Connecticut state law, like the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (โFLSAโ), requires employers to pay non-exempt employees one-and-one-half times their regular rate of pay for any hours worked in a workweek in excess of 40. A Connecticut Superior Court has held that the fluctuating workweek method (โFWWโ) of overtime calculation complies with Connecticut state wage law. See Roach v. Moran Foods, No. HHD-CV-11-6023386-S (Conn. Super. Mar. 16, 2012). The court reasoned that because the Connecticut Legislature identified in the wage law (C.G.S.A. ยง 31-76(b)(1)) a specific category of employees (i.e., delivery drivers) to which the FWW method may not apply, the intent of the Legislature was to allow the FWW to apply to other employees.
Home > State Law Articles > Connecticut > Wage & Hour (CT) > Connecticut Court Upholds Use of Fluctuating Workweek Method to Pay Salaried Non-Exempt Employees