Principal Activities
The activities which your employee is employed to perform are his or her
principal activities. These activities include any work of consequence
performed for your business -- no matter where the work is performed. Your
employee's principal activities also include all activities which are an
integral (or essential) part of his or her principal activities.
For example:
- When operating a lathe an employee will frequently, at the beginning of his
or her workday, oil, grease or clean his or her machine, or install a new
cutting tool. Such activities are an integral part of the principal activity.
Time spent in these activities would probably be hours worked.
- The time spent by a butcher sharpening knives and other tools is a part of
the principal activity the butcher was hired to perform and would probably be
hours worked.
Among the activities included as an essential part of a principal activity
are those closely related activities that are necessary for the performance of
the principal activity.
For example:
- If an employee in a chemical plant cannot perform his or her principal
activities without putting on certain clothes, changing clothes on the
employers premises at the beginning and end of the workday would be a
necessary part of the employees principal activities. The time spent in
changing clothes would be hours worked
- Some employees, such as nurses and machine operators, who replace employees
already on duty, are required to report to work before the beginning time of
their shift. This time is frequently referred to as "reporting time."
The extra reporting time is for the purpose of being made aware of what is
going on or receiving instructions to continue work already in progress.
This time is probably hours worked.
- Note: there are
special
rules concerning early relief or reporting time for certain public sector
employees. For more information about these special rules, please click on the
underlined text.
To review the
general
principles contained in the regulations, click on the underlined text. To
review the regulations which specifically address
custom,
contract, or practice or
Section
4 of the Portal Act, click on the underlined text.
If you have additional questions concerning time your employees spend in
preliminary or postliminary activities, please contact your local
Wage and
Hour District Office.
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