ronald m. gaswirth carrie b. hoffman stephen b. lindsey welcome to session 259 strategic and legal...
TRANSCRIPT
Ronald M. Gaswirth Carrie B. HoffmanStephen B. Lindsey
Welcome to Session 259
STRATEGIC AND LEGAL ASPECTS OF PAYROLL CARD
DEPLOYMENT
About the Presenters
RONALD M. GASWIRTH
Partner Gardere Wynne Sewell LLP Served as Regional Solicitor for the Department of Labor Practice Group Leader and Founder of Gardere’s Labor & Employment
Section Handles all types of employment law cases, including individual and
class action discrimination; Department of Labor matters (OSHA, Wage and Hour, OFCCP)
Assists nationwide clients in implementation of paycards
About the Presenters
CARRIE B. [email protected]
Partner Gardere Wynne Sewell LLP Handles all types of employment discrimination cases Assists clients in government investigations (EEOC, DOL) Counsels clients on employment matters Assists nationwide clients on implementation of paycards
About the Presenters
STEPHEN B. [email protected]
Manager Deloitte Consulting Focus area in HR strategy, operations & service delivery Assists clients with business case development,
implementation and overall integration of technology to deliver HR information
Lead change management, communication and training related to HR service delivery, ERP implementation and organizational change
Assists clients on implementation of paycards
Deployment Strategy Companies can deliver pay to employees through
various methods. The lowest cost method is direct deposit. The highest cost method is a paper paycheck. In between are payroll cards.
Payroll cards work just like ATM or check cards. Payroll cards can lower an organizations spend on production and distribution of paper checks.
If implemented with other technologies such as employee self-service, payroll cards can be part of an overall paperless strategy to eliminate paper based employee processes.
Deployment Strategy
Payroll cards have been targeted at companies with a high un-banked workforce. Employees in these companies can typically pay a 5-10% fee to cash their pay checks.
Payroll cards provide additional security that paper based checks cannot provide.
Deployment Strategy Payroll cards function like PIN based debit cards, check
cards or ATM cards. They can be used at PIN based point of sale (POS) locations for purchases, at ATM’s for cash withdrawals or in other capacities.
Payroll cards can be used to make purchases and get cash at: Over 5 million retail Point Of Sale (POS)
locations
Most any ATM
Payroll cards fall into two categories: Non-Branded (No Visa/MC Logo)
Branded (Visa/MC Logo)
Early Movers Vendors
Deployment Strategy Employer Benefits:
Reduce/eliminate check processing and distribution Reduce/eliminate postage fee Reduce/eliminate off cycle checks Simplify corrections & stop payments Near-instant termination pay/corrections Reduce/eliminate lost, stolen or spoiled checks
Employee Benefits: Reduce/eliminate the need to go to a bank for check cashing Eliminate check cashing costs Reduce the amount of cash carried (can’t cash half a check) Introduction to the benefits of banking/account ownership Additional card features (phone card, money transfer capability) Timely card replacement Nationwide access
Deployment Strategy Employer Watch Areas:
Accurate business case development Fielding a dedicated project team Understanding plan design implications Integration into current payroll processes Commitment to proactive change management and
communications Legal due diligence
Employee Watch Areas: Lifestyle change Not so obvious costs High card usage Concern over security- ATM’s Access concerns
Deployment Strategy Payroll cards work in the same manner as a
standard direct deposit. The payroll card account can be funded multiple ways: ACH (Direct deposit) File/Wire Transfer
Employer Costs The program can be free to the employer ACH transaction costs ($.05 to $.20 per transaction) Card load fee ($0 to $.50 per transaction) Wire transfer fee $15 to $25 per transfer
Employee Costs Free initial transaction every pay period POS fee $.75 ATM fee $1.25-$1.50
Moving a significant portion of the employee population from live checks to direct deposit or a payroll card could deliver cost savings to both the company and its employees.
Today One Time TomorrowAnnual number of Check/Stub printed & distributed bi-weekly 286,000 Pay statements printed for direct deposit employee population (40% DD rate) 114,400
Pay checks and statements printed and distributed to non-direct deposit employee population 171,600 8,580 Average Cost per Check/Stub $2.64 $2.64
Annual Cost of Check/Stub Process $453,024 $22,651Employer Variable Costs:
Change management, training & communications xxInitial card purchase for employees xx
Year 1 pay card load fee xxLegal support xx
Pay Card batch transfer fee xxTOTAL 453,024$ -$ $22,651
ONGOING SAVINGS 430,373$
Example- Bi-weekly payroll with approx. 11,000 employees, a $2 per pay check/stub cost and a direct deposit rate of 40%
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation State Pay Day Laws
Almost every state has own wage payment law and own agency to enforce law
Most laws outdated Many are being updated Agencies enforce according to own agenda Need lawyers who know the traps
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation Need understanding of legal aspects
when designing paycard program E-card: mandatory direct deposit Stored value card: trust account Form of available blank checks
Decide whether participation will be mandatory
Consider direct deposit mandate
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation Kentucky :
Statute requires “payment in legal tender of the United States or checks on banks convertible into cash on demand at full face value”
Statute silent as to paycards and direct deposit
Kentucky DOL’s “policy” permits mandatory direct deposit
Even without DOL position – paycard with blank check
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation Nevada:
Prior statute: silent regarding paycards Amended the Administrative Code
August 25, 2004: Permits paycards Restrictions Immediate payment in full One free transaction per pay period Optional at Employee’s election
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation
New Mexico: Pay wages “in lawful money of U.S. or in
checks, payroll vouchers or drafts on banks, convertible into cash on demand at full face value” or by direct deposit if voluntary
Nothing prohibits pay cards Stored value format Blank check option
Fair Labor Standards Act (federal law) Requires payment in “cash or negotiable
instrument payable at par” Paycards technically violate FLSA DOL does not pursue complaints about
payment by paycard DOL’s own position approving direct
deposit is inconsistent with letter of law
Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Implementation
Strategic and Legal Aspects of Payroll Card Deployment
Payroll Card Adoption Considerations: Business case development Integration with current payroll platform and processes Payroll card vendor search and selection Plan design attributes
Look at the states in which you operate Choose format for best coverage
Opinion letter requests/ Lobbying efforts Implementation/ Change management Employee communication and training Handling state agency complaints Feedback and process improvement
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Session 259STRATEGIC AND LEGAL ASPECTS OF
PAYROLL CARD DEPLOYMENT
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