Court Enters Judgment Against Police Officers on Overtime Suit Against City

In a recent case out of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, a federal judge entered summary judgment for the City of Fort Worth in an FLSA overtime case filed by four former police officers.   

In Clark v. City of Fort Worth, Texas, four retired City of Fort Worth police officers filed a FLSA putative collective action seeking to represent a class of current and former officers for unpaid overtime they claimed they worked when they provided security services for third-parties leasing City properties (e.g., events at the City owned convention center).  According to the plaintiffs, these off-duty hours providing security for sporting events and concerts on City property (but for non-City events) should have been added to their regular official law enforcement hours with any work over forty hours per week being paid at overtime rates.  The City moved for summary judgment arguing that the special detail exemption excluded those hours worked for the separate employers and that no overtime was due and owing.  There are only six reported cases involving the special detail exemption so this opinion is important if for no other reason than to add to the scant case law on the issue.

The special detail exemption applies to law enforcement and fire fighter employees who voluntarily perform work for separate and independent employers.  Under the exemption, the hours voluntarily worked for the separate and independent employer are excluded from the officer's hours worked on behalf of the the primary employer for FLSA overtime purposes.  In a well-reasoned opinion, the federal judge presiding over the case, concluded that the City has established its affirmative defense that the hours sued on were exempt under the special detail exemption and entered a judgment in favor of the City. 

You can download a copy of the Court's opinion here.

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Police Sergeant Sues for Overtime Based on Time Spent Reading and Responding to E-mails

Last year I wrote about the risks associated with providing company issued cell-phones or PDA's to nonexempt employees.  Since that post, there continues to be lawsuits filed seeking unpaid overtime for the off-the-clock time nonexempt employees spend reading and responding to work-related e-mails.  The most recent example is that of a police sergeant for the City of Chicago who filed a collective action on behalf of all similarly-situated police officers who were provided PDA's by the City and who were required to review and respond to work-related e-mails after hours.  A copy of the complaint can be downloaded here.

Company's providing their non-exempt employees with PDA's should carefully review their policies and procedures to ensure that they have defensible positions in the event they are confronted with an overtime suit based on the time spent reading and responding to e-mails after hours.  Some considerations that I proposed last summer include:

  • Do not provide nonexempt, hourly employees with company issued phones capable of reading or responding to e-mail (i.e., smart phones). 
  • Purchase a technology solution that captures the amount of time the user spends reading and responding to e-mail and pay nonexempt employees for that time.
  • If the employer does not intend to pay for this off-hours review of e-mails, it should clearly set out its expectations that employees should not read and review those messages outside regular work hours.  For example, implement policies that prohibit employees from reading and responding to e-mails outside of regular working hours; require employees to leave company issued smart-phones at work; require employees to program the smart phones to turn themselves off during non-working hours. 
  • Limit the employees that are provided with company issued cellphones to those who have a legitimate business need to be routinely contacted outside of business hours and limit that outside contact for matters where it is necessary.
  • Pay employees who submit time for the non-business hours review of e-mail and then discipline the employee for violating the employer's policy prohibiting business use of company cellphones outside working hours (if the employer has implemented such a policy).

Employers need to be proactive to ensure that the efficiencies provided by technology are not swallowed by the inconvenience and costs associated in the defense of overtime lawsuits