| 1. | Define work unit first. E.g., miles, loading,
unloading, other. |
||
| 2. | Average number of work units | = |
Average number of
work units
accomplished per week |
per hour |
Average number of hours projected to be worked per week |
||
| 3. | Weekly Base Rate | = | Number of units per
hour x 40 hours x base
rate of pay |
| 4. | Weekly Overtime rate | = | Number of units per
hour x number of hours
over 40 x overtime rate
of pay |
| 5. | Total weekly pay | = | Weekly base rate plus
weekly overtime rate |
| 6. | Uniform rate of pay | = |
Total weekly pay |
Total work units |
|||
| Example: | A truck driver is paid on a mileage basis for a two hundred thirty mile trip performed about ten times a week. The base rate of pay is twenty cents a mile. The overtime rate of pay is thirty cents a mile. The average length of the trip is four and one-half hours. |
| 1. | 2300 mi. divided by per week |
45 hours per week | = | 51.1 miles per hour |
|
2. |
(a) |
51.1 miles/hour times 40 hours times .20/ mile = $408.80 |
|||
| (b) | 51.1 miles/hour times 5 hours = 255.5 miles | ||||
| (c) | 255.5 miles times .30/mile = $76.65 | ||||
| (d) | $408.80 plus $76.65 = $485.45 divided by 2300 miles = 21.1 cents mile | ||||
| Note 1: | On March 1, 2007, the Washington state supreme court ruled that overtime rate of pay includes hours worked within and outside the state of Washington for Washington-based employees. Bostain v. Food Express, Inc., 159 Wn.2d 700, 153 P.3d 846 (2007). |
| Note 2: | The adoption date of this subsection is October 21, 2008. |