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Working people need a voice more than ever and Working America is making that happen.
Working people need a voice more than ever and Working America is making that happen.
I’m not getting paid for all the hours I worked!
If your paycheck doesn’t look right, it probably isn’t. Don’t assume that your employer “has a system” for this and always gets it right.
In fact, many organizations – by either accident or design – underpay workers by significant amounts. The practice is frighteningly common, and we’re not talking about nickels and dimes. A study of low-wage workers in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles found that one out of four were paid less than minimum wage. Some were cheated out of as much as $1 an hour, with the average paycheck shorted by $51 per week. That adds up to more than $2,600 a year – which ain’t chump change, no matter how much you are earning.
It’s not just low-wage workers who are underpaid; the problem affects workers up and down the wage scale.
Are the hours right? You should be paid for all the hours you work, possibly including prep time, cleanup time, any time required to put on a uniform or protective clothing at work and time to travel between job sites. If you think you worked more hours than your pay stub says – you probably did.
Is the pay rate correct? Make sure you’re receiving the hourly rate you were promised. The federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour; with a few exceptions, your pay rate must be at least that much. Twenty nine states and the District of Columbia, and some cities, have a minimum wage higher than the federal rate. If that’s true where you live, your employer has to pay the higher rate, not the federal minimum.
Are you getting credit for overtime? If you work more than 40 hours in a seven-day week, federal law ordinarily requires your employer to pay time-and-a-half your regular rate for the extra hours.
Any funky deductions? Your employer should be paying federal, state and local income taxes on your behalf, as well as Social Security (FICA) and Medicare taxes. So these deductions from your pay are legitimate. Employers ordinarily cannot deduct for required uniforms, equipment or other items if this would reduce your pay to below the federal, state or local minimum wage.
What to do if your paycheck is wrong:
Article: “Wage Theft: A a Crime without Punishment,” TheNation.org
Government agency: “State Labor Offices,” U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division
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