[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR553.211]

[Page 247-249]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
         CHAPTER V--WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 553_APPLICATION OF THE FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT TO EMPLOYEES OF 
STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS--Table of Contents
 
   Subpart C_Fire Protection and Law Enforcement Employees of Public 
                                Agencies
 
Sec. 553.211  Law enforcement activities.

    (a) As used in sections 7(k) and 13(b)(20) of the Act, the term 
``any employee . . . in law enforcement activities'' refers to any 
employee (1) who is a uniformed or plainclothed member of a body of 
officers and subordinates who are empowered by State statute or local 
ordinance to enforce laws designed to maintain public peace and order 
and to protect both life and property from accidental or willful injury, 
and to prevent and detect crimes, (2) who has the power to arrest, and 
(3) who is presently undergoing or has undergone or will undergo on-the-
job training and/or a course of instruction and study which typically 
includes physical training, self-defense, firearm proficiency, criminal 
and civil law principles, investigative and law enforcement techniques, 
community relations, medical aid and ethics.
    (b) Employees who meet these tests are considered to be engaged in 
law enforcement activities regardless of their rank, or of their status 
as ``trainee,'' ``probationary,'' or ``permanent,'' and regardless of 
their assignment to duties incidental to the performance of their law 
enforcement activities such as equipment maintenance, and lecturing, or 
to support activities of the type described in paragraph (g) of this 
section, whether or not such assignment is for training or 
familiarization purposes, or for reasons of illness, injury or 
infirmity. The term would also include rescue and ambulance service 
personnel if such personnel form an integral part of the public agency's 
law enforcement activities. See Sec. 553.215.
    (c) Typically, employees engaged in law enforcement activities 
include city police; district or local police, sheriffs, under sheriffs 
or deputy sheriffs who are regularly employed and paid as such; court 
marshals or deputy marshals; constables and deputy constables who are 
regularly employed and paid as such; border control agents; state 
troopers and highway patrol officers.

[[Page 248]]

Other agency employees not specifically mentioned may, depending upon 
the particular facts and pertinent statutory provisions in that 
jurisdiction, meet the three tests described above. If so, they will 
also qualify as law enforcement officers. Such employees might include, 
for example, fish and game wardens or criminal investigative agents 
assigned to the office of a district attorney, an attorney general, a 
solicitor general or any other law enforcement agency concerned with 
keeping public peace and order and protecting life and property.
    (d) Some of the law enforcement officers listed above, including but 
not limited to certain sheriffs, will not be covered by the Act if they 
are elected officials and if they are not subject to the civil service 
laws of their particular State or local jurisdiction. Section 3(e)(2)(C) 
of the Act excludes from its definition of ``employee'' elected 
officials and their personal staff under the conditions therein 
prescribed. 29 U.S.C. 203(e)(2)(C), and see Sec. 553.11. Such 
individuals, therefore, need not be counted in determining whether the 
public agency in question has less than five employees engaged in law 
enforcement activities for purposes of claiming the section 13(b)(20) 
exemption.
    (e) Employees who do not meet each of the three tests described 
above are not engaged in ``law enforcement activities'' as that term is 
used in sections 7(k) and 13(b)(20). Employees who normally would not 
meet each of these tests include
    (1) Building inspectors (other than those defined in Sec. 
553.213(a)),
    (2) Health inspectors,
    (3) Animal control personnel,
    (4) Sanitarians,
    (5) civilian traffic employees who direct vehicular and pedestrian 
traffic at specified intersections or other control points,
    (6) Civilian parking checkers who patrol assigned areas for the 
purpose of discovering parking violations and issuing appropriate 
warnings or appearance notices,
    (7) Wage and hour compliance officers,
    (8) Equal employment opportunity compliance officers,
    (9) Tax compliance officers,
    (10) Coal mining inspectors, and
    (11) Building guards whose primary duty is to protect the lives and 
property of persons within the limited area of the building.
    (f) The term ``any employee in law enforcement activities'' also 
includes, by express reference, ``security personnel in correctional 
instititions.'' A correctional institution is any government facility 
maintained as part of a penal system for the incarceration or detention 
of persons suspected or convicted of having breached the peace or 
committed some other crime. Typically, such facilities include 
penitentiaries, prisons, prison farms, county, city and village jails, 
precinct house lockups and reformatories. Employees of correctional 
institutions who qualify as security personnel for purposes of the 
section 7(k) exemption are those who have responsibility for controlling 
and maintaining custody of inmates and of safeguarding them from other 
inmates or for supervising such functions, regardless of whether their 
duties are performed inside the correctional institution or outside the 
institution (as in the case of road gangs). These employees are 
considered to be engaged in law enforcement activities regardless of 
their rank (e.g., warden, assistant warden or guard) or of their status 
as ``trainee,'' ``probationary,'' or ``permanent,'' and regardless of 
their assignment to duties incidental to the performance of their law 
enforcement activities, or to support activities of the type described 
in paragraph (g) of this section, whether or not such assignment is for 
training or familiarization purposes or for reasons of illness, injury 
or infirmity.
    (g) Not included in the term ``employee in law enforcement 
activities'' are the so-called ``civilian'' employees of law enforcement 
agencies or correctional institutions who engage in such support 
activities as those performed by dispatcher, radio operators, apparatus 
and equipment maintenance and repair workers, janitors, clerks and 
stenographers. Nor does the term include employees in correctional 
institutions who engage in building repair and maintenance, culinary 
services, teaching, or in psychological, medical and paramedical 
services. This is so

[[Page 249]]

even though such employees may, when assigned to correctional 
institutions, come into regular contact with the inmates in the 
performance of their duties.