Unpaid Wages Revisited: I’m Owed Wages. What Are My Rights?

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Are you owed wages from your employer, especially now during these trying and uncertain times due to COVID-19? As we outlined in our June 2019 blog, you have different options for pursuing a claim against your employer for non-payment of wages. Today, we are expanding on those rights so that employees are armed with information on how to recover wages due to them.

Many employees may be surprised to learn that your employer has no certain time period to pay you for your work. While there is no certain time frame that you MUST be paid, if you work in counties like Hillsborough or Pinellas County, there are wage theft ordinances that may apply. For example, under both county ordinances, reasonable time for payment of wages “shall be presumed to be no later than 14 calendar days from the date on which the work is performed unless the employer has established, by policy or practice, a pay schedule whereby employees earn and are consistently paid wages according to regularly recurring pay periods in which case such pay schedule shall govern.”

According to the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), when the regular payday for the last pay period you worked has passed and you have not been paid, you may contact the Department of Labor.

How do I go after my employer for what I am owed?