Woman says she's owed $350,000

 
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Jan 20, 2008 - 08:13:10 CST
A Slope County woman who worked as a dispatcher for an oil field equipment and transportation company says she's owed money for more than 6,000 hours of overtime.

Noreda Mann of Marmarth is asking for more than $350,000 in a federal lawsuit against Hamm & Phillips Service Co., Inc., an Oklahoma-based business that also serves North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Kansas and Texas.

Mann's lawsuit accuses the company of refusing to pay her for 6,323 hours of overtime in a 19-month period between February 2006 and September 2007. That's an average of 123 working hours per seven-day week and 171/2 working hours per day.

Teresa Burnett, a spokeswoman for Hamm & Phillips, said she could not comment on details of the case, but said the company "is confident in its position and hopes to obtain a speedy dismissal" of the lawsuit.

"The only plaintiff in this lawsuit is a former, not a current, employee," Burnett said in a statement. "The lawsuit contains allegations that are clearly without merit, and the company denies any violation of federal labor law."

Mann and her attorney, Paul Ebeltoft of Dickinson, did not return phone messages seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Mann worked for Hamm & Phillips from Feb. 6, 2006, to Sept. 1, 2007. Her lawsuit describes her work as a dispatcher as being "directly essential to maintaining communication with crews, receiving maintenance calls, and tracking crew location, job status and crew needs" for workers in North Dakota and other states.

Mann claims she was required to be near the dispatch radio booth after regular working hours when she was at home in Marmarth, a town of about 140 people near the Montana border. "This requirement made it impossible for (Mann) to leave the immediate vicinity of the radio when she was supposed to be off work and was not being paid for her time," her lawsuit says.

Federal labor regulations say that any worker who is required to remain on call "on the employer's premises or so close thereto that he cannot use the time effectively for his own purposes" is working and should be paid.

"An employee who is not required to remain on the employer's premises but is merely required to leave word at his home or with company officials where he may be reached is not working while on call," reads a provision in Title 29 of the federal code.

Rich Kulczewski, a regional spokesman for the U.S. Department of Labor, did not return phone messages seeking comment.

Mann's regularly hourly rate was $17.50 per hour from February 2006 through Oct. 28, 2006, and $19.38 per hour from Oct. 29, 2006, through Sept. 1, 2007. At the overtime rate of 11/2 times the normal rate, she should have received about $175,018, her lawsuit said.

Mann is asking for an additional $175,018 as "liquidated damages."

Lisa Fair McEvers, North Dakota's labor commissioner, said state and federal provisions covering on-call pay are nearly identical.

"We do get calls from time to time, but it's not a real common issue," McEvers said. "Sometimes, there's a way we work it out without doing a formal complaint."
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Woman says she's owed $350,000
Comments

scott wrote on Apr 7, 2008 9:55 AM:

" I personally know Noreda, and she is 100% correct in what she is doing. I am currently taking to one of your largest companies for failure to pay overtime. North Dakota seems well known for this. If it's not taking an 80 work week, then splitting it over two weeks to avoid overtime, to just refusing to pay any overtime for 12 hour days.

For companies to hide behind a rubber backbone state and play the "victim" after stealing from employee's is not only moraly wrong, but illegal. I made the company I worked for MILLIONS, and they cheated my out of my overtime for 3 years. Same thing, they are playing the "victim".

I never had to make a living from stealing from workers, why can't North Dakota?? "

Mom of 2 wrote on Jan 21, 2008 3:35 PM:

" Why didn't she bring up wanting to be paid for this while she was working there? Ooh right because she didn't have a clue this was even possible. It took her this long to figure it out. Some get rich quick thing she wants to try to pull over on this company. Don't get me wrong, I truly believe that a person should be paid for doing their job but if she didn't like the rules after working there a week or month she should have quit then. Why did it take her a 19 month period while she was working and now another 4 months to figure this one out? Sounds fishy to me. "

Fossilman wrote on Jan 21, 2008 11:22 AM:

" That gal is a "joke"........................Needs to get a life and a new math book..(ha ha).. "

on call wrote on Jan 21, 2008 9:23 AM:

" doesn't ND have an on call rate? It isn't minimum wage. And why be so greedy? Time and a half for on call? does this woman seriously think she has a chance? Gee, she could've at least gave herself 8 hours of rest a night. That would be a LITTLE more believable! I hope she loses, simply for being greedy. "

No Sir wrote on Jan 20, 2008 9:03 PM:

" No lw, that is what you are saying. If people are performing tasks for the company, it doesn't matter if they are in Cancun, it is still work according to federal law. "

lw wrote on Jan 20, 2008 11:49 AM:

" Get Rich, Work from Home - So, what you're saying, is if you hired the neighbor kid to mow your lawn and you received a raise at work, then you would be obligated to pay that kid for an extra time of mowing when he didn't do it because you were making more money? If she worked the hours and the law considers them working hours, then she should be paid. How much money the oil company is or isn't making has nothing to do with it. You sound like another one of those people that wants a piece of the pie you didn't make. "

BS wrote on Jan 20, 2008 9:33 AM:

" I worked construction as a manager for twenty years, and worked alot of overtime. This lady is so far out there, she must think no one in this are can do math, there is no way she did that many hours that long. Good luck lady on the lies, and on collecting money you did not earn. "

Get Rich, Work from Home wrote on Jan 20, 2008 9:13 AM:

" Aw, those poor oil companies and oil related industries. They're having such a tough time, what with profits being so low, they have to resort to work from home scams. If only the price of gas was higher, then these companies might have enough money to actually purchase an extra part-time employee or two. "

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