[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: 29CFR794.141]

[Page 713-714]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
         CHAPTER V--WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 794_PARTIAL OVERTIME EXEMPTION FOR EMPLOYEES OF WHOLESALE OR BULK 
 
Subpart B_Exemption From Overtime Pay Requirements Under Section 7(b)(3) 
                               of the Act
 
Sec. 794.141  Workweeks when hours worked do not exceed 12 in any day 
or 56 in the week; compensation requirements.

    (a) The overtime pay exemption provided by section 7(b)(3) is 
``limited to 12 hours a day and 56 hours a week'' in any workweek; the 
exemption is provided ``for employment up to 12 hours in any workday and 
up to 56 hours in any workweek'' without any payment for overtime hours 
at one and one-half times the regular rate being required. However, the 
exemption from any such time-and-one-half payment is limited to 
workweeks when ``no more'' than the specified hours are worked and is 
contingent on payment to the employee in such a workweek of 
``compensation for hours between 40 and 56'' at a rate ``not less than 
one and one-half times the applicable minimum wage.'' (H. Rept. No. 
1366, pp. 12-13, 43, and S. Rept. No. 1487, p. 32, 89th Cong., second 
sess.) Thus, the exemption will be applicable to an employee otherwise 
eligible under the principles previously discussed in this part in any 
workweek when his hours of work do not exceed

[[Page 714]]

12 in any day or 56 in the week if, and only if, his ``compensation for 
employment in excess of forty hours'' is ``at a rate not less than one 
and one-half times the minimum wage rate applicable to him under section 
6'', as provided in section 7(b)(3). This means that in addition to the 
requirement of section 6, under which the first 40 hours of work must be 
paid for at a rate not less than the minimum hourly wage rate therein 
specified, the compensation requirements applicable to such an employee 
for whom the 7(b)(3) exemption is claimed include any increase in his 
regular straight-time pay rate for the hours worked in excess of 40 
which may be necessary in order to raise the wage rate for such hours to 
a level of 50 percent above the rate required under section 6. Of 
course, if the employee is employed at a regular straight-time rate for 
all his hours of work which is as great or greater than one and one-half 
times the minimum wage applicable to him under section 6, no increase 
for the hours in excess of 40 will be required under the provisions of 
section 7(b)(3).
    (b) The general minimum wage rate applicable to employees in 
employment that was subject to the minimum wage provisions of the Act 
prior to the effective date of the Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 
1966 is $1.60 an hour. Under section 7(b)(3) an employee of a wholesale 
or bulk petroleum products distributor to whom this rate is applicable 
must be paid at least $2.40 an hour for hours worked in excess of 40 in 
the workweek in order for the exemption to apply. Many employees of such 
distributors are subject to the $1.60 minimum wage rate under section 6 
either because they are traditionally covered as employees individually 
engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce as 
defined in the Act or because the enterprise coverage provisions in 
effect prior to the 1966 amendments (applicable to enterprises with an 
annual gross volume of $1 million or more including excise taxes) would 
subject their employment to the minimum wage provisions if the 1966 
amendments had not been enacted. In the case, however, of an employee of 
such a distributor whose employment comes within the minimum wage 
provisions only because of the 1966 amendments (which reduced the annual 
gross volume for covered enterprises to $500,000 on Feb. 1, 1967, and to 
$250,000 on Feb. 1, 1969, exclusive of specified separately stated 
excise taxes at the retail level), the minimum wage rate applicable 
under section 6 was $1.30 an hour until February 1, 1970, when it 
increased to $1.45 an hour. Beginning February 1, 1971, the minimum wage 
rate applicable to such an employee will be the same ($1.60 an hour) as 
that presently applicable to employment covered by the provisions of the 
prior Act. For employees subject to the $1.30 minimum wage rate the rate 
required for work over 40 hours under section 7(b)(3) was accordingly 
$1.95 an hour; for those subject to the $1.45 rate beginning February 1, 
1970, such rate is $2.175. A discussion of the present and prior 
coverage of the Act will be found in part 776 of this chapter, when a 
revision of such part discussing enterprise coverage is published.