In your research, did you determine the first exception to ELM 432.32's 12-hour restriction is not applicable to regular rural craft employees? If so, how?
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I agree that all hours a regular rural carrier actually works over 12 in one service day is paid as FLSA Overtime (150% x hourly rate) as opposed to some different specified rate or term associated with a rate (e.g., penalty overtime).
However, that applied rate only answers
what compensation rate a regular rural carrier must receive
if they actually work greater than 12 hours in a service day. It does not relieve management from their ELM 432.32 obligation to keep regular rural craft employees from working over 12 hours in a service day.
The first exception in ELM 432.32 restricts "working greater than 12 hours in a service day" by default unless the NRLCA agreement designates otherwise, and I've seen nothing that "designates otherwise."
If such designation existed, it wouldn't be placed with FLSA payment rules under Article 9,
Compensation, Salaries, and Wages, but instead would be in Article 8,
Hours of Work.
Additionally, since the general rule from ELM 432.32
restricts, that would require a specific rule to
permit, and such
specific rule would need specifically expressed and not implied. This notion is seen in the other union's agreements.
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If I've overlooked something, I hope you or someone here would point it out.