1 / 118

Classification and Compensation Foundations

Classification and Compensation Foundations. Housekeeping. Roster completed at end of class today Break Restrooms Cell phones, pagers, text messaging Evaluation sent to your e-mail address Workshop counts as a requirement toward Pro3 certification—HR/Payroll Track

dore
Télécharger la présentation

Classification and Compensation Foundations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Classification and Compensation Foundations

  2. Housekeeping • Roster completed at end of class today • Break • Restrooms • Cell phones, pagers, text messaging • Evaluation sent to your e-mail address • Workshop counts as a requirement toward Pro3 certification—HR/Payroll Track • Do not need to do anything to get credit; it will be given automatically based on roster

  3. Our Objective • To increase your understanding of the university’s classification and compensation structure for UF staff, with emphasis on: • Describing jobs accurately • Understanding options that are available to ensure employees are classified and paid properly

  4. Today’s Agenda • To accomplish this, we will discuss various “building blocks” associated with a classification and compensation foundation: • Review the Fair Labor Standards Act • Overtime compensation • Explain UF’s classification system generally • Position classification vs. job description • Reclassification process

  5. Today’s Agenda • We also will: • Discuss various pay mechanisms • On-call pay, “call-back,” etc. • Review additional employment and lump sum payment (for use in limited situations) • Along the way, we’ll introduce relevant classification and compensation terminology that is useful to know

  6. In General … • Human resources (HR) is the function performed in organizations that facilitates the most effective use of people (employees) to achieve organizational and individual goals • At UF, HR functions include recruitment, classification & compensation, training & organizational development, benefits and retirement, employee and labor relations

  7. Human Resource Services Recruitment & Staffing Administration & Institutional Equity & Diversity Baby Gator Benefits, Retirement & Leave Administration Class & Comp Employee Relations Training & Org. Development Academic Personnel Retirement Benefits

  8. In General … • The Classification & Compensation Office partners with other HR offices—such as Recruitment and Staffing, Employee Relations, and Central Leave Administration—to ensure • Positions are classified appropriately • Employees are paid properly

  9. What Is …? • A classification and compensation system: • Provides a basis of common understanding through a system of class titles • Is designed to help ensure that staff positions similar in duties and responsibilities are grouped together • Facilitates administration of funds allocated for wages and salaries in an equitable and legal manner

  10. Why Is This Important?

  11. Classification and Compensation System • Helps us maintain an “equal pay for equal work” policy—thus avoiding inequitable treatment of employees • Aids in recruitment by establishing meaningful qualification requirements and salaries • Aids in clarifying and improving organizational structure • Facilitates better employee-management relations by ensuring clarity about the expected job

  12. Any Questions?

  13. Building Block: Fair Labor Standards Act

  14. Fair Labor Standards Act • The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) prescribes standards for wages and overtime pay, which affect most private and public employment • It requires employers to pay covered employees (nonexempt) • Overtime pay of one and one-half times the regular rate of pay • At least the federal minimum wage

  15. Minimum Wage(s)

  16. Fair Labor Standards Act • When discussing the FLSA, the terms “non-exempt” and “exempt” are used frequently—and they are confusing to many people! • What do those terms mean? • In essence: They denote what the employer’s duty is with respect to the payment of overtime

  17. Fair Labor Standards Act • “Exempt” • Employee is exempt from, or not covered by, the provisions of the FLSA that require the payment of overtime

  18. Fair Labor Standards Act • “Non-exempt” • Employee is not exempt from these provisions of—and therefore is covered by—the FLSA • Must be compensated with overtime for hours worked beyond 40 hours in a workweek • May be referred to as “hourly”

  19. Fair Labor Standards Act • What factors determine whether an employee is eligible for overtime? • Minimally, to be exempt from overtime, the employee typically: • Must be paid at least $455 per week regardless of the number of hours worked • And spend a significant portion of time performing the job duties that are considered Executive, Administrative, Professional, and/or Outside Sales

  20. FLSA—Executive Category • Employee's primary duty is the management of a department or subdivision in which the employee is employed • Regularly supervises or directs the work of two or more full-time employees • Has the authority to hire or fire employees or whose recommendations are given significant weight in employment decisions

  21. FLSA—Administrative Category • Employee: • Primarily performs office or non-manual work directly related to management or the general business operations of the employer • Exercises discretion and independent judgment in matters of significance • For example, someone who applies management policies

  22. FLSA—Professional Category • Employee performs work primarily requiring advanced knowledge in a field of science or learning • The advanced knowledge must customarily be acquired by a prolonged course of specialized intellectual instruction • For example, doctors, lawyers, CPAs

  23. FLSA—Professional Category • Alternatively, an employee could be classified as a professional if: • Primary duty is one requiring invention, originality, or talent in a field of artistic or creative endeavor

  24. Computer-Related Exemption • Certain categories of computer employees— such as programmers, systems analysts, and software engineers—can be classified as Professional employees and can be exempt from overtime • Tests must be met such as application of system analysis techniques as well as design, development, and creation of computer systems or programs

  25. At UF … • IT Entry—Non-exempt • IT Intermediate—Non-exempt • IT Practitioner—Non-exempt • IT Specialist—Non-exempt • IT Expert—Exempt • IT Senior—Exempt • IT Principal—Exempt

  26. On a Practical Level, What Does the FLSA Require?

  27. Fair Labor Standards Act • Employees in non-exempt classifications must account for all hours in the workweek • Non-exempt employees should leave their workstations during their regularly scheduled lunch periods • Conducting any job-related activity during scheduled lunch periods is time worked and must be recorded as such

  28. Fair Labor Standards Act • It is a supervisor's responsibility to ensure that unauthorized overtime is not worked • Non-exempt employees' time records must be approved by the supervisor • In approving these entries in the Time & Labor, the supervisor verifies the accuracy of the recorded time worked

  29. Overtime • Overtime is defined as work required beyond 40 hours in the workweek (not biweekly period) • UF’s workweek: Friday through Thursday • Paid leave such as vacation or sick time is not included in the calculation* *UPD exception per union contract

  30. Overtime • At UF, non-exempt (hourly) USPS and TEAMS employees are paid for overtime work or compensated with overtime compensatory leave (up to 120 hours) • In the event of a disagreement, it’s the employee’s choice • Overtime worked must always be compensated via pay or compensatory leave at “time and a half”

  31. Overtime Compensatory Leave • Upon reaching the 120-hour limit of overtime compensatory leave, employees must either: • Receive cash for additional hours of overtime worked or … • Use accrued overtime compensatory leave before receiving further overtime compensatory leave credits • Unused overtime compensatory leave must be used or be cashed out prior to the end of each fiscal year

  32. Any Questions?

  33. Regular Compensatory Leave • Full-time exemptUSPS employees required to work more than 40 hours in a workweek are eligible to earn regular compensatory leave on an hour-for-hour basis • Part-time exempt USPS employees earn regular compensatory leave when required to work more than their FTE • Maximum accrual: 120 hours of regular compensatory leave credits

  34. Activity: Case Study

  35. Building Blocks: Position Classification and Job Descriptions

  36. Position Classification • Based on duties and responsibilities of the job and not on the qualifications of the individual • Provides a general description of responsibilities associated with job titles • Many employees may share the same classification • Described via classification specifications or “class specs” • www.hr.ufl.edu/class_comp/classification/default.asp • Indicated by job code

  37. HR Representative “Class Spec”

  38. Job Description • More detailed explanation of role • Each USPS and TEAMS employee has his or her own job description • Associated with position number

  39. Pay Plans • A set of uniform pay practices for administering the university’s compensation program • Specify included classifications, leave and benefits eligibility, etc. • UF pay plans: University Support Personnel System (USPS); Technical, Executive, Administrative, and Managerial Support (TEAMS); Academic Personnel; Other Personnel Systems (OPS)

  40. Salary Administration Plan • Known as “Salary Adm Plan” • Is used in the myUFL system to identify pay plan (USPS, TEAMS, Academic Personnel, OPS), pay type (hourly/nonexempt or annual/exempt), and employment characteristics such as benefits • There are typically several Salary Adm Plans associated with each general “Pay Plan”

  41. How Do These Pieces Fit Together?

  42. Let’s Make It Real! • Marienne is an HR representative working in the Leave Administration office • Her position classification is HR representative, which is indicated in the myUFLsystem with job code 000829 • There are other HR representatives in the Office of Human Resource Services • All of them have the same position classification as indicated by this job code

  43. In the myUFL System

  44. Let’s Make It Real! • Marienne has her own position number: 00007136 • She is the only person at UF with that position number

  45. In the myUFL System

  46. Let’s Make It Real! • Marienne also has her own job description based on the specific job she does in Leave Administration • It provides more detail than the class specification used to describe what HR representatives generally do (which we saw earlier)

  47. Let’s Make It Real! • This position description is “on file” in the myUFL system • It can be viewed via Position Management to the Classification & Compensation Office by Marienne’s supervisor, Jennifer

  48. In the myUFL System An Instruction Guide is at the back of yourhandout that explainsthis process in moredetail.

  49. Let’s Make It Real! • Marienne is in the TEAMS pay plan because she was hired at UF after January 7, 2003 • The TEAMS pay plan defines her benefits and leave eligibility (among other issues) • There are some employees who are HR representatives that are in the USPS pay plan • With different benefits and leave eligibility • They are in the USPS pay plan because they were hired before January 2003 and did not elect to change to the TEAMS pay plan

  50. Let’s Make It Real! • Jennifer, Marienne’s supervisor, is also in the TEAMS pay plan even though she has a different classification than Marienne • Jennifer’s classification is Human Resources, Coordinator 2 • She has a unique position number • But her job code, 001298, is shared with other Coordinator 2s in Human Resources

More Related