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Wage Theft Prevention Act

Volume 2011 / Issue 8

December 12, 2011

A law passed in 2010 gives more protection to workers in New York State. This law, the Wage Theft Prevention Act (WTPA) took effect April 9, 2011. Here are some key provisions of the new law that employers need to know.

Written Notice
The Law already required employers to give notice to employees of their wage rates at the time of hire. Now, the WTPA requires employers to give a written notice to each new hire and to all employees by February 1 each year. The notice must include:
·         Rate or rates of pay, including overtime rate of pay (if it applies)
·         How the employee is paid: by the hour, shift, day, week, commission, etc.
·         Regular payday
·         Official name of the employer and any other names used for business (DBA)
·         Address and phone number of the employer’s main office or principal location
·         Allowances taken as part of the minimum wage (tip, meal and lodging  deductions)
Employers must have each employee sign and date the completed notice. Employers must provide a copy to each employee.
If any data in the notice changes, the employer must tell employees at least a week before it happens unless they issue a new paystub that carries the notice. The employer must notify an employee in writing before they reduce the employee’s wage rate. Employers in the hospitality industry must give notice every time a wage rate changes.
Employers that do not give notice may have to pay damages of up to $50 per week, per employee, unless they paid employees all wages required by law. (This stops at $2,500 per employee in civil lawsuits filed by workers.)
Payroll Records
Under prior law, some of the recordkeeping requirements were in the statute, while others were in the regulations. Now, the requirements are part of the law, which makes it easier for employers to understand their obligations. However, industry-specific regulations will still have some additional requirements. Employers must:
Keep records for six years. Records include the new notice and acknowledgment and payroll records.
Keep accurate records of hours worked by employees and wages paid. Now, the law clarifies the employers must keep the records on an ongoing basis. The employer may not make up the records after the fact at the end of the week, month or year.
For each week an employee works, the payroll records must contain:
·         Hours worked – (regular and overtime)
·         Rate or rates of pay (regular/overtime)
·         How the employee is paid: by the hour, shift, day, week, commission, etc.
·         Pay at the piece rate must show what rates apply and the number of pieces at each rate
·         Employee’s gross and net wages
·         Itemized deductions
·         Itemized allowances and credits claimed by the employer, if any (tip, meal and lodging allowances or credits)
Wage Statements
Under the new law, employers must:
Give each employee a wage statement or pay stub each payday that lists all of the above payroll data plus:
·         Employee’s name
·         Employer’s name, address and phone number
·         Dates covered by the payment
Give any employee who asks a written explanation of how they computed wages.
Employers that do not give wage statements may have to pay damages of up to $100 per week, per employee, unless they paid employees all wages required by law. (This stops at $2,500 per employee in civil lawsuits filed by employees.)