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<title>Not Enough Golf</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/30723.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
On a Friday afternoon in October 1988, the telephone rang at Pierce Processing,
a small engineering consulting company near Cincinnati. On the other end was an
attorney with the U.S. Department of Labor.&lt;p&gt;
At the time, company owner William Pierce had built his five-year-old firm into
an organization of 40 engineers and designers earning up to $70,000 a year. The
company had offices in Louisville and Detroit as well as Cincinnati, contracts
with Procter &amp;amp; Gamble and other &lt;em&gt;Fortune&lt;/em&gt; 500 companies, and annual
revenue of $1.7 million. Pierce was planning to buy the building where his
company was headquartered.&lt;p&gt;
Today, Pierce has been out of business since 1993, the same year he and his
wife lost their $375,000 home to foreclosure. He's more than $100,000 in debt,
owns no property to speak of, and has no bank account, lest the federal
government or unpaid business creditors seize any money he puts into it. He has
surrendered several patents because he could not pay the maintenance fees. &lt;p&gt;
Pierce, his wife, Janet, and their three children live in a small home owned by
his mother. He drives a 1988 automobile with 190,000 miles on its odometer. He
can't get a job as an engineer, so he teaches math at a private high school for
about one-fifth of what he once made. He is constantly getting phone calls from
creditors, and he worries that his 17-year-old daughter will not get a college
education because his credit rating is so bad that he can't co-sign for a
student loan.&lt;p&gt;
All due to events set in motion by that phone call. What crime did Bill Pierce
commit to bring upon himself such punishment? He let his employees take a few
hours off from work to play golf, go fishing, or tend to personal chores. If
they did not claim the hours as vacation time or make them up later in the
two-week pay period, he made deductions from their paychecks.&lt;p&gt;
Although experts in employment law and personnel managers at big companies
today know that docking salaried employees in such situations is a no-no, it
was not widely known in 1988, because the DOL had not yet disseminated
information about this interpretation of the law. Pierce had no way of knowing
his policy violated DOL regulations. He assumed that arranging for time off was
a matter to be resolved between him and his employees. It was a dangerous
assumption.&lt;p&gt;
On the phone that day was Kenneth Walton, a DOL attorney who asked Pierce if he
was &quot;ready to negotiate.&quot; Puzzled, Pierce asked, &quot;What do you mean?&quot;&lt;p&gt;
Four months earlier in May, a DOL compliance officer named Sara Cazel had
conducted a three-day audit of company records covering a two-year period.
Cazel later testified that the audit was prompted by a complaint, a fact she
had not disclosed to Pierce. After Cazel completed her audit, Pierce received
no notice from the department about audit filings until Walton's phone call.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Well, if you're not willing to negotiate,&quot; said Walton, &quot;we'll just file a
lawsuit.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Don't I have a right to know what I did wrong?&quot; Pierce asked.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Yes.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Well, can't you tell me?&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Not if you're not willing to negotiate,&quot; said Walton. &quot;I'll let the court
system tell you what you did wrong.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
Walton finally let Pierce have 10 days to arrange a meeting with DOL officials
in Cincinnati, and he promised to mail him a copy of the audit report. What
Pierce received from Walton, however, was just a notice that he owed $21,254,
with no details.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
He soon learned from department officials that the DOL objected to his
company's flextime policy for salaried employees. In court documents, Walton
acknowledged that Pierce's employees voluntarily took time off for &quot;golf,
fishing and flying model airplanes, as well as family and personal needs.&quot; But
DOL officials said that by deducting money from their paychecks when they did
not make up the time, Pierce was treating them like hourly workers instead of
salaried employees. The DOL said the illegal deductions totaled $3,100. &lt;p&gt;
Because of the deductions, Pierce was told, his employees could not be
considered salaried, so he owed them $21,254 in unpaid overtime. Even though
Pierce had classified his employees as salaried, his company had paid about
$40,000 in overtime during the audit period--but at a straight hourly rate
rather than time and a half. What he owed, said the DOL, was the total he
should have paid minus the $40,000 he had paid.&lt;p&gt;
When Pierce first discussed the problem with his attorney, they both believed
it would be easily resolved. They were wrong. Says Pierce, &quot;It's astonishing
that such a minor little thing, such a trifle, could end up turning into such
needless and unwarranted litigation and this bizarre experience, this
monstrosity.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
The Better Government Bureau, a citizens group based in Canton, Ohio, agrees.
&quot;It is hard to believe that what happened to Bill could happen in America,&quot; it
said in its newsletter. &quot;Idiotic rules and overzealous regulators have nearly
ruined Bill's life....Bill's crime? He allowed his employees to pick and choose
their own work schedule.&quot; &lt;em&gt;The Cincinnati Enquirer&lt;/em&gt; called the case &quot;an
American horror story&quot; that shows how federal regulations and litigation &quot;can
unjustly crush citizens, destroy businesses and kill jobs.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
As Pierce learned more about DOL regulations, he discovered how bizarre and
byzantine they can be. He found that he could have avoided a violation if his
employees had taken an entire day off rather than part of a day. &quot;If an
employee is absent for a day or longer to handle personal affairs,&quot; the
regulations say, &quot;his salaried status will not be affected if deductions are
made from his salary for such absences.&quot; In a sense, then, what Pierce did
wrong was failing to insist that the golfers take the whole day off instead of
just three hours.&lt;p&gt;
Another thing Pierce shouldn't have done, it turned out, was to be so
meticulous in his records of actual hours worked. He did this to avoid billing
his clients for time when his employees had gone golfing or fishing. It was in
his billing records, not in his payroll records, where Sara Cazel found the
information on which the DOL based its claims.&lt;p&gt;
In the lawsuit that it filed against Pierce in January 1989, the DOL alleged
that he had willfully violated the Fair Labor Standards Act. The lawsuit said
Pierce's willfulness increased the total amount he owed, including penalties
and double damages, to nearly $50,000.&lt;p&gt;
Pierce and his lawyer tried to reach a settlement with the DOL. They cited a
&quot;window of correction&quot; in the regulations: &quot;Where a deduction is
inadvertent...the [salary basis] exemption will not be considered to have been
lost if the employer reimburses the employee for such deductions and promises
to comply in the future.&quot; Pierce offered to settle the case by reimbursing
employees the $3,100 that the DOL claimed had been improperly deducted. He said
his company had already changed its flextime policy to be in compliance.&lt;p&gt;
The DOL would not budge, insisting on payment of the full amount based on the
allegation of willfulness. Yet moments after Pierce's trial in U.S. District
Court began in February 1992, Walton told the judge, &quot;We made an allegation of
a willful violation in this particular case, and we're withdrawing that
allegation.&quot; He gave no explanation.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
By that time--more than three years after Walton's phone call--Pierce
Processing was on the brink of collapse. During 1991, annual revenue plunged
almost 60 percent. The main reason for the precipitous decline, says Pierce,
was the time the case forced him to be away from his business: hundreds of
hours to research records and make calculations for replies to lengthy
interrogatories from DOL attorneys. He was the company's entire marketing and
business development department, and had little time left for that job. &lt;p&gt;
Business expenses were not declining, however, and the company was still
obligated under office rental, equipment lease, and business loan contracts.
Pierce was taking little pay, often none at all, and had begun to lay off
employees. He now realizes he kept some on the payroll too long. &quot;I tried to
keep the business going and keep the employees,&quot; he says, &quot;but I held on longer
than I should have.&quot; &lt;p&gt;
In March 1992 U.S. Magistrate Jack Sherman ruled that Pierce could meet labor
department requirements by reimbursing employees for the $3,100 in deductions,
as he had repeatedly offered to do. Sherman disagreed with the DOL's contention
that Pierce's deductions meant that his employees could not be considered
salaried. &quot;All other aspects of this case,&quot; he said, &quot;point to a situation in
which the employer intended...to operate within the letter and spirit of the
Act.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
At that point, however, Pierce was in such financial distress that he could not
scrape together the $3,100. Nor could he borrow it through normal channels. In
February 1993, with reimbursement still unpaid, Sherman reversed his ruling.
His judgment was for $10,842, plus court costs. (Part of the overtime amount
was dropped due to a time limit.)&lt;p&gt;
Thousands of dollars in debt to his attorney, Pierce decided to continue the
fight on his own--even though there was nothing for him to win except
vindication. His business and house were gone, and he was deep in debt. The
chance of recovering damages from the government was remote. Yet he continued
to file appeals, and he still has not given up.&lt;p&gt;
In retrospect, Pierce acknowledges that it might have been prudent to file for
bankruptcy or to try borrowing the $3,100 from a relative or friend to pay the
judgment and end the case. As for bankruptcy, he says, &quot;I don't believe in
doing things that way. I've kept in touch with my creditors about my intentions
to pay them as soon as I can, and most of them are cooperative and
understanding.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
As for his fight: &quot;I'm enough of a Don Quixote to believe I'm going to beat
that windmill. If you just roll over dead, you just encourage the government to
keep running over people. If I don't win, they may go after other small
companies, too. But I'm committed to win, to prove that there really is liberty
and justice for all in this country.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">30723@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Aug 1998 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (James Dygert)</author>
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