Overtime Bill Has Been Defeated!!!!

Nurses Activism

Published

WASHINGTON (Sept. 10) - The Senate voted Wednesday to halt the administration's effort to rewrite decades-old rules on overtime pay, risking a veto showdown with President Bush and heeding labor's claims that the changes would harm millions of workers at a time of economic uncertainty.

The 54-45 vote marked a rare defeat for business interests in the GOP-controlled Congress and left the fate of the emerging Labor Department regulations unclear. The House backed the new rules this summer, and congressional negotiators will have to resolve the issue.

``The Bush administration proposal is not only anti-worker and anti-family, it is bad economic policy,'' said Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, who led the assault on the regulations. ``It will take money out of the pockets of hardworking Americans and will not create one new job.''

Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, in a statement, defended the effort as a bid to ``strengthen overtime protections for workers'' by extending overtime eligibility to 1.3 million low earners who now lack it. ``The regulatory process should move forward to benefit workers,'' she said.

Democratic opponents said their plan would not interfere with parts of the rules extending overtime protection. They took aim at sections that would strip other workers of eligibility they have long enjoyed. The precise number was a matter of dispute - an estimated 800,000 by administration allies, and as high as 8 million by Harkin's estimate.

The regulations became the focus of heavy lobbying in which the AFL-CIO joined the battle against business organizations. In turn, that made the showdown a command performance of sorts for the Senate's four Democratic presidential contenders, all of whom broke off campaigning to vote.

Six Republicans split with the administration on the vote, including three - Sens. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska - who are on the ballot in 2004.

The vote came as the Senate labored to complete work on a $137.6 billion spending bill for health, education and labor programs for the fiscal year beginning on Oct. 1.

While the administration has a generally favorable view of the measure, it issued a statement saying the president's top advisers would recommend a veto if the overtime rules were blocked in the bill that reaches Bush's desk.

Democrats succeeded on one other attempt during the day to change the bill. The Senate voted 51-44 to reverse Education Department rules that would cut off Pell Grant eligibility for some lower-income students and reduce it for others.

In a time-tested congressional ritual used by both parties, Democrats spent much of the day advocating funding increases for a variety of politically popular programs, eager to put Republicans senators on record in opposition.

Thus, an effort to add $300 million in low-income heating assistance fell on a vote of 49-46, 11 short of the 60 needed. As drafted, the measure includes $2 billion for the program.

AFL-CIO President John Sweeney hailed the overtime vote, saying that current protections ``help ensure that workers will mot be forced to work excessive hours, and that they will receive fair pay.

''

The head of the National Retail Federation, Tracy Mullin, said that the existing regulations ``are vague, confusing and totally outdated. It is extremely difficult for an employer to determine whether a worker should receiver overtime and the result has been an explosion of litigation from disputed decisions.''

Republican aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, also said that business concern over lawsuits from overtime disputes were a factor in the push for new regulations.

Congress has not been kind to organized labor in recent years. Legislation in 2001 junked Clinton-era standards designed to curtail repetitive stress injuries in the workplace and labor objected to the worker protection provisions in last year's bill creating the Homeland Security Department.

Federal law generally grants workers overtime pay equal to the rate of time-and-a-half for labor in excess of 40 hours a week. The proposed regulations rewrite technical provisions, some dating to 1949, to define which ``white collar'' workers would be exempted.

One, for example, says that ``creative professional employees'' who perform work ``requiring invention, imagination, originality or talent in a recognized field of artistic or creative endeavor'' will be exempt from overtime. The current standard requires them to ``consistently exercise discretion and judgment'' to be denied overtime coverage.

Workers who devote more than one-fifth of their time to activities unrelated to their main job are eligible for overtime coverage under current regulations, a provision that would be dropped.

The proposed rules would not apply to workers covered by union contracts. But labor officials said the proposed changes could prompt businesses to attempt to weaken overtime protections in future contract negotiations.

The proposed rules would make overtime available to an estimated 1.3 million low-income Americans now denied it, by raising the annual pay below which overtime must be paid to $22,100. That figure is currently $8,060, where it was set in 1975.

Originally posted by PsykoRN

Chase,

Bless your heart, but we all have to remember that this will affect many other professions and not just nursing. What would be superb is if nurses and the FD, PD and the others that it will affect....

I remember reading that the bill was written so that firefighters, police and paramedics would be exempt. If the bill were to become law, they would still get overtime pay, but nurses would not. A spokesperson from the DOL commented that is was because of the "physical" nature of the work of firefighters, EMS, police, etc. But really- do you think the GOP would do anything against EMS and Firefighters after 9/11? That would be public relations suicide. Nurses were not nationally celebrated heroes after 9/11, so they are a safe target.

I believe it's also because nursing is a "female" occupation" and police, EMS and firefighting are mostly "male" occupations that it was decided that they would still get OT pay, and nurses would not.

As another poster stated, it ain't over 'til it's over.

We would ALL be exempt. But the only thing we'd be exempt from is getting the OT pay! Firemen, cops, emts, nurses - everybody was to be exempted from being paid OT. None of them eligible for OT anymore. The cops & firemen unions here were in an uproar over it too. And thats what they kept saying --"nice way to say thank you after 9/11". We're all union - well, most nurses here are - and all the cops, firemen, & emts are - so we would get to keep our OT pay as long as it was in our contracts. Thats the only way any of those groups would still get it. But as soon as it becomes law and we're all exempted from getting OT, the city and other employers are going to refuse to agree to put OT pay in future contracts. And then all those guys would lose it right along with us. There were no protections put in for them, hero or no hero. No surprise, considering that soon after 9/11 right up to a few months ago, NYC has been closing down firehouses all over the place and not hiring cops to fill their vacancies (losses). There is even some recent talk about cop lay-offs if they dont reduce enough #s by attrition.

Like the guys said nice way to say thank you.

When corporations decide it's time for you to take a paycut, call your representatives! If you're going to write them a letter, use a word processor and mail a hardcopy; also, send a copy via email or fax. Don't expect your email alone to do anything, it might be read in 6 months if ever.

Anyway, to find your reps and contact info go to:

vote smart

If you want to see who bought the White House in 2000:

Center for Responsive Politics

It was not defeated in September, it was passed in November 2003, the US Dept of Labor is behind this and they are a very powerful entity. Look it up, the media is not making a big fuss about it either. CandycapQUOTE=PsykoRN]WASHINGTON (Sept. 10) - The Senate voted Wednesday to halt the administration's effort to rewrite decades-old rules on overtime pay, risking a veto showdown with President Bush and heeding labor's claims that the changes would harm millions of workers at a time of economic uncertainty.

The 54-45 vote marked a rare defeat for business interests in the GOP-controlled Congress and left the fate of the emerging Labor Department regulations unclear. The House backed the new rules this summer, and congressional negotiators will have to resolve the issue.

``The Bush administration proposal is not only anti-worker and anti-family, it is bad economic policy,'' said Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, who led the assault on the regulations. ``It will take money out of the pockets of hardworking Americans and will not create one new job.''

Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, in a statement, defended the effort as a bid to ``strengthen overtime protections for workers'' by extending overtime eligibility to 1.3 million low earners who now lack it. ``The regulatory process should move forward to benefit workers,'' she said.

Democratic opponents said their plan would not interfere with parts of the rules extending overtime protection. They took aim at sections that would strip other workers of eligibility they have long enjoyed. The precise number was a matter of dispute - an estimated 800,000 by administration allies, and as high as 8 million by Harkin's estimate.

The regulations became the focus of heavy lobbying in which the AFL-CIO joined the battle against business organizations. In turn, that made the showdown a command performance of sorts for the Senate's four Democratic presidential contenders, all of whom broke off campaigning to vote.

Six Republicans split with the administration on the vote, including three - Sens. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska - who are on the ballot in 2004.

The vote came as the Senate labored to complete work on a $137.6 billion spending bill for health, education and labor programs for the fiscal year beginning on Oct. 1.

While the administration has a generally favorable view of the measure, it issued a statement saying the president's top advisers would recommend a veto if the overtime rules were blocked in the bill that reaches Bush's desk.

Democrats succeeded on one other attempt during the day to change the bill. The Senate voted 51-44 to reverse Education Department rules that would cut off Pell Grant eligibility for some lower-income students and reduce it for others.

In a time-tested congressional ritual used by both parties, Democrats spent much of the day advocating funding increases for a variety of politically popular programs, eager to put Republicans senators on record in opposition.

Thus, an effort to add $300 million in low-income heating assistance fell on a vote of 49-46, 11 short of the 60 needed. As drafted, the measure includes $2 billion for the program.

AFL-CIO President John Sweeney hailed the overtime vote, saying that current protections ``help ensure that workers will mot be forced to work excessive hours, and that they will receive fair pay.

''

The head of the National Retail Federation, Tracy Mullin, said that the existing regulations ``are vague, confusing and totally outdated. It is extremely difficult for an employer to determine whether a worker should receiver overtime and the result has been an explosion of litigation from disputed decisions.''

Republican aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, also said that business concern over lawsuits from overtime disputes were a factor in the push for new regulations.

Congress has not been kind to organized labor in recent years. Legislation in 2001 junked Clinton-era standards designed to curtail repetitive stress injuries in the workplace and labor objected to the worker protection provisions in last year's bill creating the Homeland Security Department.

Federal law generally grants workers overtime pay equal to the rate of time-and-a-half for labor in excess of 40 hours a week. The proposed regulations rewrite technical provisions, some dating to 1949, to define which ``white collar'' workers would be exempted.

One, for example, says that ``creative professional employees'' who perform work ``requiring invention, imagination, originality or talent in a recognized field of artistic or creative endeavor'' will be exempt from overtime. The current standard requires them to ``consistently exercise discretion and judgment'' to be denied overtime coverage.

Workers who devote more than one-fifth of their time to activities unrelated to their main job are eligible for overtime coverage under current regulations, a provision that would be dropped.

The proposed rules would not apply to workers covered by union contracts. But labor officials said the proposed changes could prompt businesses to attempt to weaken overtime protections in future contract negotiations.

The proposed rules would make overtime available to an estimated 1.3 million low-income Americans now denied it, by raising the annual pay below which overtime must be paid to $22,100. That figure is currently $8,060, where it was set in 1975.

The Overtime Takeaway has been passed, it was November 2003 and it is predicted to take affect as early as September 2004.

The bill was passed in November 2003. I will quit nursing before I'm forced to work XXX amount of hours without overtime pay. Stay informed, search union info for updates on this issue. This is really scary.:angryfire

Im just glad that Bush is about to be replaced.. I really think hes getting dumber with everything he does. No overtime?

Canada lookin better and better ;)

Come ooooooooooooooooon up! :D

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