School District Automates Time and
Attendance Process:
Ensures Full Compliance with Federally-Mandated Regulations
When the Grenada, Mississippi School
District faced a lawsuit filed under the federal Fair Labor Standards
Act, the district learned an important lesson: accurate calculation of
regular and overtime rates for hourly workers is vital. In such
litigation, the burden is on the employer to prove actual employee hours
worked. Now, Attendance Enterprise from InfoTronics, Inc. automates time
and attendance processing with useful functionality such as full
compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act and support for multiple
job positions. Grenada School District benefits from biometric data
collection and a flexible rules engine to calculate accruals, overtime,
shift pay, and other federally-mandated rules.
About Grenada School District
Grenada School District serves the North Central Mississippi area with a
lower and upper elementary school, a middle school, and a traditional
four-year high school. The district also operates a career/technical
center, Alternative Education program and a GED program based out of the
Tie Plant School facility.
The Grenada Education Center is the home of the district's Adult Basic
Education Program, the Parent Resource Center, and the Grenada League
for Adult Development. In all, 800 district employees serve nearly 5,000
students.
Employee Litigation
Several years back, a group of Grenada School District employees filed a
lawsuit that requested the school pay unpaid overtime, plus damages,
attorney’s fees, and court costs. The workers citied the
federally-mandated Fair Labor Standards Act which requires employers to
keep accurate records of hours worked for nonexempt employees and pay
them time and a half for hours worked beyond 40 hours in a workweek. The
law also allows public employers to offer compensatory time in lieu of
overtime pay.
Grenada was not the only district to
experience such litigation. According to the Mississippi School Board
Association, attorneys held meetings throughout the state to recruit
support personnel, such as bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers,
secretaries and teacher aides to file claims for unpaid overtime. In
addition, the attorneys ran ads providing a toll-free number to
employees who believed they were due back pay for overtime worked.
In most districts, it was unknown
whether these employees actually worked overtime and were due back pay
for overtime worked because the districts had no records to disprove the
allegations. In wage and hour cases, the burden is on the employer to
prove overtime hours were not worked. Accurate time sheets are necessary
to prove actual hours worked.
Learning a Lesson
The Grenada School district, and other districts throughout the state,
learned first-hand that the FLSA is a complex law. After these difficult
issues were resolved, the district resolved to keep accurate time
records for nonexempt employees; make sure employees were correctly
classified as exempt or nonexempt for FLSA purposes; and ensure that
nonexempt employees were paid overtime or given compensatory time off
for hours worked over 40 in a workweek.
For Grenada District, proper compliance
with FLSA regulations required moving from a manual time and attendance
process to an automated calculation of employee regular and overtime
rates. Thus, the District turned to Concept Electronics, Inc. (Baton
Rouge, LA), who installed Attendance Enterprise™ from InfoTronics, Inc.
Attendance Enterprise is an integrated
time and attendance system that automates complex pay and benefit rules
to ensure accuracy and regulatory compliance. The system also optimizes
employee resources and reduces labor costs with features such as
flexible pay rules, employee scheduling, labor budgeting, automated
benefit accruals, attendance-based merit points, web access for
employees and managers, and extensive reporting and analysis
capabilities. Grenada School District uses the program primarily for
FLSA compliance.
The Road to FLSA Compliance
With Attendance Enterprise, the District easily set up groups for both
exempt and non-exempt employees. The software automatically determines
exactly what types of pay are to be included in the regular rate and
applies the Fair Labor Standards Act correctly.
Employees start their shift by checking
in at an InfoTronics hand reader. This biometric device eliminates
“buddy punching” and accurately verifies employees’ identities while
protecting their privacy. The system automatically polls 12 data
collection devices throughout the day, and up-to-the-minute data is
available at the district office, showing accumulated hours, overtime
and regular rates, and data for those employees performing multiple
roles (bus driver and cafeteria duties, for example) that in the past
were difficult to track manually.
At the end of each pay period, the
accumulated regular and overtime employee data time is automatically
downloaded into the District’s payroll software for check processing via
a custom routine developed by Concept Electronics.
New Methods Bring Benefits
Since switching to Attendance Enterprise, the district is in full
compliance with FLSA regulations. The InfoTronics system accurately
applies regular, overtime and credits to each shift, and accurately
applies payment for multiple-role employees. Employee data is available
instantly at the district office for departmental monitoring of
overtime. Supervisors can make schedule adjustments as needed for
cafeteria staff, bus drivers, maintenance, secretarial, clerical, and
instructional assistants.
The new methods have also streamlined
the district office operations. When employee data was tracked manually
on paper time cards, district staff spent hours each month manually
tabulating and verifying pay totals. Now it is a matter of minutes to
compile pay period totals. Also, the district accumulates assistant
teacher regular and overtime rates, which were not tracked at all in the
past due to cumbersome manual methods.
Attendance Enterprise generates useful
reports for the district, including overtime summaries per department
that are used to determine future staffing needs; pay exceptions by job
record numbers; and missed punch reports for ease of check generation.
Tardy reports are also useful, and help the district monitor employee
performance.
In all, the Grenada district office is
confident that Attendance Enterprise provides full compliance with the
Fair Labor Standards Act. The district has alleviated the burden of
tracking employee time and attendance with biometric data collection
devices, and automated processing of overtime, regular, and
multiple-role pay. In the upcoming months, the district will automate
employee scheduling, and implement Attendance Enterprise leave
management features which makes it easier for employees and
adniminitrative staff to track personal leave, vacation, and sick time. |