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Want to know if your internship is legal?
U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD) has developed the six factors below to evaluate whether a worker is a trainee or an employee for purposes of the FLSA:
If all of the factors listed above are met, then the worker is a “trainee”, an employment relationship does not exist under the FLSA, and the FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime provisions do not apply to the worker. Because the FLSA’s definition of “employee” is broad, the excluded category of “trainee” is necessarily quite narrow. Moreover, the fact that an employer labels a worker as a trainee and the worker’s activities as training and/or a state unemployment compensation program develops what it calls a training program and describes the unemployed workers who participate as trainees does not make the worker a trainee for purposes of the FLSA unless the six factors are met. Some of the six factors are discussed in more detail below.
Training Similar to Vocational School/The Primary Beneficiary of the Activity
In general, the more a training program is centered around a classroom or academy as opposed to the employer’s actual operations, the more likely the activity is training. Also, the more the training is providing the workers with skills that can be used in multiple employment settings, as opposed to skills particular to one employer’s operation, the more likely the worker is a trainee. On the other hand, if the workers are engaged in the primary operations of the employer and are performing productive work (for example, filing, performing other clerical work, or assisting customers), then the fact that they may be receiving some benefits in the form of a new skill or improved work habits is unlikely to make them trainees given the benefits received by the employer.
Displacement and Supervision Issues
Employers with bona fide training programs typically do not utilize trainees as a substitute for regular workers. If the employer uses the workers as substitutes for regular workers, it is more likely that the workers are employees as opposed to trainees. As well, if the employer would have needed to hire additional employees or require overtime had the workers not performed the work, then the workers are likely employees. Conversely, if the employer is providing job shadowing opportunities where the worker learns certain functions under the close and constant supervision of regular employees, but performs no or minimal work, this type of activity is more likely to be a bona fide training program; however, if the worker receives the same level of supervision as employees, this would suggest an employment, rather than a training, relationship.
No Job Entitlement/No Entitlement to Wages
Typically, before the work-based training begins, both the employer and the worker agree that the worker is not entitled to a job at the conclusion of the training period or wages for the time spent in training. The parties’ expectations regarding the compensation and job opportunities are relevant but not determinative. Even when such an agreement exists, hiring workers who finish the training program is considered in determining whether an employment relationship exists, and frequently hiring such workers suggests that the workers are not trainees. Finally, if the worker is placed with the employer for a trial period with the hope that the worker will then be hired on a permanent basis (even if the worker is not automatically entitled to a job at the end of the period), then the worker is not likely to be a trainee during the trial period.
Examples:
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