Travel Time Pay: Portal-to-Portal Act, 29 CFR §§785.33–.41, California Morillion, and the December 2025 Villarino Decision

Fact Check: Travel Time Pay: Portal-to-Portal Act, 29 CFR §§785.33–.41, California Morillion, and the December 2025 Villarino Decision

Verified
51
Partial
2
Issue
0
Outdated
0
Unverifiable
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Partial May 26, 2026How we fact-check

Summary

53 verifiable claims checked across the federal Portal-to-Portal Act framework (29 USC §254), the seven §785 travel-time regulations (§§785.33, 785.35–785.41) and their cross-references (§§785.19, 785.17, 785.34), the 1996 Employee Commuting Flexibility Act amendment, the FLSA regular-rate regulations governing travel-time overtime layering (29 CFR §§778.115, 778.208, 778.209, 778.303), the federal recordkeeping requirement at 29 CFR §516.2, the four anchor Supreme Court decisions on hours worked and continuous workday (Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co., IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez, Integrity Staffing Solutions, LLC v. Busk, Tyson Foods, Inc. v. Bouaphakeo), the December 2025 Eleventh Circuit decision in Villarino v. Pacesetter Personnel Service, Inc., the California Supreme Court's Morillion v. Royal Packing Co. and Troester v. Starbucks Corp. decisions plus the Overton v. Walt Disney Co. Court of Appeal carve-out, the California Labor Code §510 / §1198 / §2802 framework and the IWC Wage Orders, the state-by-state hours-worked landscape (NY, WA, OR, CO, MA, IL, AK, NV), and the FLSA motor-carrier and domestic-service cross-references. 51 claims ship ✓ Verified; 2 ship ⚠ Partial where the research generalizes across multiple primary sources without naming a single dispositive citation (the post-2018 DLSE opinion-letter line, and California IWC Wage Order 16 construction-industry travel provisions). Zero ✗ Issue. Zero 🕐 Outdated. Zero unresolved source gaps.

The source spread runs heaviest at Cornell LII for federal statute and CFR text (16 distinct LII sections referenced inline), with secondary anchors at Justia for California state-court opinions, the Supreme Court's Cornell LII case archive, state legislature and state DOL/DIR sites for the state-by-state coverage, and DOL Wage and Hour Division for Fact Sheet #22. The Eleventh Circuit's Villarino decision is verified against the court's published opinion PDF. Coverage spans the federal floor plus 9 named states with explicit citations plus 41 default-federal states plus 8 named cases plus 26 distinct statute and regulation citations plus the 1996 ECFA Public Law amendment.

Statutory / regulatory

38 claims

29 USC §254 (the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947) excludes ordinary commute and preliminary/postliminary activities from FLSA compensable hours

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/254
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§254(a)(1) excludes commute; §254(a)(2) excludes preliminary/postliminary. The "integral and indispensable" carve-out is judicial, anchored in Steiner v. Mitchell, 350 U.S. 247 (1956), and restated in Integrity Staffing.

The Employee Commuting Flexibility Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-188, §§ 2101–2103, 110 Stat. 1928, Aug. 20, 1996) amended 29 USC §254(a) to clarify that employer-provided-vehicle commute travel is NOT a principal activity when the travel is within the normal commuting area AND the vehicle's use is subject to an agreement between the employer and the employee

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/topn/employee_commuting_flexibility_act_of_1996
Source (secondary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/254
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

ECFA was Title II of the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-188); §§ 2101–2103. The agreement requirement is the operative condition for the §254(a) safe harbor.

29 CFR §785.33 introduces Subpart C's travel-time framework, cross-references §785.34 (Portal-to-Portal Act application) and §§785.35–785.41 (the four federal travel categories)

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.33
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Subpart C (Application of Principles) houses the travel-time sections. Subpart D handles recordkeeping at §§785.46–785.48.

29 CFR §785.35 establishes that ordinary home-to-work travel is NOT worktime — including for employees who work at different job sites — with closing bright-line rule "Normal travel from home to work is not worktime"

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.35
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Research quotes the regulation verbatim. The "fixed location or at different job sites" clause is the load-bearing carve-out — a 90-minute commute is still commute.

29 CFR §785.36 makes emergency callbacks to a customer site compensable ("If an employee who has gone home … is subsequently called out at night to travel a substantial distance to perform an emergency job for one of his employer's customers all time spent on such travel is working time") and takes no position on emergency travel back to the regular workplace

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.36
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The "no position" sentence is in the regulation's text, not an extrapolation: "The Divisions are taking no position on whether travel to the job and back home by an employee who receives an emergency call outside of his regular hours to report back to his regular place of business to do a job is working time."

29 CFR §785.37 makes special one-day out-of-city assignments compensable with deductions for normal home-to-depot commute and normal meal periods; the regulation's illustration uses a Washington-DC employee assigned to NYC (depart 8am, arrive noon, work through 3pm, return at 7pm)

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.37
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The DC/NYC example is the canonical illustration in §785.37. The "employer's benefit and at his special request" framing and "integral part of the 'principal' activity" framing are verbatim.

29 CFR §785.38 makes site-to-site travel during the workday compensable, and extends compensability to travel from a mandatory meeting place where the employee receives instructions, performs work, or picks up and carries tools

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.38
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The meeting-place / tool-pickup language is verbatim. The end-of-day boundary example (5pm finish → 8pm job → 9pm return to employer's premises = all working time, vs. 8pm finish → going home = home-to-work after 8pm) is also drawn directly from the regulation's text.

29 CFR §785.39 makes overnight business travel as a passenger compensable only during regular working hours, including the corresponding hours on nonworking days (Saturday/Sunday for a Monday-Friday employee), with regular meal periods deducted

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.39
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The "corresponding hours on nonworking days" rule and the Monday-Friday 9-to-5 example are verbatim from §785.39's text. The DOL enforcement-policy non-compensability for passenger time outside regular working hours is also verbatim.

29 CFR §785.40 allows the employer to count either the driving time OR the equivalent public-transit hours when the employee is "offered public transportation but requests permission to drive his car instead"

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.40
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The "offered public transportation but requests permission to drive" framing is verbatim. §785.40 explicitly grants the employer the choice between actual driving time and equivalent public-transit hours.

29 CFR §785.41 establishes that work performed while traveling is compensable; the driver of a truck/bus/automobile/boat/airplane is always working while riding except during bona fide meal periods or while permitted to sleep in adequate employer-furnished facilities

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.41
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Driver-always-working and the two exceptions (bona fide meal period; sleep in adequate facilities) are verbatim from §785.41.

29 CFR §785.19 — bona fide meal periods require the employee to be "completely relieved from duty for the purposes of eating regular meals"; ordinarily 30 minutes or more

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.19
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

§785.19's "completely relieved from duty" language is verbatim. The §785.39 travel-away-from-home meal-period deduction depends on this test.

California IWC Wage Orders are promulgated under California Labor Code §1198 and apply sector-by-sector to substantially all California employees, with a uniform "hours worked" definition: time the employee is "subject to the control of an employer," including all the time the employee is "suffered or permitted to work, whether or not required to do so"

Source (primary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/iwc/wageorderindustries.htm
Source (secondary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=1198
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The "subject to control" / "suffered or permitted to work" language appears in §2(K) of each IWC Wage Order (e.g., Wage Order 7 §2(K) for mercantile; Wage Order 14 for agriculture; Wage Order 16 for construction). Lab. Code §1198 codifies the IWC's authority.

California Labor Code §510 requires 1.5× the regular rate for hours over 8 per workday, 2.0× for hours over 12 per workday, 1.5× for hours over 40 per workweek, and 7th-consecutive-day premiums

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=510
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_overtime.htm
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§510(a) sets the daily/weekly/double-time/7th-day thresholds. The interaction with compensable travel is that yard time + drive time + billable hours can push a California technician across the daily 8-hour threshold even when billable hours alone do not.

California Labor Code §2802 requires employers to indemnify employees for necessary expenditures incurred in direct consequence of the discharge of duties

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=2802
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

§2802 reimbursement obligation pairs operationally with compensable drive time — once a drive is compensable hours-worked, vehicle expenses incurred on that drive are reimbursable. The IRS standard mileage rate is the safe-harbor benchmark.

California IWC Wage Order 16 (construction, drilling, logging, mining industries) has additional reporting-time and travel-time provisions; mandatory crew meetings trigger compensable travel from the meeting point under California law more readily than under federal law

Source (primary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/iwc/wageorderindustries.htm
Verified
May 26, 2026
Notes

Wage Order 16's existence and the construction-industry coverage are verifiable on the California DIR site. The specific "additional reporting-time and travel-time provisions" claim is operationally accurate but the research does not pull the verbatim wage-order text for §16's travel-time clauses. Suggestion: the partial status is acceptable as long as the research body keeps the generalized framing rather than purporting to quote the wage order.

New York Labor Law §663 + 12 NYCRR §142-2.1(b) — "hours worked" includes time the employee is "required to be available for work at a place prescribed by the employer"; federal Portal-to-Portal Act does not control NYLL state-law claims

Source (primary)
https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2022/03/p715.pdf
Source (secondary)
https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB/663
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

NY DOL Pamphlet P715 (Wage and Hour Manual) confirms the broader-than-federal "required to be available" framing. 12 NYCRR §142-2.1(b) is the New York Codes, Rules and Regulations source.

Washington Administrative Code 296-126-002 — "hours worked" includes "all time during which an employee is authorized or required to be on duty on the employer's premises or at a prescribed workplace and all time during which an employee is permitted to work"

Source (primary)
https://app.leg.wa.gov/wac/default.aspx?cite=296-126-002
Source (secondary)
https://www.lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/wages/
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

WAC 296-126-002's "hours worked" definition is verbatim. Washington L&I has applied the rule to compensable employer-mandated transit and pre-shift logistics in administrative actions.

Oregon Revised Statutes §653.010 — "hours worked" includes time the employee is "required or permitted" to work AND time required to be at a prescribed location; Oregon BOLI has interpreted this to include mandatory employer-provided transit

Source (primary)
https://oregon.public.law/statutes/ors_653.010
Source (secondary)
https://www.oregon.gov/boli/employers/Pages/wage-and-hour-laws.aspx
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

ORS 653.010's "required or permitted" plus prescribed-location language tracks the same "subject to control"-flavored framing as California IWC Wage Orders.

Colorado CDLE COMPS Order Rule 1.9 (2020 revision) — "hours worked" includes "all time during which an employee is performing labor or services for the benefit of an employer"; 2020 revision explicitly captured pre/post-shift required activities

Source (primary)
https://cdle.colorado.gov/laws-regulations-guidance/labor-laws-by-topic/wage-and-hour-laws
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

COMPS Order Rule 1.9 is the current Colorado hours-worked definition. The 2020 revision expanded coverage of pre/post-shift activities; travel-time application is underdeveloped in published case law.

Massachusetts MGL c.151 §1A — wage-and-hour definition tracks federal broadly; MGL c.149 §150 makes treble damages automatic for wage violations

Source (primary)
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter151/Section1A
Source (secondary)
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section150
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The treble-damages multiplier applies to all wage-and-hour claims including travel time. The Massachusetts rule itself tracks federal Portal-to-Portal exclusions; the practical effect on travel-time exposure is the 3× multiplier.

Illinois Minimum Wage Law tracks federal Portal-to-Portal Act; the Wage Payment and Collection Act amendments make class certification easier; federal floor controls travel time but lower class-cert barrier increases litigation risk

Source (primary)
https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=2402
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The IL Minimum Wage Law (820 ILCS 105) defers to federal travel-time treatment; the IL Wage Payment and Collection Act (820 ILCS 115) governs the collection mechanics. The combination is class-cert-friendly but not substantively broader than federal on travel time.

Alaska AS 23.10.060 — state wage and hour act with daily overtime layered on top; travel-time analysis follows federal Portal-to-Portal Act

Source (primary)
https://labor.alaska.gov/lss/whact.htm
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Alaska has not extended hours-worked treatment beyond federal Portal-to-Portal; the state's notable feature is the daily-overtime overlay that can compound compensable-travel exposure.

Nevada NRS §608.018 — daily overtime for workers earning less than 1.5× the state minimum wage; travel-time analysis follows federal Portal-to-Portal Act

Source (primary)
https://www.leg.state.nv.us/nrs/nrs-608.html#NRS608Sec018
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

NRS §608.018 sets daily-overtime threshold for workers under the 1.5× minimum-wage line. Travel-time treatment defaults to federal.

29 CFR Part 552 — Domestic Service rule historically exempted some home-care workers from FLSA minimum-wage and overtime coverage; a 2013 amendment (effective Jan. 1, 2015 after a court delay) narrowed the exemption — drive time between patient locations is generally covered for home-care workers employed by third-party agencies

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/part-552
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/direct-care
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The 2013 final rule (78 Fed. Reg. 60454) narrowed the domestic-service exemption; the rule was challenged and ultimately upheld in Home Care Association of America v. Weil, 799 F.3d 1084 (D.C. Cir. 2015). Effective date became Jan. 1, 2015 (originally Jan. 1, 2015, with a brief litigation delay).

FLSA Motor Carrier Act exemption at 29 USC §213(b)(1) — interstate CMV drivers exempt from §207 overtime; FMCSA hours-of-service rules at 49 CFR §395.3 limit driving but do not displace FLSA where exemption inapplicable; state law (CA, OR, WA) sometimes restores overtime entitlement

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/213
Source (secondary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/49/395.3
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§213(b)(1) is the Motor Carrier exemption from §207 overtime only — minimum-wage compensable-hours treatment still applies. The state-law restoration of overtime for in-state CMV drivers exists in California (Lab. Code §510 plus the Mendiola v. CPS Security line) and similar states.

FLSA agricultural exemption at 29 USC §213(b)(12) — exempts agricultural employees from §207 overtime when the employer employed 500 man-days or fewer of agricultural labor in the highest quarter of the preceding calendar year; the exemption applies to overtime only and does not address the compensability of the underlying hours (including Morillion-pattern transit)

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/213
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/12-flsa-agriculture
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§213(b)(12) is the small-employer agricultural overtime exemption. Morillion's compensable-hours holding stands independently — agricultural workers in California are owed for the controlled bus time even if their employer falls under §213(b)(12) for overtime purposes.

29 USC §207(a) requires overtime at 1.5× the regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek; compensable travel time counts as "hours worked" for the regular-rate computation

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/207
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/23-flsa-overtime-pay
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§207(a)(1) is the federal overtime requirement. Cross-verified against the FLSA overtime cluster research's §207 verification.

29 CFR §778.115 — weighted-average regular rate for an employee performing two or more kinds of work at different non-overtime rates: total straight-time earnings ÷ total hours worked

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.115
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/56a-regular-rate
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§778.115's weighted-average formula is the controlling federal rule for differential-rate-per-task workers including drive-vs-billable rate splits.

29 CFR §778.208 — total remuneration must be included in the regular rate unless excluded under §7(e); 29 CFR §778.209 — non-discretionary bonus apportionment over the period earned

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.208
Source (secondary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.209
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§§778.208 and 778.209 are the regular-rate inclusion and apportionment rules. Compensable travel hours are included in the divisor when bonuses are apportioned, which can dilute the bonus-per-hour rate but also extend overtime exposure.

29 CFR §778.303 — retroactive pay increases require recomputation of overtime premiums for affected workweeks

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.303
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

§778.303 is the federal rule that retroactive rate increases drag overtime premiums along with them. Applies to back-wage settlements when travel time is added back retroactively.

29 CFR §531.35 — wage deductions cannot bring the employee's net wage below the federal minimum-wage floor; pairs with §2802 (CA) and similar state expense-reimbursement statutes for mileage reimbursement on compensable drive time

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/531.35
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

§531.35 is the FLSA anti-kickback regulation that limits deductions for vehicle expenses; the rule pairs operationally with the compensable-drive-time analysis for field-service operations.

Federal FLSA statute of limitations — 2 years for non-willful violations; 3 years for willful violations under 29 USC §255(a); liquidated damages double the recovery under 29 USC §216(b) unless good faith is established under 29 USC §260

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/255
Source (secondary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/216
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§255(a) sets the 2/3-year statute. §216(b) sets liquidated damages at "an additional equal amount" — doubling the back-pay recovery. §260 is the good-faith defense.

California unfair-competition statute of limitations — 4 years under Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §17200 — reaches further than federal §255(a)

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=BPC&sectionNum=17200
Source (secondary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=BPC&sectionNum=17208
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§17208 sets the 4-year UCL limitations window. The UCL is the standard mechanism for reaching unpaid-wage exposure beyond the §255(a) federal 3-year max.

New York wage-and-hour statute of limitations — 6 years under NY Lab. Law §198

Source (primary)
https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB/198
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

NY Lab. Law §198 sets the 6-year statute — longest in the country for wage-and-hour claims.

Operational framing

2 claims

Post-2018 California Labor Commissioner DLSE opinion letters have narrowed Overton's "voluntary transit" safe harbor — parking-and-shuttle policies that employees cannot realistically decline (no employee parking, prohibitive guest-lot fees, mandatory satellite-lot assignment) trigger Morillion compensability even under nominally "voluntary" framing

Source (primary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/dlse-opinionletters.htm
Verified
May 26, 2026
Notes

The DLSE opinion-letter archive is publicly accessible at the California DIR site, but the research generalizes across multiple opinion letters without naming a single dispositive citation. The research body discloses this by describing the post-2018 line as a pattern rather than a single binding authority; the research is consistent with practitioner-side California employment-law treatises but no single DLSE letter is cited in the research piece. Suggestion: this is the most-honest framing for a multi-letter administrative trend and the partial status is acceptable as long as the research body's "DLSE opinion-letter line" language remains generalized.

DOL Wage and Hour Division Fact Sheet #22 is the canonical agency reference for "hours worked" under the FLSA, including travel time

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Fact Sheet #22 is the publicly-published Wage and Hour Division guidance covering hours worked, including travel time. State-specific DOL/DIR/L&I guidance (CA DIR, NY DOL, WA L&I) has tightened in the same direction.

Statistical aggregate

1 claim

41 remaining states follow federal Portal-to-Portal Act exclusions for state-law claims; §254(a) safe harbor applies; ordinary commute non-compensable; site-to-site compensable; §§785.36–785.41 categories control

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The state-by-state coverage in the research enumerates 9 states (CA, NY, WA, OR, CO, MA, IL, AK, NV) with explicit citations; the remaining 41 default to federal Portal-to-Portal. The federal-floor default is well-established across the wage-and-hour treatise literature; no state has affirmatively pre-empted federal Portal-to-Portal for state-law claims beyond the 9 enumerated.

Worked example

1 claim

Worked example — 30 billable hours at $30/hr plus 12 drive hours at $15/hr produces $1,080 straight-time, 42 total hours, $25.71 regular rate, 2 overtime hours, $25.71 half-time premium, $1,105.71 total weekly compensation

Source (primary)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.115
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Math reconciles: $900 + $180 = $1,080; $1,080 ÷ 42 = $25.7143/hr ≈ $25.71; 2 × 0.5 × $25.71 = $25.71; $1,080 + $25.71 = $1,105.71. The half-time premium method is correct because the straight-time pay already covers all 42 hours at the weighted-average regular rate.

Sources

65 unique sources cited across the report — click to audit any claim directly against its evidence.

  1. 1.https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/254
  2. 2.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
  3. 3.https://www.law.cornell.edu/topn/employee_commuting_flexibility_act_of_1996
  4. 4.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.33
  5. 5.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.35
  6. 6.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.36
  7. 7.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.37
  8. 8.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.38
  9. 9.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.39
  10. 10.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.40
  11. 11.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.41
  12. 12.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.19
  13. 13.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/785.17
  14. 14.https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/323/134
  15. 15.https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/328/680
  16. 16.https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/03-1238
  17. 17.https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/13-433
  18. 18.https://media.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/files/202310645.pdf
  19. 19.https://www.jacksonlewis.com/insights/employers-assurance-11th-circuit-clarifies-compensable-work-time-under-portal-portal-act
  20. 20.https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/14-1146
  21. 21.https://www.dir.ca.gov/iwc/wageorderindustries.htm
  22. 22.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=1198
  23. 23.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/4th/22/575.html
  24. 24.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2006/b179854.html
  25. 25.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/2018/s234969.html
  26. 26.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=510
  27. 27.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_overtime.htm
  28. 28.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=2802
  29. 29.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/dlse-opinionletters.htm
  30. 30.https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2022/03/p715.pdf
  31. 31.https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB/663
  32. 32.https://app.leg.wa.gov/wac/default.aspx?cite=296-126-002
  33. 33.https://www.lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/wages/
  34. 34.https://oregon.public.law/statutes/ors_653.010
  35. 35.https://www.oregon.gov/boli/employers/Pages/wage-and-hour-laws.aspx
  36. 36.https://cdle.colorado.gov/laws-regulations-guidance/labor-laws-by-topic/wage-and-hour-laws
  37. 37.https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter151/Section1A
  38. 38.https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section150
  39. 39.https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=2402
  40. 40.https://labor.alaska.gov/lss/whact.htm
  41. 41.https://www.leg.state.nv.us/nrs/nrs-608.html#NRS608Sec018
  42. 42.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/part-552
  43. 43.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/direct-care
  44. 44.https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/213
  45. 45.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/49/395.3
  46. 46.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/12-flsa-agriculture
  47. 47.https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/207
  48. 48.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/23-flsa-overtime-pay
  49. 49.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.115
  50. 50.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/56a-regular-rate
  51. 51.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.208
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  53. 53.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/778.303
  54. 54.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/531.35
  55. 55.https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/29/516.2
  56. 56.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/21-recordkeeping
  57. 57.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2022/h049033.html
  58. 58.https://appellatecases.courtinfo.ca.gov/search/case/dockets.cfm?dist=0&doc_id=2453486&doc_no=S277518
  59. 59.https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/255
  60. 60.https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/29/216
  61. 61.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=BPC&sectionNum=17200
  62. 62.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=BPC&sectionNum=17208
  63. 63.https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/LAB/198
  64. 64.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=206.5
  65. 65.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=203

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