Presentation
After-Hours Use of Electronic Devices: Avoiding and Defending Overtime Pay Claims
Read Time: 1 minThe explosion of smartphone and tablet use has eased the way for employees to have continuous remote connectivity to the workplace, presenting yet another liability threat for employers already battling an increase in overtime pay claims.
If an employee can show the employer had actual or constructive knowledge of work performed, an employer can owe overtime pay for work never requested from a worker.
Employees who prevail in overtime pay claims may be entitled to substantial damages, including back wages plus interest, liquidated damages, and attorneys’ fees and costs from the employer. These damages can grow exponentially in the face of a collective action.
On Tuesday, February 25, 2025, Susan Desmond (New Orleans) will co-present a Strafford webinar on “After-Hours Use of Electronic Devices: Avoiding and Defending Overtime Pay Claims,” a live 90-minute CLE video webinar with interactive Q&A.
Susan and her co-panelist will provide attendees with practical guidance for avoiding and defending overtime pay claims springing from work performed outside the workplace and after work hours via electronic devices. They will examine the most recent developments regarding the after-hours use of electronic devices, assess current case law as it applies to the unique claim of electronic overtime pay, and provide techniques for defending against individual and collective actions and avoiding claims.
The panel will review these and other principal issues:
- How does continuous connectivity of employees impact the definition of working time and compensable time?
- What are the defenses to electronic overtime pay claims?
- What are best practices to avoid claims of electronic overtime pay?
- What tactics work to defeat certification in collective actions when employees claim a group of employees is entitled to electronic overtime pay?