Last week the U.S. Department of Labor announced it was changing its test for whether a company needs to pay its interns.
Before we get to the new test, let’s take a step back.
The Fair Labor Standards Act is a federal law that requires covered employers to pay non-exempt employees at least minimum wage ($7.25/hr) and time-and-a-half when they work more than 40 hours in a workweek. An intern is not an employee. Consequently, companies to do not need to pay interns anything.
Until Friday, the DOL considered someone to be an intern if he or she satisfied each of the following criteria:
On Friday, the DOL “clarified that going forward, the Department will conform to these appellate court rulings by using the same ‘primary beneficiary’ test that these courts use to determine whether interns are employees under the FLSA.”
What is the primary beneficiary test? I’ll allow the DOL to explain, from its new fact sheet:
Courts have used the “primary beneficiary test” to determine whether an intern or student is, in fact, an employee under the FLSA. In short, this test allows courts to examine the “economic reality” of the intern-employer relationship to determine which party is the “primary beneficiary” of the relationship. Courts have identified the following seven factors as part of the test:
Unlike the previous 6-factor rubric, the “primary beneficiary test” is flexible. Conceivably you could check less than seven boxes and still have an intern, rather than an employee.
Now, I see you.
I see you twisting your handlebar mustache, Sally, thinking about how you’re going to save the company money by firing half of your employees and replacing them with “interns.” Just remember that even though the “primary beneficiary test” isn’t as rigid as the previous 6-factor test, it’s still a test and your mileage may vary.
Or, you could live dangerously. I’m not recommending this.
I’m just saying the reckless companies — especially the ones with lots of money and principles — well, we employment lawyers like them.
This article first appeared on The Employer Handbook.