a top officer realizes the buildup is too high that deputies are directed to take some time off, he said. "It's not flexible at all," Christensen told Sixel. "It's a damn joke."

The set-up lets the county get away with hiring fewer employees than it should, he said, since the current employees just end up working more overtime. As a result, deputies are quitting to find other jobs.

Sixel notes that Christensen once sued Harris County over the question of whether the employees or the county should choose when to take the banked time off. He lost the argument when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Harris County in 1999.

Meanwhile, Steve Williams, president of the Houston Professional Fire Fighters Association Local 341, which has 3,400 members, says the fire department is so short-handed that it can't let the firefighters off for holidays and vacations.

Williams himself has more than 720 hours of holiday time banked and said he knows of many colleagues who have 700 hours of vacation time booked that they can't take.

The shortages are so severe that junior employees - those with less than 20 years of service - can only use two to four days of vacation each year, he told Sixel. They're paid for the banked hours when they leave, but by then they've missed family reunions and vacations, he said.

"So you can understand why the firefighters don't want to book their overtime," said Williams. "It would just be more time on the books that we couldn't take."

Sarah F. Pierce, manager of employment policy at the Society of Human Resource Management in Alexandria, Va., called the pending legislation a common-sense idea that's two decades overdue.

She said the comp-time bills introduced by Rep. Judy Biggert, R-Ill., and Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., are family friendly and designed to meet the needs of the 21st century.

Under the proposals, companies could allow employees to accrue up to 160 hours of comp time and take the time off at any time. An employer would have to show it's truly disruptive before refusing a request for time off, Pierce said.

Links


View more resources on Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

Compensation Ezine
See this week's issue
Compensation Ezine
Find out how your company's pay and benefits policies stack up against the competition. Each issue features free compensation news, a timely poll, a tool of the week, in-depth white papers, a compensation Q&A and our popular "Odd Jobs" feature.
 
 
 



Compensation Ezine
Compensation news & best practices
HR Daily Advisor
Daily newsletter of quick HR tips, news, and practical advice
Strange But True
Weekly reports from HR's humorous side
Think you know a lot? Try the all-new HR Challenge!






We respect your privacy

Highlight
Payroll Quiz

 Weekly Poll
 
What will be the impact of the changes to the Americans with Disabilities Act on employers?

It will be a major headache

It will be a minor headache

I'm not sure

 




spacer
spacer

 Plain-English... Practical... FREE!
  HR Daily Advisor
Compensation Ezine
  Safety Daily Advisor
Environmental Ezine
   

        We respect your Privacy

spacer
spacer
Comp Home | HR Conferences | Site Map | About this Site | BLR Home | About BLR | FAQs | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Related Links | Advertise
Questions? Call: 1-800-454-0404


Compensation Categories:
General Compensation | Minimum Wage | Overtime and Exemptions | Benefits | Wage and Payment Laws

Resource Types:
Compliance Resources: Regulatory Analysis | Overview |
Best Practices: White Papers | Feature Articles |
News: News |
Tools: Calculators | Checklists | Policies | Forms |
Other Resources: Questions & Answers | Job Descriptions |

Regulatory Analysis, News, and Training Resources for Every State

Other Web Centers:
BLR Home | Online Catalog | HR.BLR.com | Safety.BLR.com | Enviro.BLR.com

Surveys:
Employee Survey

©1997-2008 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. All Rights Reserved
No part of this site may be reproduced in any form without permission of Business & Legal Reports, Inc.