A federal court declared Obama-era overtime rules invalid just in time for Labor Day. On August 31 the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas issued an order explaining that rules implemented under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) during the last months of the Obama administration overreached the Labor Department’s ability to interpret FLSA. The decision can be found here: Nev. v U.S. Dep’t of Labor, No. 4.16-cv-00731-ALM, (E.D. Tex. Aug. 31, 2017) (Memo. Op. and Order). The same court issued a preliminary injunction in November 2016 that prevented the rule from going into effect on December 1, 2016, as the Obama administration planned. The district court’s final judgment likely means the rule that more than doubled the previous minimum salary requirements to exempt employees from minimum-wage and overtime requirements is permanently defeated. Josh explains how the decision affects religious organizations. For more about overtime requirements, check out these: The basics of overtime rules—with Shelley M. Jackson and Pastor John Hickey (January 3, 2017) Which employees are covered by overtime rules?—with Shelley M. Jacksonand Pastor John Hickey (January 10, 2017) Does the FLSA apply to our church?—with Shelley M. Jackson and Pastor John Hickey (January 17, 2017) 1734 Stop using comp time with nonexempt employees (Aug. 22, 2017)

E.D. Tex.: Obama FLSA rule changes invalid; salary increase for exempt employees struck down (Sept. 4, 2017)

ChurchLaw&Tax infographic: "FLSA Classification Decision Tree for Churches and Other Religious Organizations" Subscribe to the Law Meets Gospel Podcast iTunes Google Play RSS Support the Law Meets Gospel Podcast Patreon.com Sign up to contribute an amount you choose for each episode the Law Meets Gospel Podcast publishes.