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CFR  

Code of Federal Regulations Pertaining to ESA

Title 29  

Labor

 

Chapter V  

Wage and Hour Division, Department of Labor

 

 

Part 780  

Exemptions Applicable to Agriculture, Processing of Agricultural Commodities, and Related Subjects Under the Fair Labor Standards Act

 

 

 

Subpart F  

Employment or Agricultural Employees in Processing Shade- Grown Tobacco; Exemption From Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay Requirements Under Section 13(a)(14)


29 CFR 780.519 - General scope of exempt operations.

  • Section Number: 780.519
  • Section Name: General scope of exempt operations.

    All operations normally performed in the processing of shade-grown 
tobacco for use as cigar wrapper tobacco, if performed prior to the 
stemming process and for such use, are included in the exemption. As a 
whole, this processing substantially changes the physical properties and 
chemical content of the tobacco, improves its color, increases its 
combustibility, and eliminates the rawness and harshness of the freshly 
cured leaf. In the process the leaves are piled in ``bulks'' of about 
4,000 pounds each to undergo a ``sweating'' or ``fermentation'' process 
in which temperature and humidity are carefully controlled. Proper heat 
control includes, among other things, breaking up the bulk, 
redistributing the tobacco, and adding water. Proper fermentation or 
aging requires the bulk to be reconstructed several times. This bulking 
process may last from 4 to 8 months. When the tobacco is properly dried, 
cured, fermented, and aged, it is moved
to long tables where the leaves are individually graded and sorted, 
after which they are tied in bundles called ``hands'' of about 30 to 35 
leaves each, which are then baled for shipment. Equipment required for 
the work may include a steam-heated plant, platforms, thermometers, bulk 
covers, baling boxes and presses, baling mats and packing, sorting, and 
grading tables. (See Mitchell v. Budd, 350 U.S. 473, 475.) Employees 
performing any part of this processing prior to the stemming process, 
including the operations named in section 13(a)(14), may come within the 
exemption if they are otherwise qualified and if the tobacco on which 
they work is being processed for use as cigar wrapper tobacco.
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