Payroll can be one of the most complex duties of any bookkeeper’s job – especially when you need to OR want to track your Worker’s Compensation costs for job costing purposes and pay your employees Vacation, Holiday and Overtime wages. Just take a look at this question, submitted by one of our blog subscribers!
I have set up the Workers Compensation tracking in QuickBooks for a construction company with no problem, it seems to be working fine. My question is – how do you keep track of Holiday, Vacation, and Overtime pay? Do I set up each payroll item with the Workers Comp {WC} rate for each class? For example Carpenter-Holiday and Carpenter-Vacation? Thanks, Kathleen
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Answer:
Hi Kathleen;
That’s an excellent question!
One of the first things that you should do is contact your Worker’s Compensation Insurance carrier and ask them if there is a reduced Worker’s Comp rate for when you pay your field workers for non-field related time such as Vacation or Holiday pay. I once asked this question of the Insurance underwriter and much to my surprise he told me {grudgingly} that Vacation and Holiday pay for field employees was computed at a lower experience rate than their normal wages; mainly because there was “no risk” involved for those wages – he quickly followed this up with “but this will involve more tracking on your part” for the annual audit/review.
The QuickBooks payroll module is pretty darn flexible; but like the rest of the program it’s generic – so sometimes it’s a little “lacking” when it comes to some specific things like the situation above.
Even if I didn’t fall into the special situation of a reduced WC Experience Rate for Holiday and Vacation time, I would still create specific payroll items based on Work Classification/type of wage: so Carpenter-Holiday or Carpenter-Vacation would be the way I would go.
Overtime can get tricky, especially if your contractor client works on prevailing wage jobs and pays the fringe benefit portion of the prevailing wage in cash to the employee as part of the hourly gross wage, QuickBooks will need some “help” when determining the overtime rate. {This becomes complex and cannot be explained in a blog post but I plan on providing a fee-based live and pre-recorded webinar on how to set this up and make it work in QuickBooks – which will be available in January 2012}.
You will need to add an “Overtime” payroll item to your Payroll Item List using either the E-Z Setup or Custom Setup method naming them Carpenter OT, Laborer OT, etc and being sure that you select that the type of wage is an Overtime rate. If the premium OR half-time portion of overtime pay is excluded from Worker’s Compensation tracking, make sure that you have checked that option in the Workers Compensation preference; found from the Edit menu -> Preferences -> Payroll & Employees -> Workers Compensation button and checking the option to “Exclude overtime premium from Workers Comp calculation”
Make sure that your Codes in the Workers Comp List are descriptive – meaning that when you choose the WC Code in Weekly timesheets that you will understand what code is being assigned to what payroll item.
Setting things up in this manner will provide you with all the payroll numbers that you will need during an audit and clearly indicate the type of wages that are being paid.
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Common everyday business practices result in unpaid “work” hours that 70% of employers have no idea are unlawful, but do in fact, violate the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).
Below are 5 example of what is considered to be a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act:
Punching in early (or punching out late) – for example an employee punches in 15 minutes before starting time.
If you are audited, you would have to prove that employee who punched in early was not working. The Department of Labor assumes that an employee who has punched in is working.
Downtime – for example an employee’s normal workday starts at 9, but they have a long drive and have to drop children off in two different places, so they end up getting into work at 7:30, has breakfast at their desk and reads the newspaper.
If the phone rings and the employee answers the phone; or if they suddenly remember “something” that they must attend to and pull a file so they don’t forget; the Department of Labor considers them to be working and must be paid for the hour or portion of an hour when they were on the phone or pulling the file.
Chatting during breaks – an employee gets in a half an hour early to have a cup of coffee and chat with coworkers.
If, while chatting with co-workers, any business matter that happens to creep into the conversation is considered paid work time and all of the employees involved in that conversation must be paid for that time.
Checking emails from home – before leaving for work, an employee who lives over an hour away, checks a Blackberry or other electronic device for business email.
The Department of Labor considers this unpaid work time.
Supervisors “pitching in” to help – perhaps a Customer Service Supervisor (an exempt employee) puts on the headphones and takes orders for a few hours OR a Maintenance Supervisor sometimes does cleanup himself to make sure the work gets done.
If your company is audited, the Department of Labor may decide that answering the phone is hourly work and can reclassify the Customer Service Supervisor an a nonexempt hourly employee. Once they do this, if they find that the Customer Service Supervisor worked more that 40 hours in a week (and many do); you could be hit with overtime backpay, penalties, and interest —- possibly for several years.
The same goes for the Maintenance Supervisor, because they are a “manager” and, therefore exempt, should be supervising the work done by others rather than doing the work themselves.
Employees who are exempt because they do managerial work (regardless if their title is “manager” or “supervisor” should be supervising and not doing the work for the people under them.
Wondering why this is such a big deal?
There is a major Department of Labor push on wage-hour enforcement, and according to Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, “The U. S. Department of Labor is back in the enforcement business.” There will be a huge jump in wage-hour audits, and 350 investigators are being added – an increase of more than one-third.
For additional information about the Fair Labor Standards Act, visit their website.
Yet another massive winter storm is threatening snow and freezing rain from Colorado to the East Coast this week. Do you know what your obligations are to employees who cannot get to work on these bad weather days?
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Q: We are expecting more snow and ice this week and anticipate that employees may have a difficult time getting to work. Several of our employees have already used up their paid days because of bad weather this winter. How should we deal with these absences?
A: If you have operations in areas that experience severe weather, such as winter storms, flooding, or hurricanes, you should include provisions in your policies for weather-related absences. Most employers discuss weather-related absences in their attendance policies. Any policy dealing with attendance during periods of inclement weather should give employees an incentive to get to work and should distinguish between nonexempt and exempt employees.
Nonexempt employees (those employees who are covered by, and not exempt from, the minimum wage and overtime provisions of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)) generally only have to be paid for time actually worked. Accordingly, many employers do not pay nonexempt employees for weather-related absences, although the absence usually is excused. Some allow nonexempt employees to use accrued paid vacation or personal days so that they do not lose compensation. In exceptional situations, some employers pay all nonexempt employees for the day but recognize the efforts of those who worked by providing them with an extra floating personal day.
Some employers allow nonexempt employees to make up the missed time. However, if the employees make up the time in a week in which they also work 40 hours, you will owe them overtime for the additional hours worked over 40. For this reason, most of these employers do not allow the make-up time unless it is scheduled within the same workweek as the time missed. But, even this approach is likely to cause scheduling headaches.
Exempt employees should be handled differently. They are exempt from the FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime requirements because of the nature of their job duties and the fact that they are paid on a salary basis. The most common exempt classifications include executive, administrative, and professional employees.
Under the “salary basis” definition, exempt employees generally must receive their full salary for any week in which they perform work, without regard to the number of days or hours worked. Deductions may be made for less than a full week only in limited circumstances, such as for full-day absences for personal reasons or under a bona fide sick policy. However, deductions for less than full days are not allowed under any circumstances.
Deductions for absences of a day or more because of bad weather are not specifically allowed for exempt employees by the FLSA regulations. However, two Department of Labor (DOL) opinion letters indicate that you can require exempt employees to use paid leave when they are absent because of weather related conditions. In addition, the DOL opinions indicate that it may even be okay to make deductions from exempt employee pay for full-day weather-related absences in certain circumstances.
In the letters addressing snow day absences, the DOL indicated that if an employer is open for business and an exempt employee does not come to work that day, the employer may require the employee to use a paid vacation day or dock the employee for a full-day absence. According to the agency administrator, when a vacation day is used, the employee still receives the same guaranteed salary for the week, so the salary basis is maintained.
To make the case for docking an exempt employee’s pay, the agency reasoned that any absence caused by inclement weather is considered an absence for personal reasons if the employer’s business is open. The employee in effect chooses to stay home instead of reporting to work when the business is open.
If your organization is closed for the day, the opinion letters indicate that you cannot make deductions for full day absences from exempt employee pay because the FLSA regulations specifically do not allow deductions for absences occasioned by the employer or the operating requirements of the business. Under the regulations, no deductions are allowed when work is not available. However you can require that exempt employees use their paid time off (PTO) since they then would receive their entire salary. But, if you do not have any accrued PTO time, you still cannot make a deduction from their pay.
Distributed by Sunburst Software Solutions, Inc. with permission from:
HR Matters E-Tips, copyright Personnel Policy Service, Inc., Louisville, KY, all rights reserved, the HR Policy and Employment Law Compliance Experts for over 30 years, 1-800-437-3735. Personnel Policy Service markets group legal service benefits and publishes HR information products, including the free weekly electronic newsletter, HR Matters E-Tips (www.ppspublishers.com/hrmetips.htm). This article is not intended as legal advice. Readers are encouraged to seek appropriate legal or other professional advice.










