"my annual salary was $34,000 a year, with no paid overtime"

As a full-time employee in administration and development, my annual salary was $34,000 a year, with no paid overtime. I was responsible for training volunteers outside of normal work hours, working programmed events that took place from 6 - 10 PM, and administering our annual gala and other fundraising events associated with a major capital campaign, so I frequently worked overtime without compensation.

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"Businesses can never pay you what your time is worth — your time is invaluable. But they don’t even try."

They try to make folks exempt so they don’t have to pay extra. The way everything works, there’s so much turnover in doing the job. So if I can’t fill a shift any other way, then I have to fill in the shift myself. The shift has to be filled. If one of my hourly staff does it, it’s overtime pay. If I do it, it’s free for the company. But it’s the same shift.

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Third round of official comments on overtime rulemaking

We urge the Department to establish an overtime exemption threshold calculated at three times the locally applicable minimum wage, which is approximately where the threshold was when our economy saw the most widely shared prosperity. This is the simplest, most transparent, and most appropriate way to reflect actual conditions in the job market. Pegging the threshold to this mark will benefit workers, employers, and the economy by providing workers more money to contribute to the economy, more time to invest in their communities, increased opportunity, higher productivity, and benefits to workplace health & safety.

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8 hours for what we will

Overtime pay after 40 hours of work first became a movement more than 100 years ago. But today it’s no longer a reality for hundreds of thousands of working people in our state. More and more of us are working more and more hours — but we're not getting paid for it.

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