New Overtime Rules: Impacts on Admins and EA's
Melissa Mahoney, CAE (she/her/hers)
Elevating the Administrative Profession Worldwide with Vision and Leadership | Devoted Sports Fan & Travel Enthusiast
The U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) has issued its final overtime ruling which includes an increase to the minimum salary threshold for overtime eligibility on July 1, 2024, and another increase on January 1, 2025. These updates will undoubtedly impact many EAs and admins. I wrote about a similar rule update in 2016 on IAAP’s blog. The content I published then is still highly relevant today, so I am repurposing it for today’s admin/EA community.
Does this rule change impact you? If you are currently classified as an exempt employee (you do not qualify for overtime pay) and you make less than $844 per week ($43,888/year) then the answer is, “yes.” If it does impact you, what do you need to do? This is a question that is not easily answered. Most companies have already evaluated which employees will be impacted and are in the process of creating a plan to be sure they are compliant when the new ruling takes effect on July 1. That doesn’t necessarily mean you know about their plans yet and that can create some anxiety. You can alleviate that anxiety by addressing the issue with your executive. Here are some tips to help you navigate that conversation:
领英推荐
No matter how your company decides to handle compliance with these new DOL regulations, if it impacts you, being proactive in your approach with your executive will ensure you are on the same page. It’s especially important since this is the person you partner with each and every day. The reality is that this ruling was intended to favorably impact employees (not employers). As an admin or EA, you don’t want to allow anyone, especially your executive, to assume you are celebrating the positive impact to you as an employee and don’t care about how it impacts your employer. Chances are you are happy to be positively impacted but you do care very much about how it may impact your company and its future. Let your executive know that and start planning together. It is a great way to express through action how much you value the partnership.
15+ year experience | Operations Optimizer & Leader | Program & Project Management Champion | AMS/CRM Implementation Specialist | Relationship Builder | Non-Profit & Corporate Experience | Data Driven Decision Maker
2 周Melissa, thanks for sharing!
Executive Administrative Assistant to Fr. Justin Mathews (CEO), Missouri Notary, Member of the International Association of Administrative Professionals, Ally and Advocate for DEI&A. Development manager for LKDzigns.art
6 个月Thanks so much!
Executive Administrative Assistant to Fr. Justin Mathews (CEO), Missouri Notary, Member of the International Association of Administrative Professionals, Ally and Advocate for DEI&A. Development manager for LKDzigns.art
6 个月Thanks, Melissa. The next phase of this ruling takes effect on January 1 of 2025 and this post is also important for the upcoming budget year planning. As an exempt EA, it’s important to prepare in advance for some conversations or expectations about tracking your time doing specific activities and determining if indeed you should be exempt. If you have any tools or resources to help us with that tracking and conversation, please share. Thanks for all you do!