Care Coordinators May be Misclassified and Entitled to Overtime and Backpay
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
1y ago
Managed Care Organizations (MCO’s) often contract with State Health Departments to provide care for dually eligible Medicaid and Medicare patients pursuant to requirements established by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).  Care coordinators provide case management services on behalf of the MCO to various populations. If you work or have worked for an MCO in the past three (3) years and are/were: Classified as exempt from overtime (you did not receive overtime pay and likely did not clock in and out for your schedule work shifts) Paid on a salary basis (your p ..read more
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Mass SJC: Late Wage Payments are Lost Wages Subject to Treble Damages
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Nicholas F. Ortiz
2y ago
If your employer does not pay your earned wages on the date they are due, you are immediately entitled to triple damages on the late amount. If you are terminated, all wages, including vacation pay, are due on the date of your termination. If you resign, all wages are due on the next regular pay day. Also, if you are still employed and your pay is late, you also have the right to treble damages. I am highlighting this because today the Supreme Judicial Court issued its long-awaited decision in Reuter v. City of Methuen, SJC-13121 (April 4, 2022). In the case, the Methuen had terminated Ms. Reu ..read more
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Research Assistants and Overtime Pay
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Post-Baccalaureate Research Assistants (“RAs”) are notoriously underpaid and overworked in research programs all over the country. The budgetary constraints of grant-funded research programs often lead to understaffing, which in turn causes professors and other senior research staff to assign ever-increasing workloads to the RAs underneath them. This results in RAs having to work numerous overtime hours to satisfy their supervisors. For RAs who do not earn a salary of more than $684.00 per week, these overtime hours entitle them to compensation at a rate of 1.5 times their regular rate of pay ..read more
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Overtime Pay for Nurses, PAs, and NPs
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Now more than ever, nurses and other medical professionals are working long hours. Many of them are entitled to overtime pay. A federal court recently approved a $160 million settlement in a class action lawsuit brought by nurse practitioners and physicians’ assistants employed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The nurse practitioners and physicians’ assistants alleged that they were required to work overtime to update patient records and monitor and respond to patient-related notifications in the computer system, all without being paid. Under federal law, nurses, physicians’ assista ..read more
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Reading Commission Contracts: Your Unpaid Commissions Can Be Trebled Under the Massachusetts Wage Act
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
The Massachusetts Wage Act (“Wage Act” or “Act”) requires all earned wages to be paid within six days of the end of pay period. M.G.L. c. 149, s. 148. The Wage Act applies to commission payments as long as the commissions are “definitely determinable” and “due and payable” (i.e. as long as the payment in question is a commission, not a bonus (link). Id.  If your employer fails to timely pay your earned commissions, you could be entitled to triple damages, attorneys’ fees, and interest on the late payment. See DeSantis v. Commonwealth Energy System, 68 Mass. Ct. 759 (2007). Commissions are ..read more
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Law School Graduates and Attorneys: You May Be Entitled To Overtime Pay For Document Review Work
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Many recent law school graduates and newly licensed attorneys work on document review projects while searching for stable, long-term employment. Most document review companies hire employees on a project-to-project basis and compensate those employees with an hourly wage. For many projects, the applicable compensation policy provides that employees are to be paid at the regular hourly rate for all hours worked, including any hours worked in excess of forty per week. Depending on the nature of each project and the duties of document reviewers, this practice may run afoul of Massachusetts’ Overt ..read more
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Wage Claims for Uber and Lyft Drivers
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Recent litigation in Massachusetts has focused on whether rideshare drivers for companies such as Lyft and Uber are misclassified as independent. In the case of Cunningham v. Lyft, Inc., No. 1:19-cv-11974-IT, 2020 WL 2616302 (D. Mass. May 22, 2020) a Massachusetts federal judge recently ruled that that the defendant rideshare company, in this case Lyft, likely misclassified its drivers as independent contractors instead of employees under the Massachusetts independent contractor law. This is a preliminary ruling based on the judge’s view of the likelihood of success. The court held that Lyft ..read more
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Case Report: Conclusion of Six Flags Unpaid Overtime Class Action
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Our firm is pleased to announce the conclusion of the class action case we brought against Six Flags New England on behalf of thousands of seasonal employees.  After extensive litigation, the Suffolk Superior Court recently approved a settlement which resulted in a $4 million fund to compensate seasonal workers for unpaid overtime. In addition to significant overtime distributions to workers, unclaimed funds will be distributed to the Community Legal Aid of Springfield, Massachusetts, a legal aid organization located close to where a majority of Six Flags’ seasonal employees li ..read more
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My employer didn’t pay me, what can I do?
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Nicholas F. Ortiz
2y ago
If your employer has not paid you your paycheck, Massachusetts law guarantees you certain rights. First, your employer must pay you within six days after your pay period ends (seven days if you work a seven-day workweek). If you are fired, your employer must pay you all your earned wages on your last day of work. M.G.L. c. 149, § 148 (“any employee discharged from such employment shall be paid in full on the day of his discharge.”) Earned wages includes any earned, but unused vacation pay due “under an oral or written agreement” and any commissions that are “definitely determined and has ..read more
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IS MAINTENANCE OR REPAIR WORK SUBJECT TO PREVAILING WAGE?
Massachusetts Wage Law Blog
by Admin
2y ago
Can you guess what HVAC systems, electrical and plumbing systems, and even roads and sidewalks all have in common?  They are subject to wear & tear, break down, and often need maintenance and repair.  If you’ve spent much time driving on the pothole lined streets in Massachusetts, you know exactly what we mean.  Importantly, under certain circumstances that work may entitle a worker to payment of the prevailing wage rate.  Unfortunately, due to its fleeting nature, many workers performing these vital maintenance and repair tasks may not even know they should get paid a ..read more
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