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Timestamp: 2019-04-24 16:25:26
Document Index: 765621094

Matched Legal Cases: ['ART 541', 'art 541', '§ 206', 'art 541', 'art 541', '§ 31502']

Department of Labor and Workforce Development | NJ State Wage and Hour Laws and Regulations
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NJ State Wage and Hour Laws and Regulations
N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a et seq. WAGE AND HOUR LAW
34:11-56a. Minimum wage level; establishment
34:11-56a1. Definitions
34:11-56a2. Bureau for administration of act; director and assistants
34:11-56a3. Employment at unreasonable wage declared contrary to public policy; contract or agreement void
34:11-56a4. Minimum rate; overtime rate; exceptions
34:11-56a4.1. Summer camps, conferences and retreats; excepton
34:11-56a4.2. Application of act to wages under wage orders
34:11-56a4.3. Date of application of act
34:11-56a4.4. Date of application of L.1976, c. 88
34:11-56a4.5. Application of L.1979, c. 32
34:11-56a4.6. Application of L.1980, c. 182
34:11-56a4.7. New Jersey Minimum Wage Advisory Commission
34:11-56a4.8. Annual evaluation of adequacy of minimum wage
34:11-56a5. Administrative regulations; publication; duration
34:11-56a6. Authority of commissioner and director
34:11-56a7. Investigation of occupation
34:11-56a8. Appointment of wage board; report upon establishment of minimum fair wage rates
34:11-56a10. Powers of wage board
34:11-56a11. Presentation of evidence and information to wage board; witnesses
34:11-56a12. Rules of evidence and procedure
34:11-56a13. Recommendations of wage board
34:11-56a14. Submission of report of wage board
34:11-56a15. Acceptance or rejection of report by commissioner
34:11-56a16. Approval or disapproval of report following public hearing; effective date of wage order
34:11-56a17. Special certificates or licenses for employment at wages less than minimum
34:11-56a18. Modification of wage order
34:11-56a19. Additions or modifications to administrative regulations; hearing; notice
34:11-56a20. Record by employer of hours worked and wages; inspection; exceptions
34:11-56a21. Summary of act, orders, and regulations; posting
34:11-56a22. Violations of act; misdemeanor
34:11-56a23. Supervision by commissioner of payments of amounts due employees
34:11-56a24. Discharge or discrimination against employee making complaint; misdemeanor
34:11-56a25. Civil action by employee to recover amount of minimum wage less amount paid
34:11-56a25.1. Limitations; commencement of action
34:11-56a25.2. Defense to action
34:11-56a26. Protection of right to collective bargaining
34:11-56a27. Partial invalidity
34:11-56a28. Supplementation of provisions of Minimum Wage Standards Act
34:11-56a29. Short title
34:11-56a30. Application of act to minors
34:11-56a31. Establishment of maximum work week for certain health care facility employees
34:11-56a32. Definitions relative to work hours for certain care facility employees
34:11-56a33. Excessive work shift contrary to public policy
34:11-56a34. Health care facility employee work shift determined; exceptions voluntary
34:11-56a35. Violations, sanctions
34:11-56a36. Construction, applicability of act
34:11-56a37. Collection of data relative to mandatory overtime prohibition, report
34:11-56a38. Rules, regulations
N.J.S.A. 34:11D-1 et seq. EARNED SICK LEAVE
34:11D-1 Definitions relative to earned sick leave
34:11D-2 Provision of earned sick leave by employer
34:11D-3 Permitted usage of earned sick leave
34:11D-4 Retaliation, discrimination prohibited
34:11D-5 Violations; remedies, penalties, other measures
34:11D-6 Retention of records, access
34:11D-7 Notification to employees
34:11D-8 Provisions preemptive; construction of act
34:11D-9 Severability
34:11D-10 Development of multilingual outreach program
34:11D-11 Rules, regulations
N.J.A.C. 12:56 et seq. WAGE AND HOUR REGULATIONS
12:56-1.1 Purpose; scope
12:56-1.2 Violations
12:56-1.3 Administrative penalties
12:56-1.4 Administrative fees
12:56-1.5 Interest
12:56-1.6 Hearings
12:56-1.7 Discharge or discrimination against employee making complaint
12:56-2.1 Definitions
SUBCHAPTER 3. MINIMUM WAGE RATES
12:56-3.1 Statutory minimum wage rates for specific years
12:56-3.2 Exemptions from the statutory minimum wage rates
SUBCHAPTER 4. RECORDS
12:56-4.1 Contents
12:56-4.2 Time keeping system
12:56-4.3 Fixed working schedule
12:56-4.4 Retention period
12:56-4.5 Location; inspection
12:56-4.6 Employer gratuity records
12:56-4.7 Employee gratuity reports
12:56-4.8 Acceptable gratuity report form
12:56-4.9 Food or lodging records
12:56-4.10 Additions to wages
SUBCHAPTER 5. HOURS WORKED
12:56-5.1 Payment
12:56-5.2 Computation
12:56-5.3 Accounting for irregular hours of resident employees
12:56-5.4 Workweek construed
12:56-5.5 Reporting for work
12:56-5.6 On-call time
12:56-5.7 On-call employees required to remain at home
12:56-5.8 Use of time clocks
SUBCHAPTER 6. OVERTIME
12:56-6.1 Rate of overtime payment
12:56-6.2 Computation
12:56-6.3 Actual wage basis
12:56-6.4 Workweek hours
12:56-6.5 "Regular hourly wage" payment basis
12:56-6.6 Items excluded from "regular hourly wage"
12:56-6.7 Offsets; cash payments
SUBCHAPTER 7. EXEMPTIONS FROM OVERTIME
12:56-7.1 Employees exempt from overtime
12:56-7.2 Defining and delimiting the exemptions from overtime for executive, administrative, professional and outside sales employees
12:56-7.3 Exemption from overtime for an employee of a common carrier of passengers by motor bus
SUBCHAPTER 8. GRATUITIES, FOOD AND LODGING
12:56-8.1 Definitions
12:56-8.2 Gratuity splitting
12:56-8.3 Determining cash gratuities
12:56-8.4 Administrative handling of gratuities
12:56-8.5 Additional cash contribution claim
12:56-8.6 Fair value computed
12:56-8.7 Inspection of fair value methods
12:56-8.8 Method of determining "fair value"
12:56-8.9 (Reserved)
SUBCHAPTER 9. EMPLOYMENT OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES
12:56-9.1 Definitions
12:56-9.2 Application for permit
12:56-9.3 Criteria for permit
12:56-9.4 Compliance
12:56-9.5 Cancellation of permit
SUBCHAPTER 10. (RESERVED)
SUBCHAPTER 11. EMPLOYMENT IN THE FIRST PROCESSING OF FARM PRODUCTS OCCUPATIONS
12:56-11.1 Definitions
12:56-11.2 Minimum wage
12:56-11.3 Overtime rates
SUBCHAPTER 12. EMPLOYMENT IN SEASONAL AMUSEMENT OCCUPATIONS
12:56-12.1 Definitions
12:56-12.2 Minimum wage
12:56-12.3 Overtime rates
SUBCHAPTER 13. EMPLOYMENT IN HOTEL AND MOTEL OCCUPATIONS
12:56-13.1 Definitions
12:56-13.2 Minimum wage
12:56-13.3 Overtime rates
12:56-13.4 Cash wage standard
12:56-13.5 Substantiation of gratuities; food and lodging cost
12:56-13.6 Food and lodging as wages over 40 hours
12:56-13.7 Cash wage condition of employment
12:56-13.8 Required food and lodging acceptance; costs
SUBCHAPTER 14. EMPLOYMENT IN FOOD SERVICE OCCUPATIONS
12:56-14.1 Definitions
12:56-14.2 Minimum wage
12:56-14.3 Overtime rates
12:56-14.4 Cash wage standard
12:56-14.5 Substantiation of gratuities, food and lodging cost
12:56-14.6 Food and lodging as wages over 40 hours
12:56-14.7 Cash wage condition of employment
12:56-14.8 Meals and lodging applicable to minimum wage
SUBCHAPTER 15. EMPLOYMENT IN AIR CARRIER INDUSTRY
12:56-15.1 Definitions
12:56-15.2 Minimum wage
12:56-15.3 Overtime rates
SUBCHAPTER 16. INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR STATUS
12:56-16.1 Independent contractor status criteria
SUBCHAPTER 17. UNIFORMS
12:56-17.1 Uniforms
SUBCHAPTER 18. SCHOOL-TO-WORK PROGRAM
12:56-18.1 Definitions
12:56-18.2 School-to-work program requirements
SUBCHAPTER 19. EMPLOYMENT IN THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY
12:56-19.1 Trucking industry employer defined
12:56-19.2 Minimum wage
12:56-19.3 Overtime rates
SUBCHAPTER 20. EMPLOYMENT OF SKILLED MECHANICS
12:56-20.1 Skilled mechanic defined
12:56-20.2 Minimum wage
12:56-20.3 Overtime rates
N.J.A.C. 12:57 et. seq. WAGE ORDER FOR MINORS
12:57-1.1 Purpose; scope
12:57-1.2 Violations and penalties
12:57-2.1 Definitions
SUBCHAPTER 3. MERCANTILE OCCUPATIONS
12:57-3.1 Scope
12:57-3.2 Definitions
12:57-3.3 Minimum wage
12:57-3.4 Overtime rate
12:57-3.5 Regular hourly wage
12:57-3.6 Waiting time
12:57-3.7 Travel Time
12:57-3.8 Piece work
12:57-3.9 Employment under existing minimum wage orders
12:57-3.10 Diversified employment
12:57-3.11 Individuals with disabilities
12:57-3.12 Records
12:57-3.13 Posting
SUBCHAPTER 4. BEAUTY CULTURE OCCUPATIONS
12:57-4.1 Scope
12:57-4.2 Definitions
12:57-4.3 Minimum wage
12:57-4.4 Overtime rate
12:57-4.5 Regular hourly wage
12:57-4.6 Waiting time
12:57-4.7 Gratuities
12:57-4.8 Furnishing equipment
12:57-4.9 Individuals with disabilities
12:57-4.10 Records
12:57-4.11 Posting
SUBCHAPTER 5. LAUNDRY, CLEANING AND DYEING OCCUPATIONS
12:57-5.1 Scope
12:57-5.2 Definitions
12:57-5.3 Minimum wage
12:57-5.4 Overtime rate
12:57-5.5 Regular hourly wage
12:57-5.6 Waiting time
12:57-5.7 Travel time
12:57-5.8 Piece work
12:57-5.9 Individuals with disabilities
12:57-5.10 Records
12:57-5.11 Posting
SUBCHAPTER 6. LIGHT MANUFACTURING AND APPAREL OCCUPATIONS
12:57-6.1 Scope
12:57-6.2 Definitions
12:57-6.3 Minimum wage rate
12:57-6.4 Wage rate
12:57-6.5 Piece work
12:57-6.6 Waiting time
12:57-6.7 Individuals with disabilities
12:57-6.8 Posting
APPENDIX A AVAILABILITY OF STANDARDS REFERRED TO IN THIS CHAPTER
FEDERAL REGULATIONS - TITLE 29:LABOR - PART 541
Part 541 Defining and Delimiting the Exemptions for Executive, Administrative, Professional, Computer and Outside Sales Employees.
CHAPTER 11 WAGE AND HOUR LAW
ARTICLE 2. MINIMUM WAGE STANDARDS
It is declared to be the public policy of this State to establish a minimum wage level for workers in order to safeguard their health, efficiency, and general well-being and to protect them as well as their employers from the effects of serious and unfair competition resulting from wage levels detrimental to their health, efficiency and well-being.
(a) "Commissioner" means the Commissioner of Labor.
(b) "Director" means the director in charge of the bureau referred to in section 3 of this act.
(c) "Wage board" means a board created as provided in section 10 of this act.
(d) "Wages" means any moneys due an employee from an employer for services rendered or made available by the employee to the employer as a result of their employment relationship including commissions, bonus and piecework compensation and including any gratuities received by an employee for services rendered for an employer or a customer of an employer and the fair value of any food or lodgings supplied by an employer to an employee. The commissioner may, by regulation, establish the average value of gratuities received by an employee in any occupation and the fair value of food and lodging provided to employees in any occupation which average values shall be acceptable for the purposes of determining compliance with this act in the absence of evidence of the actual value of such items.
(e) "Regular hourly wage" means the amount that an employee is regularly paid for each hour of work as determined by dividing the total hours of work during the week into the employee's total earnings for the week, exclusive of overtime premium pay.
(f) "Employ" includes to suffer or to permit to work.
(g) "Employer" includes any individual, partnership, association, corporation or any person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee.
(h) "Employee" includes any individual employed by an employer.
(i) "Occupation" means any occupation, service, trade, business, industry or branch or group of industries or employment or class of employment in which employees are gainfully employed.
(j) "Minimum fair wage order" means a wage order promulgated pursuant to this act.
(k) "Fair wage" means a wage fairly and reasonably commensurate with the value of the service or class of service rendered and sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health.
(l) "Oppressive and unreasonable wage" means a wage which is both less than the fair and reasonable value of the service rendered and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health.
(m) "Limousine" means a motor vehicle used in the business of carrying passengers for hire to provide prearranged passenger transportation at a premium fare on a dedicated, nonscheduled, charter basis that is not conducted on a regular route and with a seating capacity in no event of more than 14 passengers, not including the driver, provided, that such a motor vehicle shall not have a seating capacity in excess of four passengers, not including the driver, beyond the maximum passenger seating capacity of the vehicle, not including the driver, at the time of manufacture. "Limousine" shall not include taxicabs, hotel or airport shuttles and buses, buses employed solely in transporting school children or teachers to and from school, vehicles owned and operated directly or indirectly by businesses engaged in the practice of mortuary science when those vehicles are used exclusively for providing transportation related to the provision of funeral services or vehicles owned and operated without charge or remuneration by a business entity for its own purposes.
The commissioner shall maintain a bureau in the department to which the administration of this act, and of any minimum wage orders or regulations promulgated hereunder, shall be assigned, said bureau to consist of a director in charge and such assistants and employees as the commissioner may deem desirable.
The employment of an employee in any occupation in this State at an oppressive and unreasonable wage is hereby declared to be contrary to public policy and any contract, agreement or understanding for or in relation to such employment shall be void.
Every employer shall pay to each of his employees wages at a rate of not less than $5.05 per hour as of April 1, 1992 and, after January 1, 1999 the minimum hourly wage rate set by section 6(a)(1) of the federal "Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938" (29 U.S.C. s.206(a)(1)), and, as of October 1, 2005, $6.15 per hour, and as of October 1, 2006, $7.15 per hour [1] for 40 hours of working time in any week and 11/2 times such employee's regular hourly wage for each hour of working time in excess of 40 hours in any week, except this overtime rate shall not include any individual employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity or, if an applicable wage order has been issued by the commissioner under section 17 (C.34:11-56a16) of this act, not less than the wages prescribed in said order. The wage rates fixed in this section shall not be applicable to part-time employees primarily engaged in the care and tending of children in the home of the employer, to persons under the age of 18 not possessing a special vocational school graduate permit issued pursuant to section 15 of P .L.1940, c. 153 (C.34:2-21.15), or to persons employed as salesmen of motor vehicles, or to persons employed as outside salesmen as such terms shall be defined and delimited in regulations adopted by the commissioner, or to persons employed in a volunteer capacity and receiving only incidental benefits at a county or other agricultural fair by a nonprofit or religious corporation or a nonprofit or religious association which conducts or participates in that fair.
[1For the current minimum hourly wage rate, please check Wage & Hour FAQs.]
The provisions of this section for the payment to an employee of not less than 1 1/2 times such employee's regular hourly rate for each hour of working time in excess of 40 hours in any week shall not apply to employees engaged to labor on a farm or employed in a hotel or to an employee of a common carrier of passengers by motor bus or to a limousine driver who is an employee of an employer engaged in the business of operating limousines or to employees engaged in labor relative to the raising or care of livestock.
Employees engaged on a piece-rate or regular hourly rate basis to labor on a farm shall be paid for each day worked not less than the minimum hourly wage rate multiplied by the total number of hours worked.
Full-time students may be employed by the college or university at which they are enrolled at not less than 85% of the effective minimum wage rate.
Notwithstanding the provisions of this section to the contrary, every trucking industry employer shall pay to all drivers, helpers, loaders and mechanics for whom the Secretary of Transportation may prescribe maximum hours of work for the safe operation of vehicles, pursuant to section 31502(b) of the federal Motor Carrier Act, 49 U.S.C. s.31502(b), an overtime rate not less than 1 1/2 times the minimum wage required pursuant to this section and N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1. Employees engaged in the trucking industry shall be paid no less than the minimum wage rate as provided in this section and N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1. As used in this section, "trucking industry employer" means any business or establishment primarily operating for the purpose of conveying property from one place to another by road or highway, including the storage and warehousing of goods and property. Such an employer shall also be subject to the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to the federal Motor Carrier Act, 49 U.S.C. s.31501 et seq., whose employees are exempt under section 213(b)(1) of the federal "Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938," 29 U.S.C. s.213(b)(1), which provides an exemption to employees regulated by section 207 of the federal "Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938," 29 U.S.C. s. 207, and the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. s. 501 et al.
The provisions of this section shall not be construed as prohibiting any political subdivision of the State from adopting an ordinance, resolution, regulation or rule, or entering into any agreement, establishing any standard for vendors, contractors and subcontractors of the subdivision regarding wage rates or overtime compensation which is higher than the standards provided for in this section, and no provision of any other State or federal law establishing a minimum standard regarding wages or other terms and conditions of employment shall be construed as preventing a political subdivision of the State from adopting an ordinance, resolution, regulation or rule, or entering into any agreement, establishing a standard for vendors, contractors and subcontractors of the subdivision which is higher than the State or federal law or which otherwise provides greater protections or rights to employees of the vendors, contractors and subcontractors of the subdivision, unless the State or federal law expressly prohibits the subdivision from adopting the ordinance, resolution, regulation or rule, or entering into the agreement.
34:11-56a4.1. Summer camps, conferences and retreats; exception
The provisions of the act to which this act is a supplement in respect to minimum wages and compensation for overtime work shall not be applicable during the months of June, July, August or September of the year to summer camps, conferences and retreats operated by any nonprofit or religious corporation or association.
The provisions of this act shall be applicable to wages covered by wage orders issued pursuant to section 17 of P.L.1966, c. 113 (C. 34:11-56a16).
34:11-56a4.7 New Jersey Minimum Wage Advisory Commission
a. There is created a commission to be known as the "New Jersey Minimum Wage Advisory Commission," which shall be a permanent, independent body in but not of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development. The commission shall consist of five members as follows: the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development, ex officio, who shall serve as chair of the commission, and four members appointed by the Governor as follows: two persons who shall be nominated by organizations who represent the interests of the business community in this State and two persons who shall be nominated by the New Jersey State AFL-CIO.
b. Members shall be appointed not later than December 31, 2005. Members shall be appointed for four-year terms and may be re-appointed for any number of terms. Any member of the commission may be removed from office by the Governor, for cause, upon notice and opportunity to be heard. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment for the balance of the unexpired term. A member shall continue to serve upon the expiration of his term until a successor is appointed and qualified, unless the member is removed by the Governor.
c. Action may be taken by the commission by an affirmative vote of a majority of its members and a majority of the commission shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of any business, for the performance of any duty, or for the exercise of any power of the commission.
d. Members of the commission shall serve without compensation, but may be reimbursed for the actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties as members of the commission within the limits of funds appropriated or otherwise made available for that purpose.
34:11-56a4.8. Annual evaluation of adequacy of minimum wage.
a. The commission shall annually evaluate the adequacy of the minimum wage relative to the following factors:
(1) The overall cost of living in the State;
(2) Changes in the components of the cost of living which have the greatest impact on low-income families, including increases in the cost of housing, food, transportation, health care and child care;
(3) The cost of living in the State compared to that of other states;
(4) Changes in the purchasing power of the minimum wage; and
(5) Changes in the value of the minimum wage relative to the federal poverty guidelines, the federal lower living standard income level guidelines and the self-sufficiency standards established as goals for State and federal employment and training services pursuant to section 3 of P.L.1992, c.43 (C.34:15D-3) and section 1 of P.L.1992, c.48 (C.34:15B-35).
b. In furtherance of its evaluation, the commission may hold public meetings or hearings within the State on any matter or matters related to the provisions of this act, and call to its assistance and avail itself of the services of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development and the employees of any other State department, board, commission or agency which the commission determines possesses relevant data, analytical and professional expertise or other resources which may assist the commission in discharging its duties under this act. Each department, board, commission or agency of this State is hereby directed, to the extent not inconsistent with law, to cooperate fully with the commission and to furnish such information and assistance as is necessary to accomplish the purposes of this act.
c. The commission shall submit a written report of its findings regarding the adequacy of the minimum wage and its recommendations as to whether, or how much, to increase the minimum wage to the Governor and to the Legislature, who shall immediately review the commission report upon its receipt. Each House of the Legislature shall consider the commission report within 120 days of the receipt of the report. The first report shall be submitted to the Legislature no sooner than October 1, 2007 and no later than December 31, 2007, and subsequent reports shall be submitted in one year intervals thereafter.
For any occupation for which no wage order issued pursuant to section 17 of this act is in effect, the commissioner shall, within 6 months after the rate provided in section 5 is in effect, make such administrative regulations as he shall deem appropriate to carry out the purposes of this act or necessary to prevent the circumvention or evasion thereof, and to safeguard the minimum wage rates hereby established. Such regulations may include regulations defining and governing outside salesmen; learners and apprentices, their number, proportion and length of service; part-time pay; bonuses, overtime pay; special pay for special or extra work; or permitted charges to employees or allowances for board, lodging, apparel or other facilities or services customarily furnished by employers to employees; or allowances for such other special conditions or circumstances.
The commissioner shall publish such regulations as he proposes to issue and such regulations may be issued pursuant to this section only after a public hearing, subsequent to publication of notice of the hearing, at which any person may be heard.
Such administrative regulations shall remain in effect only until such time as a wage order governing the occupation or occupations concerned, and to the extent inconsistent therewith, has been promulgated and becomes effective as provided in this act.
The commissioner, the director and their authorized representatives shall have the authority to:
(a) investigate and ascertain the wages of persons employed in any occupation in the State;
(b) enter and inspect the place of business or employment of any employer or employees in any occupation in the State, for the purpose of examining and inspecting any or all books, registers, payrolls and other records of any such employer that in any way relate to or have a bearing upon the question of wages, hours, and other conditions of employment of any such employees; copy any or all of such books, registers, payrolls, and other records as he or his authorized representative may deem necessary or appropriate; and question such employees for the purpose of ascertaining whether the provisions of this act and the orders and regulations issued hereunder have been and are being complied with; and
(c) require from such employer full and correct statements in writing, including sworn statements, with respect to wages, hours, names, addresses and such other information pertaining to his employees and their employment as the commissioner, the director or their authorized representatives may deem necessary or appropriate.
The commissioner shall have the power, on his own motion, and it shall be his duty upon the petition of 50 or more residents of the State, to cause the director to investigate any occupation to ascertain whether a substantial number of employees are receiving less than a fair wage.
If the commissioner is of the opinion that a substantial number of employees in any occupation or occupations are receiving less than a fair wage, he shall appoint a wage board as provided in section 10 of this act to report upon the establishment of minimum fair wage rates for employees in such occupation or occupations.
A wage board shall have power to administer oaths and to require by subpoena the attendance and testimony of witnesses, the production of all books, records, and other evidence relative to matters under investigation. Such subpoena shall be signed and issued by the chairman of the wage board and shall be served and have the same effect as if issued out of the Superior Court. A wage board shall have power to cause depositions of witnesses residing within or without the State to be taken in the manner prescribed for like dispositions in civil actions in the Superior Court.
The commissioner or the director shall present to a wage board promptly upon its organization all the evidence and information in the possession of the commissioner or director relating to the wages of employees in the occupations for which the wage board was appointed and all other information which the commissioner or the director deems relevant to the establishment of a minimum fair wage, and shall cause to be brought before the committee any witnesses whom the commissioner or the director deems material. A wage board may summon other witnesses or call upon the commissioner or the director to furnish additional information to aid it in its deliberations.
The commissioner and the wage board in establishing a minimum fair wage, shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence or procedure, but may consider all relevant circumstances affecting the value of the service or class of service rendered; may consider the wages paid in the State for work of like or comparable character by employers who voluntarily maintain minimum fair wage standards; and may be guided by like considerations as would guide a court in a suit for the reasonable value of services rendered at the request of the employer without agreement as to amount of wages to be paid.
The report of the wage board shall recommend minimum fair wage rates, on an hourly, daily or weekly basis for the employees in the occupation or occupations for which the wage board was appointed. The wage board may recommend establishment or modification of the number of hours per week after which the overtime rate established in section 5 shall apply and may recommend the establishment or modification of said overtime rate. The board may also recommend permitted charges to the employees or allowances for board, lodging, apparel, or other facilities or services customarily furnished by the employer to the employee; or allowances for such other special conditions or circumstances excluding gratuities which may be usual in a particular employer-employee relationship. A wage board may differentiate and classify employments in any occupation according to the nature of the service rendered and recommend appropriate minimum fair wage rates for different employments. It may recommend minimum fair wage rates varying with localities if in the judgment of the wage board conditions make such local differentiation proper.
A wage board may recommend a suitable scale of rates for learners and apprentices or students in any occupation which may be less than the regular minimum fair wage rates recommended for experienced employees.
Within 60 days of its organization a wage board shall submit to the commissioner a report including its recommendations as to minimum fair wage standards for the employees in the occupation or occupations the wage standards of which the wage board was appointed to investigate. If its report is not submitted within such time the commissioner may constitute a new wage board.
On submission of the report of a wage board the commissioner shall within 10 days confer with the director and accept or reject the report.
If he rejects the report, he shall resubmit the matter to the same wage board or to a new wage board with a statement of his reasons for the rejection.
If he accepts the report, it shall be published within 30 days together with such proposed administrative regulations as the commissioner after conferring with the director may deem appropriate to supplement the report of the wage board and to safeguard the minimum fair wage standards to be established.
At the same time notice shall be given of a public hearing before the commissioner or the director, not sooner than 15 nor more than 30 days after such publication, at which all persons favoring or opposing the recommendations contained in the report or the proposed regulations may be heard.
Within 10 days after the hearing the commissioner shall confer with the director and approve or disapprove the report of the wage board. If the report is disapproved the commissioner may resubmit the matter to the same wage board or to a new wage board. If the report is approved, the commissioner shall make a wage order which shall define minimum fair wage rates in the occupation or occupations as recommended in the report of the wage board and which shall include such proposed administrative regulations as the commissioner may deem appropriate to supplement the report of the wage board and to safeguard the minimum fair wage standards established. Such administrative regulations may include among other things, regulations defining and governing learners and apprentices, their rates, number, proportion or length of service; piece rates or their relations to time rates; overtime or part-time rates, bonuses or special pay for special or extra work; deductions for board, lodging, apparel or other items or services supplied by the employer; and other special conditions or circumstances excluding gratuities; and in view of the diversities and complexities of different occupations and the dangers of evasion and nullification, the commissioner may provide in such regulations without departing from the basic minimum rates recommended by the wage board such modifications or reductions of or addition to such rates in or for such special cases or classes of cases as those herein enumerated as the commissioner may find appropriate to safeguard the basic minimum rates established. Said wage order shall take effect upon expiration of 180 days from the date of the issuance of the order.
(a) The commissioner, to the extent necessary in order to prevent curtailment of opportunities for employment, shall by regulation provide for the employment of learners, apprentices and students, under special certificates issued pursuant to regulations of the commissioner, at such wages lower than the minimum wage applicable under the provisions of this act and subject to such limitations as to time, number, proportion and length of service as the commissioner shall prescribe.
(b) For any occupation for which minimum fair wage order rates or minimum wage rates are established by or pursuant to this act the commissioner or the director may cause to be issued to an employee, including a learner, apprentice or student, whose earning capacity is impaired by age or physical or mental deficiency or injury, a special license authorizing employment at such wages less than such minimum wage rates and for such period of time as shall be fixed by the commissioner or the director and stated in the license.
At any time after a minimum fair wage order has been in effect for 1 year or more, the commissioner may, on his own motion, after conferring with the director, and shall, on petition of 50 or more residents of the State, reconsider the minimum fair wage rates set therein and reconvene the same wage board or appoint a new board to recommend whether or not the rate, or rates, contained in such order, shall be modified. The report of such wage board shall be dealt with in the manner prescribed in sections 15, 16 and 17 of this act.
The commissioner may, from time to time after conference with the director and without reference to a wage board, propose such modifications of or additions to any administrative regulations issued pursuant to sections 6 and 17 of this act as he may deem appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this article; provided, such proposed modifications or additions could legally have been included in the original regulation. Notice shall be given of a public hearing to be held by the commissioner or director not less than 15 days after such notice, at which all persons in favor of or opposed to the proposed modifications or additions may be heard. After the hearing the commissioner may make an order putting into effect the proposed modifications of or additions to the administrative regulations as he deems appropriate.
Every employer of employees subject to this act shall keep a true and accurate record of the hours worked by each and the wages paid by him to each and shall furnish to the commissioner or the director or their authorized representative upon demand a sworn statement of the same. Such records shall be open to inspection by the commissioner or the director or their authorized representative at any reasonable time. No employer shall be found guilty of violating this provision for failure to keep a true and accurate record of the hours worked by outside salesmen, buyers of poultry, eggs, cream, milk or other perishable commodities in their natural or raw state, homeworkers legally employed in accordance with the laws of this State or any person employed in a bona fide executive, administrative or professional capacity, except that no exemption from record keeping pursuant to this section in regard to any person employed in a bona fide executive, administrative or professional capacity shall be construed to permit an employer to pay wages at a rate which violates the provisions of section 5 of P.L.1966, c. 113 (C. 34:11-56a4).
Every employer subject to any provision of this act or of any regulations or orders issued under this act shall keep a summary of this act, approved by the commissioner, and copies of any applicable wage orders and regulations issued under this act, or a summary of such wage orders and regulations, posted in a conspicuous and accessible place in or about the premises wherein any person subject thereto is employed. Employers shall be furnished copies of such summaries, orders, and regulations by the State on request without charge.
Any employer who willfully hinders or delays the commissioner, the director or their authorized representatives in the performance of his duties in the enforcement of this act, or fails to make, keep, and preserve any records as required under the provisions of this act, or falsifies any such record, or refuses to make any such record accessible to the commissioner, the director or their authorized representatives upon demand, or refuses to furnish a sworn statement of such record or any other information required for the proper enforcement of this act to the commissioner, the director or their authorized representatives upon demand, or pays or agrees to pay wages at a rate less than the rate applicable under this act or any wage order issued pursuant thereto, or otherwise violates any provision of this act or of any regulation or order issued under this act shall be guilty of a disorderly persons offense and shall, upon conviction for a first violation, be punished by a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000 or by imprisonment for not less than 10 nor more than 90 days or by both the fine and imprisonment and, upon conviction for a second or subsequent violation, be punished by a fine of not less than $500 nor more than $1,000 or by imprisonment for not less than 10 nor more than 100 days or by both the fine and imprisonment. Each week, in any day of which an employee is paid less than the rate applicable to him under this act or under a minimum fair wage order, and each employee so paid, shall constitute a separate offense.
As an alternative to or in addition to any other sanctions provided by law for violations of the "New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law," P.L.1966, c. 113 (C.34:11-56a et seq.), when the Commissioner of Labor finds that an individual has violated that act, the commissioner is authorized to assess and collect administrative penalties, up to a maximum of $250 for a first violation and up to a maximum of $500 for each subsequent violation, specified in a schedule of penalties to be promulgated as a rule or regulation by the commissioner in accordance with the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c. 410 (C.52:14B-1 et seq.). When determining the amount of the penalty imposed because of a violation, the commissioner shall consider factors which include the history of previous violations by the employer, the seriousness of the violation, the good faith of the employer and the size of the employer's business. No administrative penalty shall be levied pursuant to this section unless the Commissioner of Labor provides the alleged violator with notification of the violation and of the amount of the penalty by certified mail and an opportunity to request a hearing before the commissioner or his designee within 15 days following the receipt of the notice. If a hearing is requested, the commissioner shall issue a final order upon such hearing and a finding that a violation has occurred. If no hearing is requested, the notice shall become a final order upon expiration of the 15-day period.
Payment of the penalty is due when a final order is issued or when the notice becomes a final order. Any penalty imposed pursuant to this section may be recovered with costs in a summary proceeding commenced by the commissioner pursuant to "the penalty enforcement law" (N.J.S. 2A:58-1 et seq.). Any sum collected as a fine or penalty pursuant to this section shall be applied toward enforcement and administration costs of the Division of Workplace Standards in the Department of Labor.
As an alternative to any other sanctions or in addition thereto, herein or otherwise provided by law for violation of this act or of any rule or regulation duly issued hereunder, the Commissioner of Labor is authorized to supervise the payment of amounts due to employees under this act, and the employer may be required to make these payments to the commissioner to be held in a special account in trust for the employee, and paid on order of the commissioner directly to the employee or employees affected. The employer shall also pay the commissioner an administrative fee equal to not less than 10% or more than 25% of any payment made to the commissioner pursuant to this section. The amount of the administrative fee shall be specified in a schedule of fees to be promulgated by rule or regulation of the commissioner in accordance with the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c. 410 (C. 52:14B-1 et seq.). The fee shall be applied toward enforcement and administration costs of the Division of Workplace Standards in the Department of Labor.
Any employer who discharges or in any other manner discriminates against any employee because such employee has made any complaint to his employer, to the commissioner, the director or to their authorized representatives that he has not been paid wages in accordance with the provisions of this act, or because such employee has caused to be instituted or is about to cause to be instituted any proceeding under or related to this act, or because such employee has testified or is about to testify in any such proceeding, or because such employee has served or is about to serve on a wage board, shall be guilty of a disorderly persons offense and shall, upon conviction therefor, be fined not less than $100 nor more than $1,000. Such employer shall be required, as a condition of such judgment of conviction, to offer reinstatement in employment to any such discharged employee and to correct any such discriminatory action, and also to pay to any such employee in full, all wages lost as a result of such discharge or discriminatory action, under penalty of contempt proceedings for failure to comply with such requirement.
As an alternative to or in addition to any other sanctions provided by law for violations of P.L.1966, c. 113 (C. 34:11-56a et seq.), when the Commissioner of Labor finds that an employer has violated that act, the commissioner is authorized to assess and collect administrative penalties, up to a maximum of $250 for a first violation and up to a maximum of $500 for each subsequent violation, specified in a schedule of penalties to be promulgated as a rule or regulation by the commissioner in accordance with the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c. 410 (C. 52:14B-1 et seq.). When determining the amount of the penalty imposed because of a violation, the commissioner shall consider factors which include the history of previous violations by the employer, the seriousness of the violation, the good faith of the employer and the size of the employer's business. No administrative penalty shall be levied pursuant to this section unless the Commissioner of Labor provides the alleged violator with notification of the violation and of the amount of the penalty by certified mail and an opportunity to request a hearing before the commissioner or his designee within 15 days following the receipt of the notice. If a hearing is requested, the commissioner shall issue a final order upon such hearing and a finding that a violation has occurred. If no hearing is requested, the notice shall become a final order upon expiration of the 15-day period. Payment of the penalty is due when a final order is issued or when the notice becomes a final order. Any penalty imposed pursuant to this section may be recovered with costs in a summary proceeding commenced by the commissioner pursuant to "the penalty enforcement law" (N.J.S. 2A:58-1 et seq.). Any sum collected as a fine or penalty pursuant to this section shall be applied toward enforcement and administration costs of the Division of Workplace Standards in the Department of Labor.
If any employee is paid by an employer less than the minimum fair wage to which such employee is entitled under the provisions of this act or by virtue of a minimum fair wage order such employee may recover in a civil action the full amount of such minimum wage less any amount actually paid to him or her by the employer together with costs and such reasonable attorney's fees as may be allowed by the court, and any agreement between such employee and the employer to work for less than such minimum fair wage shall be no defense to the action. An employee shall be entitled to maintain such action for and on behalf of himself or other employees similarly situated, and such employee and employees may designate an agent or representative to maintain such action for and on behalf of all employees similarly situated. At the request of any employee paid less than the minimum wage to which such employee was entitled under the provisions of this act or under an order, the commissioner may take an assignment of the wage claim in trust for the assigning employee and may bring any legal action necessary to collect the claim, and the employer shall be required to pay the costs and such reasonable attorney's fees as may be allowed by the court.
In any action or proceeding commenced prior to or on or after the date of the enactment of this act based on any act or omission prior to or on or after the date of the enactment of this act, no employer shall be subject to any liability or punishment for or on account of the failure of the employer to pay minimum wages or overtime compensation under this act, if he pleads and proves that the act or omission complained of was in good faith in conformity with and in reliance on any written administrative regulation, order, ruling, approval or interpretation by the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or the Director of the Wage and Hour Bureau, or any administrative practice or enforcement policy of such department or bureau with respect to the class of employers to which he belonged. Such a defense, if established, shall be a complete bar to the action or proceeding, notwithstanding, that after such act or omission, such administrative regulation, order, ruling, approval, interpretation, practice, or enforcement policy is modified or rescinded or is determined by judicial authority to be invalid or of no legal effect.
Nothing in this act shall be deemed to interfere with, impede, or in any way diminish the right of employees to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing in order to establish wages in excess of the applicable minima under this act.
This act shall supplement the provisions of article 2 of chapter 11 of Title 34 of the Revised Statutes. Nothing herein shall be deemed to supersede any of the provisions of said article 2 of chapter 11, of Title 34, except insofar as the wages entitled to be received by any employee under the provisions of this act and the regulations and wage orders issued thereunder exceed the wages such employee is entitled to receive under the provisions of said article 2, of chapter 11, of Title 34 of the Revised Statutes and the regulations and wage orders issued pursuant thereto.
This act shall be known as the "New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law."
Except with respect to the minimum wage rates established by P.L.1966, c. 113, s. 5, the provisions of the "New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law," P.L.1966, c. 113 (C. 34:11-56a1 et seq.) are applicable to the employment of minors. Wage orders pertaining to minors including those promulgated under R.S. 34:11-34 through R.S. 34:11-56, on the effective date of this act shall remain in force until superseded by wage orders or regulations issued pursuant to P.L.1966, c. 113.
It is declared to be the public policy of this State to establish a maximum work week for certain hourly wage health care facility employees, beyond which the employees cannot be required to perform overtime work, in order to safeguard their health, efficiency, and general well-being as well as the health and general well-being of the persons to whom these employees provide services.
34:11-56a32. Definitions relative to work hours for certain health care facility employees
"Employee" means an individual employed by a health care facility who is involved in direct patient care activities or clinical services and who receives an hourly wage, but shall not include a physician.
"Employer" means an individual, partnership, association, corporation or person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of a health care facility.
"Health care facility" means a health care facility licensed by the Department of Health and Senior Services pursuant to P.L.1971, c.136 (C.26:2H-1 et seq.), a State or county psychiatric hospital, a State developmental center, or a health care service firm registered by the Division of Consumer Affairs in the Department of Law and Public Safety pursuant to P.L.1960, c.39 (C.56:8-1 et seq.).
"On-call time" means time spent by an employee who is not currently working on the premises of the place of employment, but who is compensated for availability, or as a condition of employment has agreed to be available, to return to the premises of the place of employment on short notice if the need arises.
"Reasonable efforts" means that the employer shall: a. seek persons who volunteer to work extra time from all available qualified staff who are working at the time of the unforeseeable emergent circumstance; b. contact all qualified employees who have made themselves available to work extra time; c. seek the use of per diem staff; and d. seek personnel from a contracted temporary agency when such staff is permitted by law or regulation.
"Unforeseeable emergent circumstance" means an unpredictable or unavoidable occurrence at unscheduled intervals relating to health care delivery that requires immediate action.
The requirement that an employee of a health care facility accept work in excess of an agreed to, predetermined and regularly scheduled daily work shift, not to exceed 40 hours per week, except in the case of an unforeseeable emergent circumstance when the overtime is required only as a last resort and is not used to fill vacancies resulting from chronic short staffing and the employer has exhausted reasonable efforts to obtain staffing, is declared to be contrary to public policy and any such requirement contained in any contract, agreement or understanding executed or renewed after the effective date of this act shall be void.
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, no health care facility shall require an employee to accept work in excess of an agreed to, predetermined and regularly scheduled daily work shift, not to exceed 40 hours per week.
(b) The acceptance by any employee of such work in excess of an agreed to, predetermined and regularly scheduled daily work shift, not to exceed 40 hours per week, shall be strictly voluntary and the refusal of any employee to accept such overtime work shall not be grounds for discrimination, dismissal, discharge or any other penalty or employment decision adverse to the employee.
(c) The provisions of this section shall not apply in the case of an unforeseeable emergent circumstance when: (1) the overtime is required only as a last resort and is not used to fill vacancies resulting from chronic short staffing, and (2) the employer has exhausted reasonable efforts to obtain staffing. In the event of such an unforeseeable emergent circumstance, the employer shall provide the employee with necessary time, up to a maximum of one hour, to arrange for the care of the employee's minor children or elderly or disabled family members.
The requirement that the employer shall exhaust reasonable efforts to obtain staffing shall not apply in the event of any declared national, State or municipal emergency or a disaster or other catastrophic event which substantially affects or increases the need for health care services.
(d) In the event that an employer requires an employee to work overtime pursuant to subsection c. of this section, the employer shall document in writing the reasonable efforts it has exhausted. The documentation shall be made available for review by the Department of Health and Senior Services and the Department of Labor.
An employer who violates the provisions of this act shall be subject to the sanctions provided by law for violations of the "New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law," P.L.1966, c.113 (C.34:11-56a et seq.).
(a) The provisions of this act shall not be construed to impair or negate any employer-employee collective bargaining agreement or any other employer-employee contract in effect on the effective date of this act.
(b) The provisions of this act shall not apply to employees of assisted living facilities licensed by the Department of Health and Senior Services who are provided with room and board as a benefit of their employment and reside in the facility on a full-time basis.
(c) The provisions of this act shall not apply to on-call time, but nothing in this act shall be construed to permit an employer to use on-call time as a substitute for mandatory overtime.
The Departments of Health and Senior Services, Human Services, and Law and Public Safety shall each collect data from all health care facilities which the respective department licenses, operates or regulates, as to the potential impact of the mandatory overtime prohibition on employee availability and other considerations, and shall jointly report their findings to the Senate and General Assembly Health Committees within 18 months of the date of enactment of this act.
The Commissioner of Health and Senior Services, in consultation with the Attorney General and the Commissioners of Human Services and Labor, shall adopt rules and regulations, pursuant to the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c.410 (C.52:14B-1 et seq.), within six months of the date of enactment of this act, to carry out the purposes of this act.
[1 Mandatory Overtime Regulations are contained in N.J.A.C. 8:43E-8.]
CHAPTER 11D EARNED SICK LEAVE Effective October 29, 2018
”Benefit year” means the period of 12 consecutive months established by an employer in which an employee shall accrue and use earned sick leave as provided pursuant to section 2 of this act, provided that once the starting date of the benefit year is established by the employer it shall not be changed unless the employer notifies the commissioner of the change in accordance with regulations promulgated pursuant to this act. The commissioner shall impose a benefit year on any employer that the commissioner determines is changing the benefit year at times or in ways that prevent the accrual or use of earned sick leave by an employee.
"Certified Domestic Violence Specialist" means a person who has fulfilled the requirements of certification as a Domestic Violence Specialist established by the New Jersey Association of Domestic Violence Professionals.
"Child" means a biological, adopted, or foster child, stepchild or legal ward of an employee, child of a domestic partner or civil union partner of the employee.
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development.
“Department” means the Department of Labor and Workforce Development.
"Designated domestic violence agency" means a county-wide organization with a primary purpose to provide services to victims of domestic violence, and which provides services that conform to the core domestic violence services profile as defined by the Division of Child Protection and Permanency in the Department of Children and Families and is under contract with the division for the express purpose of providing the services.
"Domestic or sexual violence" means stalking, any sexually violent offense, as defined in section 3 of P.L.1998, c.71 (C.30:4-27.26), or domestic violence as defined in section 3 of P.L.1991, c.261 (C.2C:25-19) and section 1 of P.L.2003, c.41 (C.17:29B-16).
"Employee" means an individual engaged in service to an employer in the business of the employer for compensation. “Employee” does not include an employee performing service in the construction industry that is under contract pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement, or a per diem health care employee, or a public employee who is provided with sick leave with full pay pursuant to any other law, rule, or regulation of this State.
"Employer" means any person, firm, business, educational institution, nonprofit agency, corporation, limited liability company or other entity that employs employees in the State, including a temporary help service firm. In the case of a temporary help service firm placing an employee with client firms, earned sick leave shall accrue on the basis of the total time worked on assignment with the temporary help service firm, not separately for each client firm to which the employee is assigned. "Employer" does not include a public employer that is required to provide its employees with sick leave with full pay pursuant to any other law, rule or regulation of this State.
"Family member" means a child, grandchild, sibling, spouse, domestic partner, civil union partner, parent, or grandparent of an employee, or a spouse, domestic partner, or civil union partner of a parent or grandparent of the employee, or a sibling of a spouse, domestic partner, or civil union partner of the employee, or any other individual related by blood to the employee or whose close association with the employee is the equivalent of a family relationship.
“Health care professional” means any person licensed under federal, State, or local law, or the laws of a foreign nation, to provide health care services, or any other person who has been authorized to provide health care by a licensed health care professional, including but not limited to doctors, nurses and emergency room personnel.
“Parent” means a biological, adoptive, or foster parent, stepparent, or legal guardian of an employee or of the employee’s spouse, domestic partner, or civil union partner, or a person who stood in loco parentis of the employee or the employee’s spouse, domestic partner, or civil union partner when the employee, spouse or partner was a minor child.
“Per diem health care employee” means any:
(1) health care professional licensed in the State of New Jersey employed by a health care facility licensed by the New Jersey Department of Health;
(2) any individual that is in the process of applying to the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs for a license to provide health care services who is employed by a health care facility licensed by the New Jersey Department of Health; or
(3) any first aid, rescue or ambulance squad member employed by a hospital system.
An employee listed in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of this definition shall be considered a per diem health care employee if that employee:
(1) works on an as-needed basis to supplement a health care employee, or to replace or substitute for a temporarily absent health care employee;
(2) works only when the employee indicates that the employee is available to work, and has no obligation to work when the employee does not indicate availability; and
(a) has the opportunity for full time or part time employment in their scope of practice under that healthcare provider which offers paid time off benefits greater in length than provided under this act under the terms of employment; or
(b) has waived earned sick leave benefits as provided under this act under terms of employment for alternative benefits or consideration.
“Per diem health care employee” shall not include any individual who is certified as a homemaker-home health aide.
“Retaliatory personnel action” means denial of any right guaranteed under this act and any threat, discharge, including a constructive discharge, suspension, demotion, unfavorable reassignment, refusal to promote, disciplinary action, sanction, reduction of work hours, reporting or threatening to report the actual or suspected immigrant status of an employee or the employee’s family, or any other adverse action against an employee.
“Sibling” means a biological, foster, or adopted sibling of an employee.
"Spouse" means a husband or wife.
2. a. Each employer shall provide earned sick leave to each employee working for the employer in the State. For every 30 hours worked, the employee shall accrue one hour of earned sick leave, except that an employer may provide an employee with the full complement of earned sick leave for a benefit year, as required under this section, on the first day of each benefit year in accordance with subsection c. or subsection d. of section 3 of this act. The employer shall not be required to permit the employee to accrue or use in any benefit year, or carry forward from one benefit year to the next, more than 40 hours of earned sick leave. Unless the employee has accrued earned sick leave prior to the effective date of this act, the earned sick leave shall begin to accrue on the effective date of this act for any employee who is hired and commences employment before the effective date of this act and the employee shall be eligible to use the earned sick leave beginning on the 120th calendar day after the employee commences employment, and if the employment commences after the effective date of this act, the earned sick leave shall begin to accrue upon the date that employment commences and the employee shall be eligible to use the earned sick leave beginning on the 120th calendar day after the employee commences employment, unless the employer agrees to an earlier date. The employee may subsequently use earned sick leave as soon as it is accrued.
b. An employer shall be in compliance with this section if the employer offers paid time off, which is fully paid and shall include, but is not limited to personal days, vacation days, and sick days, and may be used for the purposes of section 3 of this act in the manner provided by this act, and is accrued at a rate equal to or greater than the rate described in this section.
c. The employer shall pay the employee for earned sick leave at the same rate of pay with the same benefits as the employee normally earns, except that the pay rate shall not be less than the minimum wage required for the employee pursuant to section 5 of P.L.1966, c.113 (C.34:11-56a4).
d. Upon the mutual consent of the employee and employer, an employee may voluntarily choose to work additional hours or shifts during the same or following pay period, in lieu of hours or shifts missed, but shall not be required to work additional hours or shifts or use accrued earned sick leave. An employer may not require, as a condition of an employee's using earned sick leave, that the employee search for or find a replacement worker to cover the hours during which the employee is using earned sick leave.
e. If an employee is transferred to a separate division, entity, or location, but remains employed by the same employer, then the employee shall be entitled to all earned sick leave accrued at the prior division, entity, or location, and shall be entitled to use the accrued earned sick leave as provided in this act. If an employee is terminated, laid off, furloughed, or otherwise separated from employment with the employer, any unused accrued earned sick leave shall be reinstated upon the re-hiring or reinstatement of the employee to that employment, within six months of termination, being laid off or furloughed, or separation, and prior employment with the employer shall be counted towards meeting the eligibility requirements set forth in this section. When a different employer succeeds or takes the place of an existing employer, all employees of the original employer who remain employed by the successor employer are entitled to all of the earned sick leave they accrued when employed by the original employer, and are entitled to use the earned sick leave previously accrued immediately.
f. An employer may choose the increments in which its employees may use earned sick leave, provided that the largest increment of earned sick leave that an employee may be required to use for each shift for which earned sick leave is used shall be the number of hours the employee was scheduled to work during that shift.
3. a. An employer shall permit an employee to use the earned sick leave accrued pursuant to this act for any of the following:
(1) time needed for diagnosis, care, or treatment of, or recovery from, an employee’s mental or physical illness, injury or other adverse health condition, or for preventive medical care for the employee;
(2) time needed for the employee to aid or care for a family member of the employee during diagnosis, care, or treatment of, or recovery from, the family member’s mental or physical illness, injury or other adverse health condition, or during preventive medical care for the family member;
(3) absence necessary due to circumstances resulting from the employee, or a family member of the employee, being a victim of domestic or sexual violence, if the leave is to allow the employee to obtain for the employee or the family member: medical attention needed to recover from physical or psychological injury or disability caused by domestic or sexual violence; services from a designated domestic violence agency or other victim services organization; psychological or other counseling; relocation; or legal services, including obtaining a restraining order or preparing for, or participating in, any civil or criminal legal proceeding related to the domestic or sexual violence;
(4) time during which the employee is not able to work because of a closure of the employee’s workplace, or the school or place of care of a child of the employee, by order of a public official due to an epidemic or other public health emergency, or because of the issuance by a public health authority of a determination that the presence in the community of the employee, or a member of the employee’s family in need of care by the employee, would jeopardize the health of others; or
(5) time needed by the employee in connection with a child of the employee to attend a school-related conference, meeting, function or other event requested or required by a school administrator, teacher, or other professional staff member responsible for the child’s education, or to attend a meeting regarding care provided to the child in connection with the child’s health conditions or disability.
b. If an employee's need to use earned sick leave is foreseeable, a employer may require advance notice, not to exceed seven calendar days prior to the date the leave is to begin, of the intention to use the leave and its expected duration, and shall make a reasonable effort to schedule the use of earned sick leave in a manner that does not unduly disrupt the operations of the employer. If the reason for the leave is not foreseeable, an employer may require an employee to give notice of the intention as soon as practicable, if the employer has notified the employee of this requirement. Employers may prohibit employees from using foreseeable earned sick leave on certain dates, and require reasonable documentation if sick leave that is not foreseeable is used during those dates. For earned sick leave of three or more consecutive days, an employer may require reasonable documentation that the leave is being taken for the purpose permitted under subsection a. of this section. If the leave is permitted under paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection a. of this section, documentation signed by a health care professional who is treating the employee or the family member of the employee indicating the need for the leave and, if possible, number of days of leave, shall be considered reasonable documentation. If the leave is permitted under paragraph (3) of subsection a. of this section because of domestic or sexual violence, any of the following shall be considered reasonable documentation of the domestic or sexual violence: medical documentation; a law enforcement agency record or report; a court order; documentation that the perpetrator of the domestic or sexual violence has been convicted of a domestic or sexual violence offense; certification from a certified Domestic Violence Specialist or a representative of a designated domestic violence agency or other victim services organization; or other documentation or certification provided by a social worker, counselor, member of the clergy, shelter worker, health care professional, attorney, or other professional who has assisted the employee or family member in dealing with the domestic or sexual violence. If the leave is permitted under paragraph (4) of subsection a. of this section, a copy of the order of the public official or the determination by the health authority shall be considered reasonable documentation.
c. Nothing in this act shall be deemed to require an employer to provide earned sick leave for an employee's leave for purposes other than those identified in this section, or prohibit the employer from taking disciplinary action against an employee who uses earned sick leave for purposes other than those identified in this section. An employer may provide an offer to an employee for a payment of unused earned sick leave in the final month of the employer’s benefit year. The employee shall choose, no later than 10 calendar days from the date of the employer’s offer, whether to accept a payment or decline a payment. If the employee agrees to receive a payment, the employee shall choose a payment for the full amount of unused earned sick leave or for 50 percent of the amount of unused earned sick leave. The payment amount shall be based on the same rate of pay that the employee earns at the time of the payment. If the employee declines a payment for unused earned sick leave, or agrees to a payment for 50 percent of the amount of unused sick leave, the employee shall be entitled to carry forward any unused or unpaid earned sick leave to the proceeding benefit year as provided pursuant to subsection a. of section 2 of this act. If the employee agrees to a payment for the full amount of unused earned sick leave, the employee shall not be entitled to carry forward any earned sick leave to the proceeding benefit year pursuant to subsection a. of section 2 of this act.
d. If an employer foregoes the accrual process for earned sick leave hours pursuant to subsection a. of section 2 of this act and provides an employee with the full complement of earned sick leave for a benefit year on the first day of each benefit year, then the employer shall either provide to the employee a payment for the full amount of unused earned sick leave in the final month of the employer’s benefit year or carry forward any unused sick leave to the next benefit year. The employer may pay the employee the full amount of unused earned sick leave in the final month of a benefit year pursuant to this subsection only if the employer forgoes, with respect to that employee, the accrual process for earned sick leave during the next benefit year. Unless an employer policy or collective bargaining agreement provides for the payment of accrued earned sick leave upon termination, resignation, retirement or other separation from employment, an employee shall not be entitled under this section to payment of unused earned sick leave upon the separation from employment.
e. Any information an employer possesses regarding the health of an employee or any family member of the employee or domestic or sexual violence affecting an employee or employee’s family member shall be treated as confidential and not disclosed except to the affected employee or with the written permission of the affected employee.
4. a. No employer shall take retaliatory personnel action or discriminate against an employee because the employee requests or uses earned sick leave either in accordance with this act or the employer's own earned sick leave policy, as the case may be, or files a complaint with the commissioner alleging the employer's violation of any provision of this act, or informs any other person of their rights under this act. No employer shall count earned sick leave taken under this act as an absence that may result in the employee being subject to discipline, discharge, demotion, suspension, a loss or reduction of pay, or any other adverse action.
b. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of an unlawful retaliatory personnel action under this section whenever an employer takes adverse action against an employee within 90 days of when that employee: files a complaint with the department or a court alleging a violation of any provision of this section; informs any person about an employer's alleged violation of this section; cooperates with the department or other persons in the investigation or prosecution of any alleged violation of this section; opposes any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this section; or informs any person of his or her rights under this section.
c. Protections of this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this act.
d. Any violator of the provisions of this section shall be subject to relevant penalties and remedies provided by the “New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law,” P.L.1966, c.113 (C.34:11-56a et seq.), including the penalties and remedies provided by section 25 of that act (C.34:11-56a24), and relevant penalties and remedies provided by section 10 of P.L.1999, c.90 (C.2C:40A-2), for discharge or other discrimination.
5. Any failure of an employer to make available or pay earned sick leave as required by this act, or any other violation of this act, shall be regarded as a failure to meet the wage payment requirements of the “New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law,” P.L.1966, c.113 (C.34:11-56a et seq.), or other violation of that act, as the case may be, and remedies, penalties, and other measures provided by that act, R.S.34:11-58, and section 10 of P.L.1999, c.90 (C.2C:40A-2) for failure to pay wages or other violations of that act shall be applicable, including, but not limited to, penalties provided pursuant to sections 23 and 25 of that act (C.34:11-56a22 and 34:11-56a24), and civil actions by employees pursuant to section 26 of that act (C.34:11-56a25), except that an award to an employee in a civil act shall include, in addition to the amount provided pursuant to section 26 of that act (C.34:11-56a25), any actual damages suffered by the employee as the result of the violation plus an equal amount of liquidated damages.
6. Employers shall retain records documenting hours worked by employees and earned sick leave taken by employees, for a period of five years, and shall, upon demand, allow the department access to those records to monitor compliance with the requirements of this act. If an employee makes a claim that the employer has failed to provide earned sick leave required by this act and the employer has not maintained or retained adequate records documenting hours worked by the employee and earned sick leave taken by the employee or does not allow the department access to the records, it shall be presumed that the employer has failed to provide the earned sick leave, absent clear and convincing evidence otherwise. In addition, the penalties provided by the “New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law,” P.L.1966, c.113 (C.34:11-56a et seq.) for violations of the requirements of that act regarding the maintaining and disclosure of records shall apply to violations of the requirements of this section.
7. a. Employers shall provide notification, in a form issued by the commissioner, to employees of their rights under this act, including the amount of earned sick leave to which they are entitled and the terms of its use, and remedies provided by this act to employees if an employer fails to provide the required benefits or retaliates against employees exercising their rights under this act. Each covered employer shall conspicuously post the notification in a place or places accessible to all employees in each of the employer's workplaces. The employer shall also provide each employee employed by the employer with a written copy of the notification: not later than 30 days after the form of the notification is issued; at the time of the employee's hiring, if the employee is hired after the issuance; and at any time, when first requested by the employee. The commissioner shall make the notifications available in English, in Spanish, and any other language that the commissioner determines is the first language of a significant number of workers in the State and the employer shall use the notification in English, Spanish or any other language for which the commissioner has provided notifications and which is the first language of a majority of the employer’s workforce.
b. The commissioner shall advise any employee who files a complaint pursuant to this section and is covered by a collective bargaining agreement, that if the agreement provides for earned sick leave, the employee may have a right to pursue a grievance under the terms of the agreement.
8. a. The governing body of a county or municipality shall not, after the effective date of this act, adopt any ordinance, resolution, law, rule, or regulation regarding earned sick leave. The provisions of this act shall preempt any ordinance, resolution, law, rule, or regulation regarding earned sick leave adopted by the governing body of a county or municipality.
b. No provision of this act, or any regulations promulgated to implement or enforce this act, shall be construed as:
(1) requiring an employer to reduce, or justifying an employer in reducing, rights or benefits provided by the employer pursuant to an employer policy or collective bargaining agreement which are more favorable to employees than those required by this act or which provide rights or benefits to employees not covered by this act;
(2) preventing or prohibiting the employer from agreeing, through a collective bargaining agreement or employer policy, to provide rights or benefits which are more favorable to employees than those required by this act or to provide rights or benefits to employees not covered by this act;
(3) prohibiting an employer from establishing a policy whereby an employee may donate unused accrued earned sick leave to another employee or other employees; or
(4) superseding any law providing collective bargaining rights for employees, or in any way reducing, diminishing, or adversely affecting those collective bargaining rights, or in any way reducing, diminishing, or affecting the obligations of employers under those laws.
Employees or employee representatives may waive the rights or benefits provided under this act during the negotiation of a collective bargaining agreement.
c. With respect to employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement in effect at the time of the effective date of this act, no provision of this act shall apply until the stated expiration of the collective bargaining agreement.
9. The provisions of this act shall be deemed to be severable and if any section, subsection, paragraph, sentence or other part of this act is declared to be unconstitutional, or the applicability thereof to any person is held invalid, the remainder of this act shall not thereby be deemed to be unconstitutional or invalid.
10. The commissioner shall develop and implement a multilingual outreach program to inform employees, parents, and persons under the care of health care providers about the availability of earned paid sick leave pursuant to this act. The program shall include the distribution of written materials in English, Spanish and any language that is the primary language of 10 percent or more of the registered voters in the State to all child care and elder care providers, domestic violence shelters, schools, hospitals, community health centers and other healthcare providers. The commissioner shall, during each calendar year, allocate not less than $500,000 to the program, which shall be regarded as a cost of administration of temporary disability and family temporary disability benefits and be charged to the administration account of the State disability benefit fund, except that the allocation made pursuant to this subsection shall not result in the total amount credited to administrative costs exceeding the maximum amount permitted pursuant to subsection (a) of section 22 of P.L.1948, c.110 (C.43:21-46).
11. The commissioner shall adopt rules and regulations pursuant to the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c.410 (C.52:14B-1 et seq.) to effectuate the purposes of this act.
CHAPTER 56 WAGE AND HOUR REGULATIONS
(a) The purpose of this subchapter is to establish rules to effectuate N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a et seq., the New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law (Act), to provide sanctions for noncompliance, and to protect established wage rates.
(c) This chapter shall not apply to:
(a) A violation of the Act shall occur when an employer:
Pays or agrees to pay wages at a rate less than the rate applicable under this chapter or any wage order issued pursuant thereto;
Requests, demands, or receives, either for himself, herself or any other person, either before or after a worker is engaged in public or private work at a specified rate of wages, the following:
(c) The employer shall, upon conviction for a second or subsequent violation, be punished by a fine of not less than $500.00 nor more than $1,000 or by imprisonment for not less than 10 nor more than 100 days or by both the fine and imprisonment.
(d) Each week in any day of which an employee is paid less than the rate applicable to him or her under the Act or under a minimum fair wage order, and each employee so paid, shall constitute a separate offense.
(e) The wage rate applicable to the employee shall conform to the overtime provisions of N.J.A.C. 12:56-6.
(a) As an alternative to or in addition to any other sanctions provided for in N.J.A.C. 12:56-1.2 under N.J.S.A. 34:11-56 et seq. when the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development finds that an employer has violated that Act, the Commissioner is authorized to assess and collect an administrative penalty in the amounts that follow:
First violation-not more than $250.00;
Second and subsequent violation-not less than $25.00 nor more than $500.00.
(b) No administrative penalty shall be levied pursuant to this subchapter unless the Commissioner provides the alleged violator with notification by certified mail of the violation and the amount of the penalty and an opportunity to request a formal hearing. A request for a formal hearing must be received within 15 business days following the receipt of the notice.
If a hearing is not requested, the notice shall become the Final Order upon the expiration of the 15 business day period following receipt of the notice.
All wages due, fees and penalties shall be paid within 30 days of the date of Final Order. Failure to pay such wages due, fees and/or penalty shall result in a judgment being obtained in a court of competent jurisdiction.
All payments shall be made payable to the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development, Wage and Hour Trust Fund in the form of a certified check or money order, or such other form suitable to the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development.
(c) In assessing an administrative penalty pursuant to this chapter, the Commissioner shall consider the following factors, where applicable, in determining what constitutes an appropriate penalty for the particular violations:
(a) The Commissioner is authorized to supervise the payment of amounts due to employees under this chapter, and the employer may be required to make these payments to the Commissioner to be held in a special account in trust for the employee, and paid on order of the Commissioner to the employee or employees affected.
(b) The employer shall also pay the Commissioner an administrative fee on all payments of gross amounts due to employees pursuant to Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter II of Title 34 of the revised statutes.
(c) A schedule of the administrative fees is set forth in Table 1.4(c) below.
Table 1.4(c)
First Violation-10 percent of amount of any payment made to the Commissioner pursuant to this chapter.
Second Violation-18 percent of amount of any payment made to the Commissioner pursuant to this chapter.
Third and Subsequent Violations-25 percent of amount of any payment made to the Commissioner pursuant to this chapter.
(a) When the Commissioner assesses an administrative penalty under N.J.A.C. 12:56-1.3, the employer shall have the right to a hearing under (b) below.
(b) No administrative penalty shall be levied pursuant to this subchapter unless the Commissioner provides the alleged violator with notification by certified mail of the violation and the amount of the penalty and an opportunity to request a formal hearing. A request for formal hearing must be received within 15 business days following the receipt of the notice. All hearings shall be heard pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1 et seq. and the Uniform Administrative Procedures Rules, N.J.A.C. 1:1.
(c) All requests for hearing will be reviewed by the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance to determine if the reason for dispute could be resolvable at an informal settlement conference. If the review indicates that an informal settlement conference is warranted, such conference will be scheduled. If a settlement cannot be reached, the case will be forwarded to the Office of Administrative Law for a formal hearing.
(d) The Commissioner shall make the final decision of the Department.
(e) Appeals of the final decision of the Commissioner shall be made to the Appellate Division of the New Jersey Superior Court.
(f) If the employer, or a designated representative of the employer, fails to appear at a requested hearing, the Commissioner or his or her designee may, for good cause shown, re-schedule a hearing.
(g) If the Commissioner or his or her designee does not authorize such a re-scheduled hearing, then the Commissioner shall issue a final agency determination effective upon the date set for the original hearing.
(h) Payment of the penalty is due when a final agency determination is issued.
(i) Upon final order the penalty imposed may be recovered with cost in a summary proceeding commenced by the Commissioner pursuant to the Penalty Enforcement Law, N.J.S.A. 2A:58-1 et seq.
(a) An employer is a disorderly person, if he or she discharges or in any other manner discriminates against any employee because such employee has made any complaint to his or her employer or to the Commissioner that he or she has not been paid wages in accordance with the provisions of this chapter, or because such employee has caused to be instituted or is about to cause to be instituted any proceeding under or related to this chapter, or because such employee has testified or is about to testify in any such proceeding, or because such employee has served or is about to serve on a wage board, and shall be guilty of a disorderly persons offense and shall, upon conviction therefor, be fined not less than $100.00 nor more than $1,000. Such employer shall be required, as a condition of such judgment of conviction, to offer reinstatement in employment to any such discharged employee and to correct any such discriminatory action, and also to pay to any such employee in full, all wages lost as a result of such discharge or discriminatory action, under penalty of contempt proceedings for failure to comply with such requirement.
(b) As an alternative to, or in addition to, any sanctions imposed under (a) above, the Commissioner is authorized under N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a24 to assess and collect administrative penalties as provided for in N.J.A.C. 12:56-1.3.
"Act" means the New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law, N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a et seq.
"Covered employee" means an employee subject to this chapter.
"Division of Wage and Hour Compliance" means Division of Wage and Hour Compliance of Labor Standards and Safety Enforcement of the New Jersey State Department of Labor and Workforce Development, PO Box 389, Trenton, N.J. 08625-0389.
"Employ" means to suffer or permit to work.
"Employee" includes any individual employed by an employer, except:
For trainees who are involved in a program in which:
i. The training is for the primary benefit of the trainee;
ii. The employment for which the trainee is training requires some cognizable trainable skill;
iii. The training is not specific to the employer, that is, is not exclusive to its needs, but may be applicable elsewhere for another employer or in another field of endeavor;
iv. The training, even though it includes actual operation of the facilities of the employer, is similar to that which may be given in a vocational school;
v. The trainee does not displace a regular employee on a regular job or supplement a regular job, but trains under close tutorial observation;
vi. The employer derives no immediate benefit from the efforts of the trainee and, indeed, on occasion may find his or her regular operation impeded by the trainee;
vii. The trainee is not necessarily entitled to a job at the completion of training;
viii. The training program is sponsored by the employer, is outside regular work hours, the employee does no productive work while attending and the program is not directly related to the employee's present job (as distinguished from learning another job or additional skill); and
ix. The employer and the trainee share a basic understanding that regular employment wages are not due for the time spent in training, provided that the trainee does not perform any productive work.
If a trainee does not meet all of the above-listed criteria, the trainee shall be considered to be an employee.
"Employer" includes any individual, partnership, association, corporation or any person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee.
"Fair wage" means a wage fairly and reasonably commensurate with the value of the service or class of service rendered and sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health.
"Oppressive and unreasonable wage" means a wage which is both less than the fair and reasonable value of the service rendered and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health.
"Patient" means a person, such as an alcoholic or drug addict receiving inconsequential payments in a program administered by an organized and generally recognized charity.
"Premium pay" means a sum of money or bonus paid in addition to the regular price, salary or other amount.
"Regular hourly wage" means the amount that an employee is regularly paid for each hour of work as determined by dividing total hours of work during the week into the employee's total earnings for the week, exclusive of overtime premium pay.
"Volunteer" means a person who donates his or her service for the protection of the health and safety of the general public. Such a person would include, among others, a volunteer fireman, rescue worker, an aide in the care of the sick, aged, young, mentally ill, destitute and the like or assistant in religious, eleemosynary, educational, hospital, cultural and similar activities.
"Wages" means any monies due an employee from an employer for services rendered or made available by the employee to the employer as a result of their employment relationship including commissions, bonus and piecework compensation and including any gratuities received by an employer to an employee.
"Work hours" means the actual hours suffered or permitted to work.
(a) Except as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.2, every employee shall, effective January 1, 2019, be paid not less than $8.85[1] per hour, the minimum hourly wage rate set by section 6(a)(1) of the Federal "Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938" (29 U.S.C. § 206(a)(1)), or the rate provided under N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4, whichever is greatest.
(b) On an annual basis, on or about September 30, the Department shall revise the minimum hourly wage set forth in (a) above based on any percentage increase during the one-year period of August of the prior year through August of the current year of the consumer price index (CPI) for all urban wage earners and clerical workers (CPI-W, U.S. City Average), as released by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Annually, the Department shall, through a public notice published in the New Jersey Register, provide the new CPI-W, U.S. City Average, adjusted minimum hourly wage.
(c) The Department shall, no later than September 30 of each year, publish a notice, as set forth in (b) above, on the Department's website, http://www.nj.gov/labor/ .
(a) Employees in the following occupations shall be exempt from the statutory minimum wage rates:
Full-time students employed by the college or university at which they are enrolled at not less than 85 percent of the effective minimum wage rate, effective March 1, 1979;
Outside sales person;
Sales person of motor vehicles;
Part time employees primarily engaged in the care and tending of children in the home of the employer;
Minors under 18 years of age except as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-11, 12:56-13, 12:56-14 and N.J.A.C. 12:57, Wage Orders for Minors; and
At summer camps, conferences and retreats operated by any nonprofit or religious corporation or association during the months of June, July, August and September.
Every employer shall keep records which contain the name and address of each employee, the birth date if under the age of 18, the total hours worked each day and each workweek, earnings, including the regular hourly wage, gross to net amounts with itemized deductions, and the basis on which wages are paid.
The employer may use any system of time keeping containing the items specified in N.J.A.C. 12:56-4.1, provided it is a complete, true and accurate record.
(a) Many employees, particularly in offices, are on a fixed working schedule from which they seldom vary. In these instances, the employer may keep a record showing the exact schedule of daily and weekly work hours that the employee is expected to follow and merely indicate each workweek that the schedule was followed.
(b) When the employee works longer or shorter hours than the schedule indicates, the employer shall record the hours the employee actually worked.
Records containing the information required by this subchapter shall be kept for six years.
(a) Records shall be kept at the place of employment or in a central office in New Jersey, except as provided in (b) below.
(b) In unusual circumstances where it is not feasible to keep records in New Jersey, exception from this provision may be obtained from the Commissioner.
(c) All records shall be open to inspection by the Commissioner at any reasonable time.
Supplementary to the provisions of any section of this chapter pertaining to the records to be kept with respect to employee, every employer of employees who receive gratuities shall also maintain and preserve payroll or other records containing the total gratuities received by each employee during the payroll week.
(a) Employees receiving gratuities shall report them either daily or weekly as required by the employer. The information in the report shall include:
The employee's name, address and social security number;
The calendar day or week covered by the report; and
The total amount of gratuities received.
The United States Treasury Department, Internal Revenue Service, "Employee's Report on Tips" shall be acceptable in those instances where the report is made on a weekly basis or less.
(a) Supplementary to the provisions of any section of this chapter pertaining to the records to be kept with respect to employees, every employer, who claims credit for food or lodging as a cash substitute for employees who receive food or lodgings supplied by the employer, shall maintain and preserve records substantiating the cost of furnishing such food or lodgings.
(b) Such records shall include the nature and amount of any expenditures entering into the computation of the fair value of the food or lodging and shall contain the date required to compute the amount of the depreciated investment in any assets allocable to the furnishing of the lodgings, including the date of acquisition or construction, the original cost, the rate of depreciation and the total amount of accumulated depreciation on such assets. No particular degree of itemization is prescribed. The amount of detail shall be sufficient to enable the Commissioner, assistant director or his or her authorized representative to verify the nature of the expenditure and amount by reference to the basic records which shall be preserved pursuant to this chapter.
If additions to wages paid so affect the total cash wages due in any workweek as to result in the employee receiving less in cash than the minimum hourly wage provided in the act or in any applicable wage order or if the employee works in excess of 40 hours a week the employer shall maintain records showing those additions to wages by reason of gratuities or food, or lodgings paid on a workweek basis.
Employees entitled to the benefits of the act shall be paid for all hours worked.
(a) All the time the employee is required to be at his or her place of work or on duty shall be counted as hours worked.
(b) Nothing in this chapter requires an employer to pay an employee for hours the employee is not required to be at his or her place of work because of holidays, vacation, lunch hours, illness and similar reasons.
Employees who reside on the employer's premises and whose hours worked are irregular and intermittent to the extent that it is not feasible to account for the hours actually on duty may be compensated for not less than eight hours for each day on duty in lieu of any other applicable provisions.
(a) A workweek shall be a regularly recurring period of 168 hours in the form of seven consecutive 24-hour periods.
(b) The workweek need not be the same as the calendar week and may begin any day of the week and any hour of the day.
(c) The workweek shall be designated to the employee in advance.
(d) Once the beginning time of an employee's workweek is established, it remains fixed regardless of the schedule of the hours worked.
(e) The beginning of the workweek may be changed if the change is intended to be permanent and is not intended to evade the overtime requirements of the act.
(a) An employee who by request of the employer reports for duty on any day shall be paid for at least one hour at the applicable wage rate, except as provided in (b) below.
(b) The provisions of (a) above shall not apply to an employer when he or she has made available to the employee the minimum number of hours of work agreed upon by the employer and the employed prior to the commencement of work on the day involved.
(a) When employees are not required to remain on the employer's premises and are free to engage in their own pursuits, subject only to the understanding that they leave word at their home or with the employer where they may be reached, the hours shall not be considered hours worked. When an employee does go out on an on-call assignment, only the time actually spent in making the call shall be counted as hours worked.
(b) If calls are so frequent or the "on-call" conditions so restrictive that the employees are not really free to use the intervening periods effectively for their own benefit, they may be considered as "engaged to wait" rather than "waiting to be engaged". In that event, the waiting time shall be counted as hours worked.
"On-call" employees may be required by their employer to remain at their homes to receive telephone calls from customers when the company office is closed. If "on-call" employees have long periods of uninterrupted leisure during which they can engage in the normal activities of living, any reasonable agreement of the parties for determining the number of hours worked shall be accepted. The agreement shall take into account not only the actual time spent in answering the calls but also some allowance for the restriction on the employee's freedom to engage in personal activities resulting from the duty of answering the telephone.
(b) "Rounding" practices. It has been found that in some industries, particularly where time clocks are used, there has been the practice for many years of recording the employees' starting time and stopping time to the nearest 5 minutes, or to the nearest 1/10 or quarter of an hour. Presumably, this arrangement averages out, so that the employees are fully compensated for all the time they actually work. For enforcement purposes this practice of computing working time will be accepted, provided that it is used in such a manner that it will not result, over a period of time, in failure to compensate the employees properly for all the time they have actually worked.
For each hour of working time in excess of 40 hours in any week, except for those exemptions set forth in N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4 or as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-7.1, every employer shall pay to each of his or her employees, wages at a rate of not less than 1 1/2 times such employee's regular hourly wage.
(a) Overtime and minimum wage pay shall be computed on the basis of each workweek standing alone.
(b) Hours shall not be averaged over two or more workweeks.
Covered employees shall be entitled to overtime pay based upon their actual wages and not the specified minimum wages.
(a) Covered employees shall be paid 1 1/2 times the regular hourly wage for each hour of working time in excess of 40 hours in any workweek.
(b) There is no requirement that an employee be paid premium overtime compensation for hours in excess of eight hours per day, nor for work on Saturdays, Sundays, holidays or regular days of rest, other than the required overtime for over 40 hours per week; provided, however, nothing shall relieve an employer of any obligation he or she may have assumed by contract or of any obligation imposed by other State or Federal law limiting overtime hours of work or to pay premium rates for work which are in excess of the minimum required by this chapter.
(a) The "regular hourly wage" is a rate per hour.
(b) The act does not require employers to compensate employees on an hourly rate basis. Their earnings may be determined on a piece-rate, salary, bonus, commission or other basis, but the overtime compensation due to employees shall be paid on the basis of the hourly rate derived therefrom. Therefore, the regular hourly wage of an employee is determined by dividing his or her total remuneration for employment, exclusive of overtime premium pay, in any workweek, by the total number of hours worked in that workweek for which such compensation was paid.
(c) If an employee is remunerated solely on the basis of a single hourly rate, the hourly rate shall be his or her "regular hourly wage".
(a) The "regular hourly wage" shall not be deemed to include:
Payments in the nature of gifts made on holidays or on other special occasions or as a reward for service, the amounts of which are not measured by or dependent on hours worked, production or efficiency;
Payments made for occasional periods when no work is performed due to vacation, holiday or other similar cause;
Reasonable payments for traveling or other expenses incurred by an employee in the furtherance of his or her employer's interests and properly reimbursable by the employer which are not made as compensation for employment;
Sums paid in recognition of services performed during a given period if either:
i. Both the fact that payment is to be made and the amount of payment are determined at the sole discretion of the employer at or near the end of the period and not pursuant to any prior contract, agreement or promise causing the employee to expect such payments regularly; or
ii. The payments are made pursuant to a bona fide profit-sharing plan or trust, or thrift or savings plan to the extent to which the amounts paid to the employee are determined without regard to hours of work, production or efficiency; or
Contributions irrevocably made by an employer to a trustee or third person pursuant to a bona fide plan providing for old age, retirement, life, accident, or health insurance or similar benefits for employees; or
Additional premium compensation for hours worked in excess of eight hours per day, or for work on Saturdays, Sundays, holidays, or regular days of rest; or
Overtime premiums.
(a) Overtime premium payments shall not be offset by allowances for the value of food, lodging or gratuities since such allowances are already considered in determining the straight time wages paid. Overtime premium payments shall be cash payments by the employer.
(b) Where the employee's pay includes the value of gratuities, food or lodging and it is not feasible to determine the exact regular hourly wage during a particular week, the employer shall be deemed to have fulfilled the overtime requirements of this chapter if the premium payment for the overtime hours is paid in cash on the basis of the agreed hourly wage, but in no event shall the premium payment be at a rate less than the applicable minimum rate.
Any individual employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, professional or outside sales capacity shall be exempt from the overtime requirements of N.J.A.C. 12:56-6.1.
(a) Except as set forth in (b) below, the provisions of 29 CFR Part 541 are adopted herein by reference.
(b) Not adopted by reference are those provisions within 29 CFR Part 541 that apply solely to those individuals employed by government employers, including, but not limited to, those individuals employed by State, county and municipal employers, since the definition of the term "employer" within N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a1 does not include government employers. See N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a1 ("employer" includes any individual, partnership, association, corporation or any person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee); See also, Allen v. Fauver, 167 N.J. 69 (2001).
(c) "Administrative" shall also include an employee whose primary duty consists of sales activity and who receives at least 50 percent of his or her total compensation from commissions and a total compensation of not less than $400.00 per week.
(a) Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4, any individual employed by a common carrier of passengers by motor bus shall be exempt from the overtime requirements of N.J.A.C. 12:56-6.1.
(b) "Common carrier of passengers by motor bus," as used in this section, shall mean any employer that operates an "autobus," as that term is defined in N.J.S.A. 48:4-1, where the operation of the "autobus" has been authorized by the Chief Administrator of the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission through the issuance of a certificate of public convenience and necessity under N.J.S.A. 48:4-3.
(a) "Fair value" means not more than the actual cost to the employer of the food or lodging supplied by an employer and does not include a profit to the employer nor to any affiliated business or person.
(b) "Gratuity" means cash received by an employee for services rendered for an employer or customer of an employer.
Where employees practice gratuity splitting (for example, where food servers pay a portion of the gratuities received by them to food clearers), each employee shall have included in wages only the applicable proportionate share.
(a) In determining the cash gratuities actually received by an employee, the following methods shall be evidentiary value:
Statements, including United States Treasury Department, Internal Revenue Service, "Employee's Report on Tips", that are furnished by an employee to an employer;
Amounts indicated on customer billing, credit card invoices or other customer charge accounts wherein there is an indicated service charge or gratuity designated for the employee and payable to the employee.
(a) Provided there is an agreement in advance with the employees, the employer, in order to facilitate the administrative handling of gratuity allowances, may establish an average value of gratuities received by an employee based upon a percentage of gross sales apportioned on basis of hours worked among the employees being tipped. This portion shall be:
Derived from a representative sampling of the sources indicated in N.J.A.C. 12:56-8.3; or
Ten percent; or
Such other method as may be agreed upon subject to the approval of the Commissioner.
(b) Gratuities shall be the property of the tipped employee. Gratuities shall be restored to the tipped employee except when gratuities are pooled, voluntarily by the employees or as a policy of management.
In no event shall N.J.A.C. 12:56-6.4 and 6.5 be interpreted to deny to an employee the right to make claim for additional cash compensation where it is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the actual amount of tips received was less than the amount determined by the employer.
(a) Except whenever any determination made by regulation is applicable, the fair value to the employer of furnishing the employee with food and lodging is the cost of operation and maintenance including adequate depreciation plus a reasonable allowance for interest on the depreciated amount of capital invested by the employer.
(b) The fair value so computed shall not exceed the rental value of comparable facilities in the State.
(c) The cost of operation and maintenance, the rate of depreciation, and the depreciated amount of capital invested by the employer shall be arrived at in accordance with generally accepted accounting practices.
(d) Generally accepted accounting practices shall not include those rejected by the New Jersey Division of Taxation or the Federal Internal Revenue Service for tax purposes, and the term "depreciation" includes obsolescence.
(e) Items found to be primarily for the benefit of the employer shall not be included in the cost.
(f) Lodging furnished which is in violation of any Federal, State, or local law, ordinance or prohibition shall be valued at nothing.
(g) When a fair market value does not exist for rental of the lodging in the competitive open market, the fair market value shall be zero.
Methods of determining fair value shall be subject to inspection and approval by the Commissioner.
The following is an example of a method of determining fair value:
Employer "A" has three employees who are furnished food and lodging in addition to gross cash wages of $2.50 per hour. The cost of food purchased for the employees is $72.00 total a week. The building housing the employees cost $36,000 in 1978 and subsequent improvements amounted to $4,000. Maintenance costs for the year were $2,480. The estimated life of the building when constructed was 50 years. The building can adequately house six persons.
The "fair value" of food for the week is determined as follows:
"Fair value" per employee ($72.00 divided by 3)
The "fair value" of lodging for year 1979 is determined as follows:
Cost of building in 1978
Add: Subsequent improvements
Depreciation for year (1/50 times $40,000.00)
Maintenance costs for year
Interest on employer's net investment:
Depreciation to date
Six percent of net investment
Total for week ($5,632.00 divided by 52)
"Fair value" per employee ($108.31 divided by 6 persons)
Assume that employee B worked 40 hours in a particular week. His wages would be as follows:
Gross cash wages (40 times $2.50)
Fair value of food
Fair value of lodging
Hourly wage ($142.05 divided by 40)
Assume that employee B worked 48 hours in a particular week. His wage entitlement would be as follows:
Total earnings exclusive of overtime premium pay:
Gross cash wages (48 hrs. times $2.50)
Total straight time wages
Overtime wages:
Regular hourly wage (162.05 divided by 48 hours
Overtime pay 8 x $3.38 divided by 2)
Employee B Wage entitlement for 48 hours
(a) "Individual with disability" means an individual whose earning capacity is impaired by a physical or mental disability and who is being served or eligible to be served in accordance with the recognized rehabilitation program of a sheltered workshop, education institution, or other program of rehabilitation approved by the commissioner.
(b) "Sheltered workshop" means a charitable organization or institution conducted not for profit, but for the purpose of carrying out a recognized program of rehabilitation for individuals whose earning capacity is impaired by age, physical or mental deficiency or injury, and to provide such individuals with remunerative employment or other occupational rehabilitating activity of an educational or therapeutic nature.
(a) Application for a special permit shall be filed on properly executed prescribed forms with the Office of Wage and Hour Compliance. Special permit means authorization to employ individuals with disabilities at wages less than minimum wage rates for such period of time fixed and stated in the authorization.
(b) A blanket special permit may be issued for an entire sheltered workshop or a department of a sheltered workshop.
(a) The following criteria may be considered in determining the necessity of issuing a special permit:
The present and previous earnings of disabled employees;
The nature and extent of the disability;
The wages of employees who are not disabled engaged in comparable work;
The types and duration of rehabilitative services;
The extent to which individuals with disabilities share, through wages, in the receipts for work done;
The extent to which the disabled employees are learners;
Whether there exists any employer arrangement with customers or subcontractors which appears to be an unfair method of competition which tends to spread or perpetuate substandard wage levels; and
The productivity of the disabled employee.
(a) All terms and conditions shall be complied with under which a special permit is granted.
(b) No individual who is not an individual with a disability shall be employed under a special permit at wages lower than the minimum required by the act.
(a) The Commissioner may cancel any special permit for cause.
(b) A special permit may be canceled as of the date of issuance upon the following conditions:
If it is found that fraud has been exercised in obtaining the special permit or in permitting an individual with a disability to work thereunder; or
As of the date of the violation, if it is found that any of the provisions of the act, or of the terms of the special permit have been violated; or
As of the date of notice of cancellation, if in the judgment of the Commissioner, the special permit is no longer necessary in the interest of the employees covered.
(a) "First processing of farm products occupations" means any activity as an employee in an establishment which is in an industry engaged primarily in the first processing of farm products during seasonal operations.
(b) "Industry engaged primarily in the first processing of farm products" means an establishment which is primarily engaged in the first processing of, or in canning or packing, perishable or seasonal fresh fruits or vegetables for human consumption, during seasonal operations.
All employees including those under the age of 18 engaged in first processing of farm products occupations shall be paid at minimum wage rates as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
Overtime at 1 1/2 times the regular hourly rate shall be paid to those engaged in first processing of farm products occupations for all hours worked in excess of 40 in a week.
(a) "Seasonal amusement occupation":
Means any activity as an employee in an establishment which is exclusively an amusement or recreational establishment, provided:
i. It does not operate for more than seven months in any calendar year; or
ii. During the preceding calendar year, its average receipts for any consecutive six months of such year were not more than 33 1/3 percent of its average receipts for the other six months of that year.
"Seasonal amusement occupation" includes but is not limited to amusement rides and amusement device operators, cashiers who sell tickets for the rides and device, and operators of game concessions.
"Seasonal amusement occupation" does not include retail, eating or drinking concessions; nor does it pertain to camps, beach and swimming facilities, movie theatres, theatrical productions, athletic events, professional entertainment, pool and billiard parlors, circuses and outdoor shows, sport activities or centers, country club athletic facilities, bowling alleys, race tracks and like facilities which are not part of a diversified amusement enterprise.
Employees engaged in seasonal amusement occupations shall be paid at minimum wage rates as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
Employees engaged in seasonal amusement occupations shall be exempt from the overtime provisions of the act.
(a) "Hotel and motel occupation" means any activity as an employee for an establishment kept, used, maintained, advertised as or held out to be a place where sleeping accommodations are supplied for pay to transient or permanent guests, in which 15 or more rooms are available for rental furnished or unfurnished; except this definition shall not include summer camps and country clubs when these activities are not part of a hotel or motel establishment.
(b) "Seasonal hotel and motel" means a hotel or motel in which, during the previous business year, not less than two-thirds of the gross receipts were received in a continuous period of three months or less.
Employees including those under 18 years of age engaged in hotel and motel occupations shall be paid a minimum wage rate as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
Overtime at 1-1/2 times the regular hourly wage rate shall be paid for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours in any week.
(a) The wage rates established in this subchapter shall be acceptable in those occupations where gratuities or food and/or lodging are actually received.
(b) Employers subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act must pay the Federal cash wage rate of $2.13 and must demonstrate that the balance of the $5.05[1] minimum wage required under State law is paid through gratuities in accordance with N.J.A.C. 12:56-4 and 12:56-8. Employers not subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act must demonstrate that the total wage, including cash and gratuities, equals the $5.05[1] minimum wage required under State law in accordance with N.J.A.C. 12:56-4 and 12:56-8.
Employer substantiation of gratuities received by an employee and the cost of food and lodging shall be as provided in this chapter.
Food and lodging supplied to employees shall not be included in wages for those hours worked in excess of 40 hours per week.
Where cash wages have been established as a condition of employment through agreement between the employer and employee, gratuities, food and lodging shall not be included as part of such cash wages.
Meals and lodging which the employer requires the employee to accept shall be considered for the convenience of the employer and the cost thereof shall not be considered applicable as minimum wages.
(a) "Restaurant industry" means any eating or drinking place which prepares and offers food or beverages for human consumption either in any of its premises or by such services as catering, banquets, box lunch or curb service.
(b) "Restaurant occupation" means any activity of any employee in the restaurant industry.
(c) "Uniform" means any garment such as dress, apron, collar, cuffs or headdress which is worn by the employee either at the direction of the employer or as a condition of employment.
Employees including those under 18 years of age employed at restaurant occupations shall be paid a minimum wage rate as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
(a) Overtime at 1 1/2 the regular hourly wage shall be paid for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours in any week.
The minimum overtime rate for those covered by the overtime provision is $5.70 on May 3, 1990, $6.38 on April 1, 1991, and $7.58[1] on April 1, 1992.
If the employee's regular hourly wage rate is more than the minimum per hour, then the overtime rate is 1-1/2 times the employee's regular rate.
Food and lodging supplied to employees shall not be included in wages for those hours worked in excess of 40 hours per week. Gratuities shall not be counted toward the premium part of the overtime. The additional halftime must be in cash.
[1 The current minimum overtime rate is 1 1/2 the current minimum hourly wage rate. For the current minimum hourly wage rate, please check Wage & Hour FAQs.]
(a) The wage rate established in this subchapter shall be acceptable in those occupations where gratuities or food and/or lodging are actually received.
Where cash wages have been established as a condition of employment through agreement between the employer and the employee or the employee's collective bargaining agent, gratuities, food and lodging shall not be included as part of such cash wages.
Meals and lodging shall be considered applicable toward the minimum wage unless the employee elects not to receive such meals and lodging.
(a) "Air carrier employee" means an employee, non-union or union, where applicable labor agreements permit, who operates in a phase of air carrier employment which operates on a seven day a week, 24 hour-a-day basis and whose normal work is scheduled on a seven day a week, 24 hour-a-day basis.
(b) "Air carrier employer" means an air carrier holding a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the Civil Aeronautics Board pursuant to Section 401 of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958, 49 USC Section 1371.
Employees engaged in the air carrier industry shall be paid a minimum wage rate as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
(a) Overtime shall be paid at 1 1/2 times the regular hourly wage rate to all nonexempt employees for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours in a week except rescheduled time off for overtime shall be permitted to air carrier employees where:
The employee so requests;
The employer determines that the workload demands permit the employee's absence; or
The rescheduled time off is taken within specified periods.
The criteria identified in the Unemployment Compensation Law at N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(6)(A)(B)(C) and interpreting case law will be used to determine whether an individual is an employee or independent contractor for purposes of the Wage and Hour Law.
(a) It shall be a presumption that the employer has required his or her employees to wear uniforms if such garments are of a similar design, color or material, or form part of the decorative pattern of the establishment.
(b) Maintenance and upkeep of uniforms of kitchen people, cooks, and dishwashers shall be provided and maintained by the employer.
(c) If uniforms are required which are not appropriate for street wear or use in other establishments, the employer shall pay for the cost of such uniforms.
(d) If a particular type of clothing is required to be worn, which is appropriate for street wear, the employer who requires an employee to furnish more than one style, type or color of clothing during any one year of his or her employment shall pay to each such employee, in addition to his or her regular wages otherwise due, the amount which employee is required to pay for newly required uniform or uniforms and such additional payment shall be made to the employee in the week in which the change is required.
(e) No deduction from the pay of employees for uniforms shall be permitted. If the employee pays for uniforms in cash and the cash payment brings the employee below the minimum wage, the employer shall make up the difference for the minimum wage for that week.
"Career awareness and exploration" means structured school programs that enable student learners to:
Develop awareness of the many employment opportunities available;
Develop awareness of the relevant factors to be considered in making career decisions;
Become familiar with occupational clusters and classifications;
Explore key occupational areas and assess their own interests and abilities; and
Develop tentative occupational plans and arrive at a tentative career choice.
"Incidental" means any irrelevant, occasional productive work which is not part of achieving learning objectives.
"Internship" means a program of study for a student which includes supervised practical training.
"Job shadowing" means the process by which a student learner determines (by observation, interview and study) the pertinent information related to an occupation. Information can include such factors as: qualifications for employment, functions performed, necessary skills and knowledge, equipment and material used, and physical demands and working environment.
(a) The following conditions shall be met to allow for non-paid activities of student learners at for profit and not-for-profit organizations:
The student shall be at least 16 years of age;
The activity must be related to a formal school-to-work transition plan for a student learner;
There is collaboration and planning between worksite staff and school staff resulting in clearly identified learning objectives related to the non-paid activities;
Any productive work is incidental to achieving learning objectives;
The student learner receives credit for time spent at the worksite and the student is expected to achieve the learning objectives;
The student learner is supervised by a school official and a workplace mentor;
The non-paid activity is of a limited duration, related to an educational purpose and there is no guarantee or expectation that the activity will result in employment; and
The student learner does not replace an employee.
"Trucking industry employer" means any business or establishment primarily operating for the purpose of conveying property from one place to another by road or highway, and includes the storage and warehousing of goods and property. Such an employer must also be subject to the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to the Federal Motor Carrier Act, 49 U.S.C. 31501 et seq., whose employees are exempt under Section 13(b)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. 213(b)(1), which provides an exemption to employees regulated by Section 204 of the Federal Motor Carrier Act and Interstate Commerce Act.
Employees engaged in the trucking industry shall be paid a minimum wage rate as provided in N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4 and N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
Every trucking industry employer shall pay to all drivers, helpers, loaders and mechanics for whom the Secretary of Transportation may prescribe maximum hours of work for the safe operation of vehicles pursuant to 49 U.S.C. § 31502(b) an overtime rate not less than one and one-half times the minimum wage required pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4 and N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
(a) For purposes of this exemption, "skilled mechanic" is defined as:
A mechanic who is a specialist performing all repairs and who works on the total automobile and who works on various automobile makes and models; or
A mechanic who is responsible for work on certain parts of the vehicle, for example, transmission mechanic, brake mechanic, engine mechanic, air-conditioning mechanic.
(b) The term "skilled mechanic" does not include: a mechanic or helper who works on limited sections of an automobile and performs minor tasks such as lubricating, tire changing, brake service, oil changing.
Skilled mechanics engaged in the new or the new and used motor vehicle sales or the automotive and/or truck repair industry must be paid a minimum wage rate as provided in N.J.A.C. 12:56-3.1.
(a) Skilled mechanics employed by nonmanufacturing employers primarily engaged in the business of selling new or new and used motor vehicles or in the business of automotive and/or truck repair shall be exempt from the overtime requirements of N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a4 and N.J.A.C. 12:56-6.1 provided all of the following conditions are met:
The mechanic shall be paid on a flat rate or incentive rate basis; and
The mechanic shall be guaranteed a basic contractual hourly rate, separate from and exclusive from the flat or incentive rate. The contractual hourly rate must include payment of time and one-half of the hourly rate for all hours actually worked in excess of 40 hours per week. The contractual hourly rate must be at least minimum wage.
CHAPTER 57 WAGE ORDERS FOR MINORS
(a) The purpose of this chapter is to define and clarify certain sections of N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a et seq.
(b) This chapter shall apply to the wage rates for the employment of minors subject to N.J.S.A. 34:11-34 et seq.[1]
(c) This chapter shall apply to minors employed in mercantile occupations, beauty culture occupations, and laundry, cleaning and dyeing occupations.
(d) Other wage orders and regulations for minors under 18 years of age are provided for under N.J.A.C. 12:56-11, 13 and 14, Wage and Hour.
[1 Revised N.J.S.A. cite to 34:11-56a et seq. from 34:11-34 et seq.]
(a) An employer or his or her agent, or the officer or agent of any corporation, is a disorderly person, if he or she discharges or in any other manner discriminates against any employee because the employee has served or is about to serve on a wage board or has testified or is about to testify before a wage board or in any other investigation or proceeding or because the employer believes that the employee may serve on a wage board or may testify before a wage board or in any investigation or proceeding under this chapter and shall be guilty of a disorderly person offense and upon conviction be punished by a fine of not more than $500.00[1].
(b) An employer or the officer or agent of any corporation is a disorderly person if he or she pays or agrees to pay to any minor less than the rates applicable to such minor under a mandatory minimum fair wage order and shall be guilty of a disorderly person offense and upon conviction be punished by a fine of not more than $500.00[1] or by imprisonment of not more than 90[2] days or by both such fine and imprisonment. Each week, in any day of which an employee is paid less than the rate applicable to him or her under a mandatory minimum fair wage order; and each employee so paid, shall constitute a separate offense.
(c) An employer or the officer or agent of any corporation is a disorderly person if he or she fails to keep the records required or to furnish such records to the Commissioner upon request and shall be guilty of a disorderly person offense and upon conviction be punished by a fine of not more than $500.00[1] and each day of such failure to keep the records or to furnish same as required shall constitute a separate offense.
[1 A fine of not more than $1,000.00 pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a22.
2 Imprisonment of not more than 100 days pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a22.]
"Act" means New Jersey State Wage and Hour Law, N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a et seq.
"Division of Wage and Hour Compliance" means the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance within the Labor Standards and Safety Enforcement program area of the New Jersey State Department of Labor and Workforce Development, PO Box 389, Trenton, N.J. 08625.
"Employee" means any individual employed by an employer.
"Employer" means any individual, partnership, association, corporation or any person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee.
This subchapter shall apply to the minimum wage rates paid to all minors engaged in mercantile occupations, irrespective of the nature of the business of the employer or the location of the place where the work is being performed.
(a) "Mercantile occupation" means:
Any employment in or for any industry or business selling or offering for sale any type of merchandise, wares, goods, articles or commodities.
All work connected with the soliciting of sales or opportunities for sale and the distributing of such merchandise, wares, goods, articles or commodities and the rendering of services incidental to the sale, use or upkeep of the same whether performed on the employer's premises or elsewhere; or
Work performed in the manufacturing of merchandise sold at retail upon the premises where it is manufactured; and
Does not mean work performed in the manufacturing of merchandise which is sold at wholesale by the manufacturer.
(b) "Working time" means time for which wages are paid and includes both time worked and time of authorized attendance, whether or not work is provided and time is spent in traveling, within the State of New Jersey, from one establishment to another which is authorized or requested by the employer.
Minors under 18 years of age at mercantile occupations shall be paid not less than the statutory minimum wage rate.
(a) Overtime, at the rate of not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which the employee is actually employed, shall be paid to each minor for hours worked in excess of 40 in any one week, except that the overtime rate shall not apply to an executive, professional or administrative employee who is paid for his or her services in accordance with N.J.A.C. 12:56-7.
(a) "Regular hourly wage" means the amount that an employee is regularly paid for each hour of work as determined by dividing the total hours of work during the week into the employee's total earnings for the week, exclusive of overtime premium pay.
(b) The regular rate of pay at which the employee is employed shall not be less than the minimum rate established by N.J.A.C. 12:57-3.3.
(c) When an employee is paid on a piece work basis or any other basis than an hourly rate the regular hourly wage shall be determined by dividing the total of the hours worked during the week into the employee's total earnings exclusive of part time bonuses for the week and exclusive of wages earned at overtime rates as such rates are defined.
(d) The total computed earnings shall include commissions, bonuses and all compensation paid by the employer, except overtime pay.
Time during regular working hours and at other periods when employees are required to wait on the premises and no work is provided by the employer shall be counted as working time and paid at such employee's regular hourly wage.
An employee who is required or authorized to travel, from one establishment to another shall be compensated for the travel time at the same rate as for working time and shall be reimbursed for travel expense.
(a) Minors employed on a piece work or commission basis shall be employed at rates which yield to each employee not less than the minimum wage established for time workers.
(b) For any week during which a minor is employed on a piece work or commission basis, or any basis whatsoever other than an hourly or time basis, the minimum amount of wage that shall be paid to such employee for such work shall be not less than the amount the employer would be required to pay if such employee were employed on an hourly or time basis.
(c) In the case of commissioned employees, their minimum wage may be charged against the commissions earned.
Whenever an employee is employed in any week solely in occupations governed by another minimum wage order, such employee may, for such week, be paid not less than the minimum rates required by such other minimum wage order.
(a) "Diversified employment" means employment of an employee by one employer in mercantile occupations and during the same time being employed in occupations either covered or not covered by other minimum wage orders.
(b) An employee who during any payroll period works at diversified employment shall be paid for the full payroll period at the highest minimum wage rate established by any minimum wage order for any occupation in which the employee was engaged during the pay period in question; provided, however, that in cases where the employer has kept an accurate record of the actual time the employee has been engaged in each covered occupation, the employee may be paid not less than the minimum wage earned at such occupation.
No minor whose earning capacity has been impaired by physical or mental disability shall be paid at less than the minimum wage until a special license, in accordance with the provisions of N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a17(b), has been obtained by the employer from the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance.
(a) Every employer shall keep a record of the name and address of each such employee, together with a record of the ages of all minors, a true and accurate record of the amount paid each pay period to each minor, and such other records as are essential in determining an employee's regular hourly wage and the amount of overtime wages earned.
(b) Employers are required to keep a true and accurate record of the hours worked each day. These records shall include the actual starting and stopping time of each work period and the total hours worked each pay period by each minor.
A notice issued by the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance setting forth the provisions of this subchapter shall be posted in a conspicuous place in every room where minors are employed at mercantile occupations.
This subchapter shall apply to the minimum wage rates paid to all minors engaged in beauty culture occupations, irrespective of the nature of the business of the employer or the location of the place where the work is being performed.
(a) "Beauty culture establishment" means any shop, store, place, room or part thereof, in which services are rendered in a beauty culture occupation, or any branch thereof, and a charge is made to the recipient of such services.
(b) "Beauty culture occupation" means any service, operation or process used or useful in the care, cleansing, or beautification of or in the enhancement of personal appearance, and all service, operation or process, incidental to such care, cleansing, beautification or enhancement, including the service of demonstrators, maids, cashiers, reception or appointment clerks.
(c) "Operator" means any employee duly licensed as an operator, manicurist, manager-operator or demonstrator by the New Jersey Board of Beauty Culture.
(d) "Senior student permit" means a permit issued by the New Jersey Board of Beauty Culture.
(e) "Temporary permit" means a permit issued by the New Jersey Board of Beauty Culture.
Minors under 18 years of age at beauty culture occupations shall be paid not less than the statutory minimum wage rate.
Overtime, at the rate of not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which the employee is actually employed, shall be paid to each minor for hours worked in excess of 40 in any one week, except that the overtime rate shall not apply to an executive, professional or administrative employee who is paid for his or her services in accordance with N.J.A.C. 12:56-7.
(b) The regular rate of pay at which the employee is employed shall not be less than the minimum rate established by N.J.A.C. 12:57-4.3.
Any period of time during which an employee is required to wait on the premises and during which period no work is provided by the employer shall be counted as working time and be paid at such employee's regular hourly wage.
In no case shall tips or gratuities from patrons be counted as part of the minimum wage or regular wage rate being paid to an employee.
Employers shall furnish all material and equipment pertinent to performance of the work with the exception of personal manicuring and hair cutting tools.
No minor whose earning capacity has been impaired by physical or mental disability shall be paid at less than the minimum wage, unless a special license, in accordance with the provisions of N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a17(b), has been obtained by the employer from the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance.
(a) Every employer shall keep the following records for each minor employee:
Full name, address, and occupational classification;
A true and accurate record of hours worked each day including record of starting and stopping time, meal periods, total daily and weekly hours and amount of wages paid for each pay period.
Such other records as are essential in determining an employee's regular hourly wage and the amount of overtime wages earned and paid.
(b) Records shall be dated showing the payroll ending date by month, day and year, and all records shall be kept so as to enable representatives of the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance to determine readily whether or not the employer is complying with the orders of the Commissioner.
A notice issued by the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance setting forth the provisions of this subchapter shall be posted in a conspicuous place in every room where minors are employed in a beauty culture occupation.
This subchapter shall apply to the minimum wage rate paid to all minors engaged in laundry, cleaning and dyeing occupations, irrespective of the nature of the business of the employer or the location of the place where the work is being performed.
"Laundry, cleaning and dyeing occupation" means any activity of a minor or any capacity in the marking, sorting, washing, cleansing, collecting, ironing, assembling, packaging, pressing, receiving, shipping or delivery, or any other activity including clerical work, directly incidental or essential to the laundering, cleaning or renovating of any articles of clothing, napery, blanket, rugs, carpets, draperies, bed clothing fabric, textile, fur or leather, when such activity is not performed in the original process of manufacturing.
Minors under 18 years of age at laundry, cleansing and dyeing occupations shall be paid not less than the statutory minimum wage rate.
(b) The regular rate of pay at which the employee is employed shall not be less than the minimum rate established by N.J.A.C. 12:57-5.3.
(d) The total computed earnings shall include commissions, bonuses, and all compensation paid by the employer except overtime pay.
Time during regular working hours and at other periods when employees are required to wait on the premises and no work is provided by the employer shall be counted as working time and paid at each employee's regular hourly wage.
An employee who is required or authorized to travel from one establishment to another after the beginning or before the ending of his or her work day shall be compensated for travel time at not less than the employee's regular hourly wage and shall be reimbursed for travel expenses.
No minor employed on a piece work basis or any basis other than a time basis shall for any week of employment be paid less than the amount that the employee would earn for the hours of employment at the minimum wage applicable.
No minor whose earning capacity has been impaired by physical or mental disability shall be paid at less than the minimum wage, until a special license, in accordance with the provisions of N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a17(b), has been obtained by the employer from the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance.
A true and accurate record of hours worked each day, including a record of starting and stopping time, meal periods, total daily and weekly hours, and amount of wages paid for each pay period;
(c) Such records shall be open to inspection by the Commissioner at any reasonable time, and sworn copies shall be supplied to the Commissioner upon demand.
A notice issued by the Division of Wage and Hour Compliance setting forth the provisions of this subchapter shall be posted in a conspicuous place in every room where minors are employed at laundry, cleaning, and dyeing occupations.
This subchapter shall apply to the minimum wage rates paid to all minors engaged in light manufacturing and apparel occupations regardless of the nature of the business of the employer or the location of the place where the work is being performed.
"Apparel industry" means the making or otherwise producing of apparel, designed or intended to be worn by any individual.
"Light manufacturing" means a type of employment where the process or operation of making wares or any material produced and within compliance of the prohibitive occupations for minors as cited at N.J.S.A. 34:2-21.17 regardless of the location of the place where the work is being performed.
"Minimum wage" means the current statutory minimum wage rate as cited at N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a.4.
"Minor" means a person under the age of 18 years old.
Minors employed in the apparel industry or light manufacturing as defined in N.J.A.C. 12:57-6.2 shall be paid not less than the statutory minimum wage rate.
Minors employed on a piece work basis shall be employed at piece work rates which yield to each such employee rates not less than the applicable statutory minimum wage rate.
No minor required to report for work shall be paid for less than one hour in any one day at the basic hourly rate of pay.
This subchapter or an abstract thereof shall be posted in a conspicuous place in every room where minors are employed at the occupations covered by this subchapter. A copy of such abstract may be obtained from:
APPENDIX A. AVAILABILITY OF STANDARDS REFERRED TO IN THIS CHAPTER
A copy of each of the standards referenced in this chapter is on file and may be inspected at the following office between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. on normal working days:
Labor Standards and Safety Enforcement
Copies of the referenced standards may be obtained from the following office: