Does Checking Your Email On Your BlackBerry Count As Overtime?

from the according-to-some... dept

We've had plenty of stories over the years about how the whole barriers between "work" and "life" continue to blur, and that's causing problems in some areas. Two years ago, we noted that some employees were upset to have to sign documents making it clear that checking email on Blackberries would not count towards overtime work. Last year, we questioned if paying employees hourly wages still made sense in many cases because of situations like this. The issue has come up again, as a Chicago police officer is suing for overtime for use of his Blackberry during off-hours. Obviously, there are some jobs where paying hourly could make sense, but if it's a job that's going to require a Blackberry and regularly checking in, it seems like it shouldn't be paid hourly, but as an exempt employee that gets paid a straight salary.
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Filed Under: blackberry, email, overtime


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  • icon
    cc (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 3:38am

    Sort of balances out with the time your spend using the bathroom during work hours. :P

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Stella, 19 Aug 2010 @ 4:06am

    I don't really understand why people make such a fuss... switch off the Blackberry when you finish with work. Or if you're using your personal one, just don't open the work emails. Most people switch off work phones after hours.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 4:09am

      Re:

      It's easy to say, but there are a lot of arguments that probably begin with "in this economy" and end with "so I can't take a stand against my boss".

      Does that mean it's right? Absolutely not, but that is probably how the people working extra hours feel it is.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Spuds (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 7:37am

        "in this economy..."

        That is a fine point. In fact, where I work, it has gotten to the point that supervisors remind you that in this economy, there are a lot of people looking for jobs. They remind you that it may behoove you to straighten up and fly right. They remind you that you should do what they ask-- on or off the clock.

        It is interesting to me because once the economy gets back on track, I think the company I work for is going to be a ghost town.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:27am

      Re:

      "switch off the Blackberry when you finish with work"

      Spoken like someone who has the luxury of being "off the clock" when they finish work. It work in I.T. and am often required for emergency situations. The guy who's meant to be on call that night is unavailable? I'll get it in the ass if I don't at least pick up my phone.

      If you'd ever been in a situation where a boss emails you with vital or emergency data and expects you to deal with it even if you're not technically on call, you'd understand. It's not right of course, but many bosses expect it anyway - and your raise/promotion/job may depend on it.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:31am

        Re: Re:

        I'm in IT also, and I simply work 7 hour days, with the assumption that I will catch up by answering a few e-mails outside of work hours, and almost always have weekend projects going on once a month.

        I more than make up for it since I'm fairly responsive offhours and I do my best to keep downtime to near nil.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 3:54pm

        Re: Re:

        I work in another field and I'm an hourly employee (highly skilled and all of that stuff but still hourly). I, too, am often expected to respond to emergency situations.

        What I see on the NPR report isn't a guy who was just checking his crackberry rather than responding to an emergency that required his presence by phone or in person. At least the story itself doesn't indicate a pattern of emergency responses.

        My way of dealing with it is to tell my boss (and I've had more than my share of ignorant boneheads since beloved employer decided that my boss doesn't need to actually know what I do to be my boss) that it damned well better be an emergency and what the definition of that is. (No, it's not the phone in the janitors closest doesn't work or one out of a hundred phones don't work.) It's defined in my business as a threat to public health and safety first then as a threat to personal health and safety second. It's a catch all that works for the most part. (Police, Fire, Ambulance, Hospital, Ferry and ATC, STC are automatic.)

        I've yet to respond to a real emergency that is actually fixable (there's been a couple that haven't been fixable) and get things going again. Including helping out IT guys when communications fail. (Telecom is all computers these days anyway.)

        At the same time I recognize my own limitations in terms of how long I can work efficiently and productively on a problem and when it becomes pointless to continue because I'm either not going to solve it or I'm just gonna make things worse. Or, worse, damage the customer's business or injure myself both distinct possibilities the more tired I become.

        As for changing me from wages to salaried or exempt, forget it. One of the few real hold backs to my being abused when I'm off work is that both the customer and beloved employer know it's gonna cost them to call me out off hours so they make sure they're sure.

        For projects I'll do a shift change should I have to work nights for a night or two because that is what I've found what works best for me and, by extension, everyone else. That it's less expensive for the company and customer is a nice secondary effect. :-)

        Overtime is, no matter, what, routinely abused, people are expected to work it to respond to crackberries, emergencies that aren't emergencies and other issues at any hour of the day or night.

        Then I keep remembering the old saying "no one ever died wishing they'd spent too little time in the office" as well as the fact that people who get overstressed live shorter, more miserable lives and thank fate, God and anyone else that I can, and do, manage my own workload.

        Oh, as far as I know, I've yet to lose my employer a customer. Gained them a few. Never lost one yet.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      TC, 20 Aug 2010 @ 5:34am

      Re:

      Easy to say "switch off, don't respond"

      However, the reality is that many bosses expect an answer and expect you to be reachable.

      It usually starts with an occasional quickie. An emailed question that's usually hinted at being urgent but only requires two seconds to reply to. Eventually it evolves into almost daily evening emails that require research or some sort of action....and of course, since you aren't paid overtime at the start, you won't get any unless you fuss.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    nunya_bidness, 19 Aug 2010 @ 4:31am

    Thank You for your support.

    I'm glad to see this fine officer doing everything he can to help the city of Chicago, in this time of economic unrest. It's good to see someone willing to go that extra yard to help out, with no concern for their own welfare.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 10:16am

      Re: Thank You for your support.

      Most times these sort of claims come from sheer frustration by the employee at what they consider a massive abuse of "the rules", such as they are, by the employer. It's called "you want this, pay me!" and it's the final frustrated shot at the boss for massive abuse of the system.

      Somehow, I don't see a cop doing this on a whim. Actually, I don't see anyone doing this on a whim.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    out_of_the_blue, 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:05am

    If it's *required* by the job, then pay *more*.

    Definition of required includes that this is recent development -- we somehow got along without email back there -- but if employer requires it of an hourly employee, then absolutely, it's *work*. It's highly annoying to interrupt leisure hours and check in, even if only a minute is technically needed, still requires your time, and arranging your life around that.

    I note, Mike, that you yet again are wishing for "unlimited" at a fixed price. Converting hourly workers to salary is a *trap* employers set whenever they can, to reduce their costs. Employers should either *pay* extra or arrange the job differently, not shift costs onto employees.

    @ AC: 'It's easy to say, but there are a lot of arguments that probably begin with "in this economy" and end with "so I can't take a stand against my boss".' -- That's not an argument, that's an ultimatum. It's to advantage of The Rich to have people dependent on jobs, and easily replaced if won't knuckle under. -- Fight back: go slow, don't do the little extras, add a minute to every break. Don't get into the trap of being a passive economic unit used for someone else's profit; that's ultimately riskier than losing any one job because every other employer will put the screws to you too.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Gardner (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:14am

      Re: If it's *required* by the job, then pay *more*.

      Who's *the rich* when it comes to the police force, or any gov't employee? The taxpayer?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Kingster (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:23am

        Re: Re: If it's *required* by the job, then pay *more*.

        Well... I think that out_of was commenting about a comment made by AC to Stella's comment. AC's comment was employer indeterminate, and so out_of gets to call employers "The Rich". Why? Because rich doesn't have to be about money... It can be used as a descriptor of any resource... Minerals, cows, manure, and, yes, jobs. If I were an employer, I can decide who gets a job and who doesn't (within some guidelines, obviously), and so I am "rich" with employment opportunities. Savvy?

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        noesbueno (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:40am

        Re: Re: If it's *required* by the job, then pay *more*.

        if you live here on long island, the police and gov't employees ARE the rich.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      abc gum, 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:36am

      Re: If it's *required* by the job, then pay *more*.

      "wishing for "unlimited" at a fixed price"

      Everything has a limit

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    bwp (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:06am

    'Obviously, there are some jobs where paying hourly could make sense, but if it's a job that's going to require a Blackberry and regularly checking in, it seems like it shouldn't be paid hourly, but as an exempt employee that gets paid a straight salary.'

    It's not that simple Mike. You have to follow the FLSA standards for exempt or non-exempt jobs.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Matthew, 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:15am

      Re:

      ^- This. In fact, some companies go through a lot of contortions to qualify some roles as "exempt" when the nature of the work really suggests that they should be "non-exempt." It lets them demand extra effort from employees whenever necessary under the guise of "reasonable overtime." And the more employees give in to the demand, the more pressure can be put on reticent employees to be a team player.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Danny, 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:41am

    I would like to say that if the company expects you to be available by smart phone then you should definitely be getting paid for that time but as others have said companies have no qualms about bending reality to pressure employees into going the extra mile for free (and with the way the job market is these days companies have the advantage of, "Oh you want compansation for this? Fine we'll just hire someone who will do it without compensation.").

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Jimr (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 5:44am

    On Call

    If I am required to check it then it I consider myself on call and demand to be compensated.
    If I check my work email because I feel like then why should my employee compensate me for something that I am not required to do.
    I did carry a work mobile phone and did answer it 24-7 and billed every time I answered it. The clients and employer knew that if they called me I would bill them. If I did it for free I would never be able to sleep as they would all expect free work.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:03am

    I had a job with a work issued blackberry and the expectations was a 2 hour response for emails. So that means you have to set an audible alert and check you mobile often. Get this...I worked night shift. Day shift felt free to email/page me throughout the day. I left that job a nervous wreck...and cannot look at a black berry without wanting to throw up. I believe the time I spent away from the factory was more stressful and should have been overtime...but I was exempt, of course. Now figure you have a cop who is getting emails throughout every day about every other case from the DA, the courts, etc. He may have a point depending on how much they took advantage of him.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Joseph Durnal, 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:16am

    It depends

    I've actually helped companies write policies around this. They key is for the employer to have specific policies related to the use of mobile devices, including what counts as work. A good example, a policy can state that only messages marked with high importance or from your supervisor or manager are required to be addressed via blackberry during non-working hours, nothing that the blackberry can be configured with different types of alert levels for different types of e-mail. We can also write rules in the mail system to cc a supervisor if not already on any e-mail not from the supervisor marked with high importance. The key is to be sure the policies are clear in what is expected of the staff. Even exempt employees are generally required to put in X number of hours, usually 40 in a week, and sometimes get "comp" time, etc for extra hours worked. Of course, that won't stop the rouge supervisor from telling their staff that they must go above and beyond corporate policy, but that is a different management problem (we could solve that with technology too, by applying corporate policy to only allow approved messages to be sent to the mobile devices during non-working hours, but that is a can of worms).

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      nasch (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:19am

      Re: It depends

      How do you keep people from marking every email as high importance? I've worked places where some people clearly had that as their default setting, because you would get emails about doughnuts in the break room marked as urgent.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Chuck Norris' Enemy (deceased) (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:24am

    Unionized

    Well, you are working with a union here so they may fight going to a salary. Unions love overtime pay and all the perks that come along with that...like meal compensations.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Dark Helmet (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 7:13am

      Re: Unionized

      This is exactly the reason here in Chicago. The unions here fight salaries like they were Hitler....

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 10:29am

        Re: Re: Unionized

        As well they should. Usually the reason the employer is trying to move people from hourly to salary has nothing to do with a change in duties but everything to do with actually reducing the take home of the employee while increasing the hours of work.

        A union's only job, by law, is to represent and bargain for their membership. If they routinely agreed to such things I can guarantee you they'd be out of business very soon.

        There are legitimate and varied reasons for the change and unions, and their membership, mostly agree to an employers request for those changes. The only thing, however, the public ever hears about are those rare times when they don't.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 10:52am

      Re: Unionized

      Let me see now, overtime, how do I love thee?

      Exhaustion when it's constant and lengthy, meal allowances that just might pay for McDonalds if I'm lucky, the government gets more than half my damned overtime pay before I see it, I slip up a tax bracket so the income tax goes up, I get cranky and don't think or execute at all well and the odds of seriously injuring myself goes up exponentially after 12 hours of constant work. (Even in an office environment, by the way.) Not to mention damaging my real life relationships like my partner, friends and so on.

      Oh yeah, this union member and rep just loves overtime, endless overtime and the more the better. Sure I do. And the union itself gets less than a penny an hour more in dues for it so it just adores it too not to mention the extra book keeping.

      In a pig's eye I love overtime. It's necessary sometimes and I'll gladly do it, it's part of the job.

      In the meantime, how about getting a life? A real one. Not some idiot fantasy about unions and their members.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 11:14am

      Re: Unionized (another thing)

      Read the NPR report. His union isn't representing him in this. He's gone private. As I say below it's likely it's because he's been told it can't be won and he's decided he's too greedy or has a point to make.

      Odds are he's a gonna lose.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    MissingFrame, 19 Aug 2010 @ 6:43am

    This is new? What about pagers?

    I remember a lot of people carrying around work-related pagers, or getting phone calls off-hours. This was the requirement of some jobs and why I rarely accepted employment from such places. Some people worked out deals with their employer about when they would or wouldn't have to carry the pager.

    However, one place I did work had a policy of minimum 2 hours charged time if they paged you. Needless to say they handed out pagers quite sparingly.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Tim, 19 Aug 2010 @ 7:04am

    Salary

    The thing with salary, if you work under, you get docked, if you work over, you don't make extra pay. That's how it works in the real world anyway.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:03am

    only if the demand you check your email when you're off.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    butch, 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:10am

    I am in IT too and though I have no blackberry, I am expected to answer my home or cell phone, using my minutes, 24/7.

    In addition to that time, we are required to attend 7:00am meetings in order to accommodate our fellow associates overseas to whom we sent most of our IT jobs. All this added together makes for a long work day. And of course, there is no overtime pay.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    IT Droid, 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:22am

    First of all, companies have to issue you communications devices (blackberry, pagers, etc) separate from your private one. They pay for them, they can use them how they want.
    Seconde, salaried is BS. Is Corporate-speak for "we work you to the bone, and don't pay you"
    Do your research, most courts now-adays don't allow for IT to be exempted from Overtime.

    Third.NEVER EVER FORGET that a CEO can fire you, but an IT can hack onto the CEO's credit score, mess it up, sent his mortgage to hell, and put all the companies finances on facebook, and password lock all the servers. Even though IT IS THE COMPANY, the IT Department still gets treated like a red-haired stepchild. Take the place you deserve.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      nasch (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:33am

      Re:

      First of all, companies have to issue you communications devices (blackberry, pagers, etc) separate from your private one.

      Well, they don't HAVE to. They can tell you to use your personal one, and you can say yea or nay. And if you say nay they can of course fire you.

      Seconde, salaried is BS. Is Corporate-speak for "we work you to the bone, and don't pay you"

      There are still companies that treat their (salaried) employees decently.

      NEVER EVER FORGET that a CEO can fire you, but an IT can hack onto the CEO's credit score, mess it up, sent his mortgage to hell, and put all the companies finances on facebook, and password lock all the servers.

      What the hell? Are you actually condoning that type of behavior?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 8:30am

    Now that is something people can enforce.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Ron Rezendes (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 9:11am

    Pretty simple folks: No pay = no work

    Employment is a simple trade of time for money. Anytime the employer wants the employee to do something then the employee should rightfully be paid an amount previously agreed upon at the time of employment.

    If you're hourly and "required" to do anything outside the office after your regular shift, then the standing agreement, signed by both parties at the time of employment, is an exchange of X amount of dollars per hour.

    If you're a salaried employee and you know of the after hours expectations upon employment, then it is your right to negotiate a salary that you feel comfortable with knowing the expectations you will need to live up to. If the work overrides the salary - renegotiate (ask for more money) or go elsewhere for your employment.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Butch, 19 Aug 2010 @ 9:23am

      Re: Pretty simple folks: No pay = no work

      It's easy to say to find another job, but in today's market it is easier said than done.

      I find my job responsibilities rising as my fellow workers are being off-shored, yet my salary remains the same. Basically I have to do more work for the same pay.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Ron Rezendes (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 9:57am

        Re: Re: Pretty simple folks: No pay = no work

        I can personally attest to that as well, but there is a point (mine is easier to get to than most I think) where you just say: "I can't do this anymore. I work to LIVE, not live to WORK. The trade off of my time for your pay is grossly unbalanced and for my own sanity and dignity I must change jobs." or "It's not my life, it's not my wife, it's just a job and I CAN get another one just like I got this one." The problem is uncertainty scares the hell out of many people and there is no way those words would ever come out of their mouth to their employer because of that fear. I say "Face your fears and dare to be happy! Hopefully, at least happier!"

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Yo, 19 Aug 2010 @ 9:19am

    Eh...

    The decision is yours to keep a job or not. Despite the economy, it is still your choice (or theirs of course). It is lame and greedy to go to court for something you obviously agreed to do by doing it, whether you hated it or regreted it or not, or wish you didn't have to in order to keep your job or not. Officer or not, dumb.

    Calm down, calm down. Just because I don't agree with this particular action, (at least based on how I understood the situation), doesn't mean I don't respect officers as a person/job choice.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      TtfnJohn (profile), 19 Aug 2010 @ 11:11am

      Re: Eh...

      Thing is we have limited information on why this has happened though, on the surface, I agree with you. It does look like he was stockpiling his 10 or 15 minutes a day till he had enough to sue on.

      If he's represented by a union, and there's a good possibility he is, he's either bypassed them because they told him there was less than a snowball's chance in hell of a grievance being successful in this (far less as I read it) or they took it up and it failed so they've done their duty by him. The presence of a private lawyer is the hint there as is the issue he's fighting on.

      Satan will have a fully equipped hockey rink and be playing for the Black Hawks in hell before this guy wins this thing.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    sashi, 19 Aug 2010 @ 11:35am

    Concept is nice

    Yes,its really acceptable in Employee wages partition

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Aug 2010 @ 1:16pm

    "I slip up a tax bracket so the income tax goes up"

    This is a myth! The tax bracket system is based on a graduated tax system, the first bracket (for sake of argument) is $20,000 You get taxed on that 20k at a rate of 0! (it all comes back at income tax time) Now if you make $20,001 that single dollar will be taxed at the new rate (lets say 10%).

    So in this simple example, you earned $20,001 and paid a total of 10 cents tax at income tax time.

    You could have a point if you were earning close to the alternative minimum income tax level (~45,000 single, ~75,000 joint for 2009) and not have a good accountant informing you of how to do your taxes right, H&R block does not count, get a real CPA to tell you tax benifits and issues.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    KGB, 19 Aug 2010 @ 1:36pm

    Pay dat man his money.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    RT, 19 Aug 2010 @ 4:07pm

    Read your L&I rules

    If your hourly and you are required to be on call, the law says you must be compensated, It's called 'on call' pay...

    All you folks spouting off scenarios need to read your L&I rules. They are there for a reason, know them and you will be the one in control!

    DOH!!!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    ibrahem, 11 Mar 2012 @ 4:31pm

    hou are yuo

    I fin

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    ibrahem, 11 Mar 2012 @ 4:31pm

    hou are yuo

    I fin

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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