cbg
I'm a Northern Girl
That's not what he's doing. He is not changing the employee's status; he's closing down for two weeks.
Even an exempt employee need not be paid if they do NO work during the entire work week. If the closure exactly matches the work weeks (which I admit we do not know is the case) the exempt status is not invalidated at all. But even if it doesn't, the employer is not changing the status back and forth; he is taking a one-time action which causes a temporary suspension of the status. Each workweek stands alone. The exempt status is not determined by the announcement of a yearly salary and if what this OP is referring to actually is an offer letter and not a contract, the amount in the offer letter is, for the purpose of determining the exempt status, meaningless. As long as the salary floor is met each work week, the job duties and only the job duties are relevant. Not what the job status was last week or next week.
Now, if the employer were calling the employee exempt one week to avoid overtime and then calling her exempt the next week when she didn't work any extra hours, I'd agree. But a single closure that may or may not affect things at all is not the same thing.
Even an exempt employee need not be paid if they do NO work during the entire work week. If the closure exactly matches the work weeks (which I admit we do not know is the case) the exempt status is not invalidated at all. But even if it doesn't, the employer is not changing the status back and forth; he is taking a one-time action which causes a temporary suspension of the status. Each workweek stands alone. The exempt status is not determined by the announcement of a yearly salary and if what this OP is referring to actually is an offer letter and not a contract, the amount in the offer letter is, for the purpose of determining the exempt status, meaningless. As long as the salary floor is met each work week, the job duties and only the job duties are relevant. Not what the job status was last week or next week.
Now, if the employer were calling the employee exempt one week to avoid overtime and then calling her exempt the next week when she didn't work any extra hours, I'd agree. But a single closure that may or may not affect things at all is not the same thing.