Colorado | Overtime Pay Lawyers | Class Action Lawsuit Attorneys
If you were employed in Colorado and you believe that your Colorado employer has not paid you all of the overtime pay, hourly wages, salary and other benefits that you believe your Colorado employer owes you, tell us your story!
-Report Unpaid Colorado Overtime & Wages-
Colorado Employees — You Have Legal Rights!
Federal labor law generally requires employees to be paid overtime pay at a rate of not less than one and one-half times an employee’s regular rate of pay after 40 hours of work in a workweek. Employees in Colorado are no different and are typically entitled to overtime pay, unless they are exempt. Unfortunately, Colorado employees are often misclassifed by their employers as exempt from overtime.
Workers in Colorado are sometimes incorrectly treated as executives, administrators, professionals, outside sale persons, commissioned retail sales employees, independent contractors or other exempt employees when they should not be. These terms are defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and require that very specific legal requirements be met before they can apply to prevent you from receiving overtime pay.
Colorado employees are sometimes denied overtime pay for other reasons which can be improper. Common examples include:
- requiring Colorado employees to work off the clock (not recording time actually worked by the employee on the job, not paying for meal periods and rest breaks, failing to pay overtime for travel time from the office to a work-site and back, not paying overtime for time spent working while traveling, refusing to pay overtime for attendance at training, meetings and lectures, not paying for time spent doing necessary preparations for work such as suiting up or putting on protective gear on, on-call time, or time in security lines, forcing employees to work without clocking in, or by telling employees to report fewer hours than actually worked);
- telling Colorado employees that they did not get permission or approval in advance for the overtime or that they are paid a salary and salaried workers are not entitled to overtime (just because you are paid a salary does not necessarily mean that you are not entitled to overtime);
- miscalculating the amount of overtime pay due (employers often improperly calculate overtime by carrying over one week’s earned overtime hours into another week, paying employees their regular rate for overtime work instead of time and a half; altering employees’ time sheets and records, etc.).
–Contact A Colorado Overtime Pay Class Action Attorney–
If you were employed in Colorado and believe your employer has not paid you all of the overtime pay, hourly wages, salary and other benefits you believe you are due (or if you are just not sure and want to find out), contact an overtime pay class action lawyer:
-Report Unpaid Colorado Overtime & Wages-
You can also share your Colorado overtime pay and wage complaints, if any, with other Colorado employees by leaving a comment below.
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workers at jbs swift are not being paid the ammount they should be the management on the fabrication floor are telling everyone that no overtime is allowed and yet they are still having the production run the full eight hours not allowing the employees to be paid for either their time to dress in or thir time to dress out also according to the union contract they are required to give the employee either the pay for a 15 minute break or the actual 15 minute break if their time runs over 8 hours and 12 minutes to me this seems to be a totaly unfair sitution and I am quit afraid that if I complain to the union or to the management about it I would be terminated from my employment. thank you for any information you might be able to give.
April 3rd, 2008 at 7:06 am
I have been carying a nextel for my company as a start up engineer and a manager of a 24/7 operation since 2001. There is no policy for compensation and even if my nextel is off I can and am expected to be availble for emergencies via home or cell 24/7. Only when I’m on vacation I can totaly avoid being available
July 28th, 2008 at 2:08 am