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I'm curious to learn about how other jurisdictions from my own (the province of Ontario, in Canada) stack up in regards to IT professionals' ability to claim overtime. Is it common or uncommon where you work/live? Do you get paid overtime? Moreover, do you think that IT professionals should qualify for overtime?

Background
In Ontario, an "IT professional" is defined as "professionals who use specialized knowledge and professional judgement to work with information systems based on computers and related technologies." (http://www.labour.gov.on.ca/english/es/guide/guide_22.html#information)

This definition is so broad that it covers everything from tech support staff to software engineers. According to the Ontario Employment Standards act, an IT professional is exempt from sections VII and VIII of the act, which cover Hours of Work, Daily Rest Periods, Weekly/Bi-Weekly Rest Periods, Eating Periods, and Overtime. This means that there are no regulations for IT professionals in these areas. Naturally, it seems you'd be hard-pressed to find an ITP that can claim overtime in Ontario, and, I suppose, technically, employers here do not even have to provide you with time to eat or sleep.

(I've asked this over at HN as well, but I'm interested in hearing what StackOverflow users think.)

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StackOverflow users aren't here to provide legal advice. – Jonathan Sampson Sep 3 at 3:03
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Who's asking for legal advice? I'm asking whether or not you get paid overtime. – ntownsend Sep 3 at 3:04
I disagree with this being closed. There are 30 questions tagged professional-experience, only a handful of which are closed. A few random samples from this list include "When have you been put on a new project that was far more challenging than anything you’d worked on before?", "Graduate Student: Advice on what to do now?", and "How do I prepare myself for working with other programmers?", all of which seem as programming-related as this question, in that the question is about the working conditions of programmers and challenges they face outside of typing code into a machine. – ntownsend Sep 4 at 13:20

closed as not programming related by Jonathan Sampson, Cade Roux, rpetrich, John Saunders, John Sheehan Sep 3 at 4:24

7 Answers

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No. No overtime. Time-in leiu on a case by case basis.

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It depends on if you're a salaried employee or a contrator.

Salaried employees generally do not get paid overtime. At best they might get time in lieu for working evenings/weekends but a certain amount of overtime at key junctures tends to be expected. If you work for the government you may get flexi-time, meaning if you work an additional 5 hours this week you can take off 5 hours at some other point.

Contractors will get paid hourly, daily, weekly or a fixed price. If they're paid hourly they effectively get overtime. Fixed price you don't. You work what it takes. Daily is somewhat ambiguous as what constitutes a day? If you work 10 hours, is that more than a day? 11? 12?

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I have never gotten overtime for it work. But I do try to keep a to my 40 hours If I had to come in on sunday or on a holiday I might cut out early an hour for the rest of the week or something along that lines.

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From my experience it always depended on a company policy. Here are some options that I came across.

  • Overtimes were paid, but an "overtime" was defined as 2 or more hours of extra work. If you worked extra 1.5 hours, that was not an overtime and was not paid
  • Time worked overtime was considered "in lieu" and could be used later as leave
  • Overtimes were not paid, but also they were very rare

That's all from the salaried employee prospective.

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In the US, these issues are governed by FLSA guidlines. Most IT professionals are exempt (in that they are not entitled to OT pay), based on the FLSA's definition of 'Exempt Professional Job Duties.' The article is worth a read (if you're really bored and want to be depressed about all those unpaid hours ticking off the clock...)

Found the following excerpt from Here

However, there are special provisions which exempt some computer employees who might not otherwise qualify as "professionally" exempt. These include systems analysts, programmers (who "write code"), or software engineers. More specifically, the special computer employee exemption applies to workers who apply systems analysis techniques and procedures to determine hardware, software, or system functional specifications, or who design, develop, test or modify computer systems or programs based on user or design specifications.

I love the "write code." Classic...

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I'm a salaried employee and considered "management" so they can get around paying me overtime (I do not have anyone reporting to me). We're basically expected to work minimum 50 hours per week. I do not get paid for this overtime. I'm also am expected to handle on call, after hours support if we have production code issues, but this is generally handled via a rotation.

This is in Chicago, IL.

I'm paid very well for my time and have good benefits too.

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In my country unpaid overtime is illegal. Overtime must be paid 150% of your hourly rate and even 200% if at night, on sunday or holiday. You also cannot exceed 150 hours of overtime per year. I don't think IT is exempt from these general rules. Also work is defined as something you get paid for so unpaid overtime could not be covered by working agreement since it's not work by definition.

In practice unpaid overtime happens but is considered as favour to the employer not a duty of employee and employer can get sued for this if employee changes his mind later.

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What country is that? – Novelocrat Sep 3 at 4:04
Don't forget about Poland. ;-) – Kamil Szot Sep 3 at 4:18

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