Oregon Employee Work Schedules Law Poster
The Oregon Employee Work Schedules Law is an Oregon general labor law poster poster provided for businesses by the Oregon Bureau Of Labor and Industry. This notification is required for some employers, such as retail, hospitality, and food services.
▶ Your employer must give you a work schedule in writing at least 14 calend\ ar days in advance. It must be posted and easily visible and include all work shifts/on-ca\ ll shifts. You may decline shifts that are not included in the written work schedule. ▶ You have the right to rest between shifts. Unless you request or agree to it, you can’t be scheduled to work during the first 10 hours after the previous calen\ dar day’s work or on-call shift OR the first 10 hours following the end of work that spanned two calendar days. If you are scheduled for a back to back shift within 10 hours, your employer must pay you ti\ me-and- a-half your regular pay rate. ▶ Your employer must pay you additional compensation if they change your sc\ hedule less than 14 days ahead the start of the schedule. If you request to work additional shifts or make changes, this extra pay is not required. Other exceptions include c\ hanges of less than 30 minutes, disciplinary suspensions, staff shortages, if you agree to be\ on the voluntary standby list, and a few others. Learn more at oregon.gov/boli. » You must get an extra hour of pay at your regular rate plus wages earned \ if your employer adds more than 30 minutes of work to your shift, changes the date, start time, or end time of your shift with no loss of hours, or schedules you for an extra work or on-call shift » You must get one-half of your regular rate of pay, per hour, for each scheduled hour that you do not work if your employer subtracts hours from your shift before or after you report for duty, changes the date or start time/end time of your shift resulting in a loss of hours, cancels your shift, or does not ask you to work when you are scheduled for an on-call shift ▶ You have the right to provide input into your schedule. You may identify limitations or changes in your availability including child care needs. You may request not to be scheduled for work shifts during certain times or at certain locations. Your employer is not required to grant your requests, but they may not retaliate against you for making them. ▶ When you’re hired: Your employer must give you a written estimate of your work schedule that\ includes the average number of hours you can expect to work and if/how y\ ou will be expected to work on-call shifts. ▶ Voluntary standby list: Your employer must give you information about their voluntary standby list, which is an opt-in list they can keep of people willing to work ad\ ditional hours due to unanticipated customer needs or unexpected absences. Retail, hospitality, and food services employers must follow predictive work schedule rules if they employ at least 500 workers worldwide. This law applies to workers whose work is related to retail, hospitality, and food service. Temporary or leased workers and exempt salaried workers are not covered by this law. PREDICTIVE SCHEDULING OREGON LAWS Protect You At Wo rk July 2022 - June 2023 If your employer isn’t following the law or something feels wrong, give us a call. The Bureau of Labor and Industries is here to enforce these laws and protect you. CONTACT US Call: 971-245-3844 Email: [email protected] Web: oregon.gov/boli Se habla español.
Get an Oregon all-in-one labor law poster
Instead of printing out pages of mandatory Oregon and Federal labor law posters, you can purchase a professional, laminated all-in-one labor law poster that guarantees compliance with all Oregon and federal posting requirements. Fully updated for December 2017!
Get All-In-One Poster NowMore Oregon Labor Law Posters 14 PDFS
Minimum-Wage.org provides an additional thirteen required and optional Oregon labor law posters that may be relevant to your business. Be sure to also print and post all required state labor law posters, as well as all of the mandatory federal labor law posters.
Oregon Poster Name | Poster Type |
---|---|
Required Captive Audiences | Workers Rights Law |
Required Oregon Sick Time Poster | Sick Leave Law |
Required Breaks & Meals & Overtime & Paychecks | Overtime Law |
Required State Minimum Wage Poster (Spanish) | Minimum Wage Law |
Required State Minimum Wage Poster | Minimum Wage Law |
List of all 14 Oregon labor law posters
Oregon Labor Law Poster Sources:
- Original poster PDF URL: https://www.oregon.gov/boli/employers/Documents/BOLI_Printable_Predictive_Scheduling.pdf , last updated May 2020
- Oregon Labor Law Poster Page at http://www.oregon.gov/BOLI/TA/pages/req_post.aspx
- Oregon Bureau Of Labor and Industry at http://www.oregon.gov/BOLI/pages/index.aspx
Labor Poster Disclaimer:
While Minimum-Wage.org does our best to keep our list of Oregon labor law posters updated and complete, we provide this free resource as-is and cannot be held liable for errors or omissions. If the poster on this page is out-of-date or not working, please send us a message and we will fix it ASAP.