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Administrative Exemption

The administrative exemption applies to a wide variety of employees. However, many employees whose jobs involve administrative work do not meet the administrative exemption test and must be classified as nonexempt.​​

                   Administrative Exemption Test

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To determine if an employee is exempt, consider the duties he/she performs as well as salary. An administrative employee is exempt from overtime pay if the employee meets all of the following requirements:
  • Has duties and responsibilities involving one or both of the following;
  1. Office or non-manual work “directly related” to your management policies or general business operations or those of your customers.
  2. The administrative functions of a school system or educational establishment or one of its departments or subdivisions engaging in work directly related to its academic instruction or training.
  • Customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment 
  • Regularly and directly assists a proprietor or an employee employed in an executive or administrative capacity; under only general supervision, performs work along specialized or technical lines requiring special training, experience or knowledge, or executes special assignments and tasks;
  • Is primarily engaged in duties that meet the administrative test and
  • Meets the salary test discussed in this section
  • Three types of administrative employees who may qualify for an exemption are:
  • Executive or administrative assistants to whom executives or high-level administrators have delegated part of their discretionary powers

Staff employees who are functional rather than department heads. This could include employees who act as advisory specialists to management, or to the employer's customers. Typical examples are tax experts, insurance experts, sales research experts, wage rate analysts, foreign exchange consultants, and statisticians. Such experts may or may not be exempt, depending on the extent to which they exercise discretionary powers. Also included in this category would be persons in charge of a functional department, which may even be a one-person department, such as credit managers, purchasing agents, buyers, personnel directors, safety directors, and labor relations directors. Employees who perform special assignments under only general supervision. Often, such employees perform their work away from the employer's place of business. Typical titles of such persons are buyers or field representatives.
                  “Directly Related” Duties Defined for                                           Administrative Exemption

The California Supreme Court held that work duties qualify as administrative when “directly related” to management policies or general business operations. Work is “directly related” if it meets two components:
  1. The work must be “qualitatively” administrative. “White-collar” employees engaged in servicing a business may be involved in administrative operations if such servicing includes advising management, planning, negotiating and representing the company. For instance, an insurance claim adjuster may meet this portion of the test if they perform activities such as making recommendations regarding coverage and negotiating settlements. “Quantitatively,” the work must be of substantial importance to the management or operations of the business.
  2. Duties that are routine or unimportant would not be considered “directly related” to management policies or general business operations.

There is still some level of uncertainty as to how this portion of the test will be applied, and you should consult legal counsel if you are unsure whether your worker’s job duties are truly administrative in nature. Remember that actual job duties, not the workers’ job title, are key to the analysis.

       Examples of Exempt Duties for an Administrator

Examples include:
  • Advising management
  • Planning
  • Negotiating
  • Representing the company
  • Purchasing materials and supplies
  • Promoting sales
  • Researching business opportunities
  • Analyzing business data
  • Determining company and/or personnel policies

​               Executive or Administrative Assistants

Executive or administrative assistants to whom executives or high level administrators delegate part of their discretionary powers may possess enough authority to qualify for the administrative exemption. Generally, these assistants can be found in large establishments where executives or administrators possess duties of this scope and which require so much attention that the work of personal scrutiny, personal attention to correspondence and conducting personnel interviews must be delegated.


   Examples of Nonexempt Duties for an Administrator

Examples of nonexempt duties that an administrator might perform include:
  • Performing routine clerical duties
  • Making deliveries
  • Operating equipment
  • Inspecting products
  • Tabulating data
  • Challenge of Administrative Exemption

California court cases have confirmed how difficult it is for an employee to meet the administrative exemption. Employers who misclassify employees as exempt may owe the employees unpaid overtime, penalties for missed meal and rest breaks, interest and attorneys’ fees.

Because employers do not track exempt employees’ hours, a court will rely on the employee’s evidence as to how many hours of overtime and missed meal and rest breaks are owed. Even if an employee does not recoup a significant amount for overtime and meal and rest break violations, the employee may have incurred large attorneys’ fees. The smaller recovery does not result in reduced attorneys’ fees.

Courts will focus on whether or not the employee in question is actually engaged in running your business or determining the overall course of its policies. Employees whose primary duties are not related to the company’s day-to-day business, who do not participate in policy making or do not have any impact on the company’s operation will not be eligible for the administrative exemption.


               “Primarily Engaged In” Defined for                                              Administrative Exemption

For purposes of the administrative exemption, “primarily engaged in” means that more than one-half of the employee’s work time is spent engaged in exempt work. This means an exempt employee spends more than 50 percent of his/her time performing:
  • Exempt duties. 
  • Work that is directly and closely related to exempt work.
  • Work properly viewed as a means for carrying out exempt functions.

      “Customarily and Regularly Exercises Discretion                    and Independent Judgment” Defined for the                                    Administrative Exemption

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For the administrative exemption to apply, the employee must “customarily and regularly exercise discretion and independent judgment.” This phrase means the comparison and evaluation of possible courses of conduct and acting or making a decision after the various possibilities have been considered. The employee must have the authority or power to make an independent choice, free from immediate direction or supervision and with respect to matters of significance. The decision may be in the form of a recommendation for action, subject to a superior’s final authority, but the employee must possess sufficient authority for the recommendations to affect matters of consequence to the business or its customers. With respect to the administrative exemption, this phrase has been most frequently misunderstood and misapplied by employers and employees alike in cases involving the following:
  • Confusion between the exercise of discretion and independent judgment, and the use of skill in applying techniques, procedures or specific standards.
  • Misapplication of the phrase to employees making decisions relating to matters of little consequence.
  • Misapplication of the exemption to employees engaged in production aspects of the employer's business as opposed to administrative functions. This is one of the most common misapplications.


                                              
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