Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm asking because I do not wish to pay the lawyer hourly wage for him to do it. I thought this was a place where you can come and get advice... Was I wrong?
Yes, you can get advice here, but what people are trying to tell you is that in order to get completely accurate, 100 percent relevant to your own situation legal advice, you need to pay a lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can report them to the Dept of Labor. They'll take care of them for you, and order them to pay up.
Anonymous wrote:I'm asking because I do not wish to pay the lawyer hourly wage for him to do it. I thought this was a place where you can come and get advice... Was I wrong?
Anonymous wrote:If the lawyer is the one suggesting that you should get what is owed to you, why is he not also providing guidance on how to do that? Wouldn't his advice be better than a bunch of random internet strangers?
Anonymous wrote:If the lawyer is the one suggesting that you should get what is owed to you, why is he not also providing guidance on how to do that? Wouldn't his advice be better than a bunch of random internet strangers?
Anonymous wrote:Contract does not state anything about OT or salary. States I will make X hourly. I did not think anything of this till a lawyer was brought into it. He's one suggesting I get what is owed to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, basically, they offered you extra, OT hours at a lower rate. You chose to take the extra hours, knowing the rate. You had a choice to decline those extra hours and just work the 40, or, at any point, to quit and find a job that paid you a higher amount. But, you made an agreement with the parents to work at a lower, effective rate for those extra hours.
And, now that they lost a job and can no longer employ you, you want to sue them for extra money. Really classy.
Why shouldn't she? It was illegal for them not to pay OT. Tough.