
The Obama administration on Tuesday unveiled the final version of a long-awaited and controversial rule to extend overtime pay to 4.2 million U.S. workers, which marks one of the administration's most significant moves to address stagnant wages.
The rule, which has drawn intense criticism from business groups and Republicans, doubles the maximum annual income a salaried worker can earn and still be automatically eligible for overtime pay from $23,660 to $47,476 and requires that threshold to be updated every three years. It takes effect Dec. 1.
Officials said many workers will earn more money, an estimated total of $12 billion over the next decade, while others will work fewer hours for the same pay.
For the full story on nbcnews.com, click here.
Photo: iStock
Latest from Lawn & Landscape
- LMN partners with Attentive.ai
- Get to know the generations working for you
- Addressing addiction in landscaping
- Fairway expands national footprint with 6 acquisitions
- Graze Robotics opens new headquarters in Plano, Texas
- Addiction in the green industry
- Kress earns Sourcewell approval
- The best laid plans