Question | Answer | ||||||||
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What is the current Minimum Wage in New York State? | View details on current minimum wage. | ||||||||
Can employers require their employees to wear uniforms? | Yes. However, the cost of buying and/or taking care of a uniform must not bring the employee below the minimum wage. IF...
THEN...
OR...
Ordinary clothing (such as black trousers and white shirts) is generally not a "uniform." | ||||||||
Do the minimum wage requirements cover everyone? | Most people are covered by the minimum wage requirements. However, some people are not. Those who are not covered include:
For more detailed information on some of the exclusions in the above list, please see our The Labor Law does not consider independent contractors - people who are in business for themselves - as "employees." This means that minimum wage requirements do not cover independent contractors. | ||||||||
Where can I find the required posters that summarize the minimum wage rules? | Article 19 of the Labor Law requires employers to post the provisions of the Minimum Wage Act. View Posters. | ||||||||
What are the rules for overtime? | The overtime requirement is based on hours worked in a given week. In general, if you have worked more than 40 hours in a pay week, and are not "exempt", you must be paid an overtime rate for all hours over 40. If you are a farm worker, you must be paid an overtime rate for all hours worked over 56 in a calendar week, and/or for any hours worked on your day of rest. See the chart below:
Federal law excludes some types of employees from the requirement to receive one and one-half times their regular rate of pay. Many people call these "exempt" positions. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), listed by the U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, outlines occupations excluded by federal law. You can find the act at: | ||||||||
Where can I find details about the state laws for employing minors? | View information on employment of minors in NYS. | ||||||||
How many hours can an employer ask an employee to work? | There are no limits on:
In some industries and occupations, an employee must receive 24 hours of rest in each calendar week. Such jobs include work:
For a complete list of the "day of rest" provision of the law, go to https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB
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Must an employer give meal periods and "breaks" to workers? | Employees who:
AND
MUST
AT LEAST
View meal period requirements. | ||||||||
Must an employer pay workers for sick time, holidays and/or vacations? | Under a new revision to the New York State Labor Law,196-b, employers are now responsible for providing sick leave to their employees as follows:
For more detailed information on this new law, please visit https://www.ny.gov/programs/new-york-paid-sick-leave.
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What is the status of an employer's oral agreement to provide a particular fringe benefit? | Section 195.5 of the Labor Law states: Every employer shall notify his employees in writing or by publicly posting the employer's policy on sick leave, vacation, personal leave, holidays and hours. If an employer does not have a written policy, the oral policy (or past practice) may be enforced - if the terms of the policy can be confirmed through an investigation. Moreover, violators of § 195.5 are subject to civil penalty. | ||||||||
When employees resign -- or are discharged -- from a job, must the employer pay them for any accrued, unused vacation time? | Whether an employer must pay for unused time depends upon the terms of the vacation and/or resignation policy. New York courts have held that an agreement to give benefits or wage supplements, like vacation, can specify that employees lose accrued benefits under certain conditions. [See Glenville Gage Company, Inc. v. Industrial Board of Appeals of the State of New York, Department of Labor, 70 AD2d 283 (3d Dept 1979) affd, 52 NY2d 777 (1980).] To be valid, the employer must have told employees, in writing, of the conditions that nullify the benefit. IF...
AND...
THEN...
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How can employees get help to collect Wage Supplements (fringe benefits) that their employer owes them? | The Division of Labor Standards investigates and tries to collect claims for unpaid benefits or wage supplements which the employer has agreed to provide. Wage supplements include:
Learn more about the Labor Standards Complaint Process Section 198c of the New York State Labor Law, Benefits or Wage Supplements Information About Filing a Claim (LS 223.2) Submit completed claim forms to: | ||||||||
Does the law require that an employer "give notice" of termination? | The New York State Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act became a law on August 5, 2008, with the approval of the Governor (passed by a majority vote, three-fifths being present). Under the provisions of the act:
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Where will I find details on pensions and retirement funds, 401Ks, health & welfare plans, continuation of health care coverage and severance? | The Employee Benefits Security Administration enforces the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). It also enforces the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA). These acts cover matters that involve:
For more information, go to: | ||||||||
Can you fire an employee without due cause? | Yes. New York is an 'at-will' employment State. Without a contract restricting termination, generally an employer has the right to discharge an employee at any time for any, or no, reason, providing it is not an act of illegal retaliation or discrimination (see below). An employee also has the right to leave their job at any time, without needing to defend or explain that decision.
For more information about how the New York State Division of Human Rights handles unlawful forms of discrimination, go to the Division of Human Rights website.
The New York State Department of Labor also enforces Labor Law Section 215, which prohibits retaliation.
To obtain the text of the statutes discussed above, go to: https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB | ||||||||
When must terminated employees get their last check? | When employment has ended, the employer must pay the wages by the regular payday for the pay period worked. If asked, the employer must mail the final wages to the employee | ||||||||
How can employees get help to collect wages their employer owes them? | The Division of Labor Standards investigates claims for unpaid or withheld wages, including illegal deductions, and tries to collect these wages. Labor Standards also enforces the prohibition against illegal kickback of wages and tip appropriation. View information on Unpaid/Withheld Wages or Wage Supplements/Fringe Benefits Claims. | ||||||||
May employers deduct money from wages? | Employers are only allowed to deduct certain items from an employee's wages, such as taxes, insurance premiums, union dues, etc. They are not permitted to charge employees for breakages, cash shortages, fines or any other losses to the business. For more detailed information on deductions, please see Section 193 of the New York State Labor Law. | ||||||||
What information must an employer's payroll records contain? | Employers must keep payroll records showing, for each week worked by an employee:
If the employee worked overtime and is required to be paid at a higher rate for overtime hours, the payroll records must also include the four items listed below, along with the items listed above:
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What posters must employers display in the workplace? Where can they get the posters? | View Posters | ||||||||
What notices must be provided to employees? | New York State Labor Law requires all employers to display a Minimum Wage Poster. However, employers in certain, specific industries have more posting responsibilities.
Other employers with specific posting requirements include:
Employers who hire minors must post a schedule setting forth "the hours of beginning and stopping and the time allowed for meals" of each minor in their employ. | ||||||||
Where can I find the New York State Labor Laws on the Internet? | The New York State Labor laws are available online at the New York State Senate website: https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB |