CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

76F Hi 79F
Lo 68F

Recent Blog Posts

Supreme Court Rejects Home Care Wage Suit

By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | June 12, 2007

In a decision that will be welcomed by Americans struggling to pay for home care, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled yesterday that home care attendants hired through an agency are not covered by the federal minimum wage and overtime benefits.

In so ruling, the federal high court rejected a suit brought by a retired home attendant from Queens, Evelyn Coke. Ms. Coke, 73, had sued her former employer, Long Island Care at Home Ltd., for back pay.

A federal appellate court had previously sided with Ms. Coke. The unanimous decision, written by Justice Breyer overturns the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which sits in Manhattan.

Justice Breyer upheld Department of Labor exemptions of such workers from federal overtime pay and minimum wage regulations. The exemptions were part of an "Interpretation" of a 1974 amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act. The ruling applies only to home care attendants who are hired through an agency.

New York City had weighed in on the issue in a brief to the court, saying that its share of Medicaid costs would go up if home care attendants were better paid. The city estimated that it would need to raise its annual Medicaid payments to $1.871 billion, an increase of about $279 million, if the high court sided with Ms. Coke.

"The ruling properly deferred to the agency's exercise of authority expressly delegated by Congress to fill gaps in the legislation," a city lawyer, Susan Choi-Hausman, said in a statement responding to the ruling.

In its brief, the city has also questioned whether overtime pay would result in higher compensation for home care attendants. While some attendants currently work shifts as long as 24 hours, the city suggested that, were agencies ordered to pay overtime, they might simply introduce more shifts. Increasing the number of attendants who cycle through a home could result in a drop in the comfort level that a client has with an attendant, the city's brief argued.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

I don't think that the ruling of the court is correct since all of us Home Care workers are struggling... [MORE]

Monita Johnson 

Jun 14, 2007 08:41

Berkshire Lifestyle
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

Spitzer Staff May Have Broken Law in Bruno Probe

Council Members Push Pedal To Add Taxi Fuel Surcharge

Paterson's Tax Cap Plan May End Up Costing City

Shooter of Two in East Village Surrenders to Police

Port Authority Nears Deal With Church at Ground Zero

MTA Board Members Asking Albany for Help

NATIONAL ›

Obama Calls for Joint Approach to Terror at Berlin

Schumer Scolded Over Politics At Economic Hearing

Hurricane Dolly Weakens, Spares Levees

Weather Forces McCain to Cancel Event on Oil Rig Off Gulf Coast

Test Offers Hope in Combatting Cholesterol Drug Side Effects

Obama Plans Olympic Ad Buy

ARTS+ ›

Before, During & After the Fall: Dürer at MOBIA

Chaos and Danger in Architectural Design

Nameless, Homeless, Borderline Soulless: Ralph Fiennes Does Beckett

Up for Bid at Scope Hamptons: Collector Mentorship

A Victorian Neighborhood Remade

Dream Weavers Captured in Print