This is the consolidated appeal from the dismissal of two lawsuits brought by paramedics in Chicago. The plaintiffs claim that the City of Chicago systemically miscalculated their overtime pay in a total of ten different ways. Not all claims, however, are common to all plaintiffs. Relying on our decision in
Jonites v. Exelon Corp.,
I. Background
On August 28, 2006, a group of fifty-four paramedics employed by the Chicago Fire Department filed a two-count collective action against the City of Chicago, alleging that it willfully failed to properly compensate them for overtime, in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-219 (2006). See Alvarez v. City of Chicago, No. 06-cv-4639 (N.D.Ill.). The district court granted the Alvarez plaintiffs’ motion to begin distributing notices of the action to prospective plaintiffs and provided them with 60 days in which to add additional plaintiffs.
More than three hundred additional plaintiffs opted in. On the City’s motion, the district court dismissed several of them because the 60-day deadline had passed. Four of those plaintiffs, along with eight new plaintiffs, then filed a new action. See Caraballo v. City of Chicago, No. 07-cv-2807 (N.D.Ill.). The Caraballo plaintiffs assert the same claims as the Alvarez plaintiffs, but did not style their lawsuit as a collective action or seek class certification. On September 13, 2007, the district court consolidated Alvarez and Caraballo.
On June 6, 2008, the Caraballo plaintiffs moved for summary judgment. In their motion for summary judgment, the Caraballo plaintiffs identified a total of ten subclaims under FLSA. Briefly summarized, these claims are:
1. Payments excluded from employees’ “regular rate” for determining overtime compensation. FLSA requires overtime at the rate of one-and-a-half times an employee’s “regular rate,” which is defined *447 as “all remuneration for employment paid to ... an employee,” with several exceptions including “payments to an employee which are not made as compensation for his hours of employment.” The paramediсs identify six types of pay that they believe were wrongly excluded from their “regular rate.”
a. Duty availability pay. This is a quarterly lump-sum payment of $175 made to all emergency medical services employees who work in 24-hour shifts pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”).
b. Fitness pay. Also made pursuant to the CBA, this is a lump-sum payment of $350 to employees who meet certain physical qualifications measured by a voluntary fitness test, which employees may take yearly.
c. Specialty pay. Specialty pay is provided under the CBA to paramedics who are also hazardous materials technicians and certified drivеrs. The compensation is equal to 5% of the employee’s annual salary and is paid quarterly on a pro rata basis.
d. Uniform pay. Pursuant to the CBA, all paramedics receive two lump-sum payments during the course of a year “for cleaning and maintenance of dress uniforms, work clothes and protective сlothing.”
e. Acting pay. If a paramedic temporarily works in a higher rank, he receives additional compensation known as acting pay.
f. Driving pay. Paramedics receive additional compensation, known as driving pay, if they drive the ambulance.
2. Treatment of continuing education time. Plaintiffs make two argumеnts regarding the way the city handled time spent in continuing education. First, plaintiffs argue that the city improperly counted time spent in continuing education as “hours worked” for purposes of calculating the regular rate, since continuing education was compensated on an annual basis. Because the City calculated plaintiffs’ regular rate (and, in turn, overtime rate) by dividing paramedics’ salary by the number of hours worked, an increase in “hours worked” decreases the rate at which plaintiffs are compensated for overtime. Second, plaintiffs argue that the city could not use payments made for continuing educatiоn as credits against overtime owed.
3. Treatment of additional shifts. The plaintiffs also argued that the City could not count hours spent working additional shifts as “hours worked” for purposes of determining the regular rate and that the City was not permitted to use them as credits against overtime owed.
4. Human computation errors. The рlaintiffs argued that the city committed various human errors in calculating their overtime compensation.
5. Salary method of computing weekly regular rates. Plaintiffs argue that the city violated the FLSA by using the fixed salary method to determine regular rates.
The City filed a cross-motion for summary judgment against all parties, including the Alvarez plaintiffs. In addition to responding on the merits, defendant moved to decertify plaintiffs’ collective action and dismiss their claims on the grounds that they were “hopelessly heterogenous.” On March 20, 2009, the district court granted the city’s motion for *448 summary judgment against all plaintiffs, reasoning that the plaintiffs were not similarly situated because еach plaintiff raised a different combination of the ten sub-claims, such that the plaintiffs could not be readily divided into homogenous subgroups. The district court also noted that arbitration pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement, while not mandatory, might be a more efficient way to resolve the paramеdics’ claims. The court did not reach the merits of the ten subclaims raised by the plaintiffs. Instead, it dismissed the claims of all plaintiffs, without prejudice, and directed them to pursue arbitration.
II. Analysis
The Fair Labor Standards Act gives employees the right to bring their FLSA claims through a “collective action” on behalf of themselves and othеr “similarly situated” employees. 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (2006). A collective action is similar to, but distinct from, the typical class action brought pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23. The principle difference is that plaintiffs who wish to be included in a collective action must affirmatively opt-in to the suit by filing a written consent with the court, while the typical class action includes all potential plaintiffs that meet the class definition and do not opt-out.
The City-and the district court’s opinion-relies heavily on our decision in
Jonites v. Exelon Corp., 522
F.3d 721 (7th Cir.2008). In
Jonites,
we affirmed the dismissal of a collective action brought on behalf of more than a thousand lineman and other hourly workers employed by Commonwealth Edison. The
Jonites
plaintiffs alleged that two types of purportedly off-duty time were really compensable work. The first involved Com Ed’s “call-out” policy, which required off-duty workers to respond to at least 35% of the calls from their employer for additional manpower on an emergency basis. The frequency of these call-outs variеd widely among workers; some were called as often as once every five and a half days on average, and others no more than once a month. The employees took the position that they were entitled to be paid for “some of the time” during which they were subject to call, with the amount to be dеtermined by the trier of fact. The second challenge was to the lunch policy, which required workers at job sites to remain awake and be alert for trespassing and the theft of tools. However, only part of the class worked the daytime shift, to which the lunch policy applied. We held that as to both of these сlaims, the purported class was “hopelessly heterogenous” because liability would require significant individual fact-finding and many of the workers had no conceivable claim at all.
Id.
at 725-26,
Appellants argue that this case is different from
Jonites
because the plaintiffs here appear to be similarly situated with regard to individual subclaims, but are heterogenous only because there are several different combinations of those sub-claims. For example, whether any given paramedic is entitled to recover on the uniform pay theory depends on the legal question of whether such рay should have been included in the base rate, and the simple factual question of whether the particular paramedic received uniform pay. Instead of dismissing their claims as heterogenous, plaintiffs argue, the district
*449
court should have allowed them to split their claims into homogenous subclasses.
See, e.g., Fravel v. County of Lake,
No. 2:07-cv-253,
The district court appeared to agree with the plaintiffs’ characterization of their subclaims, noting that the City’s liability to any particular plaintiff on any given sub-claim turns only upon a single uniform policy and whether that policy impacted that particular plaintiff. However, the district court refused to adopt the Fmvel approach, concluding that the number of subclaims made the plaintiffs “hopelessly heterogenous” and that arbitration would be more efficient.
A district court has wide discretion to manage collective actions.
See Hoffmann-La Roche v. Sperling,
Similarly, the district court mistakenly compared the efficiency of proceeding through subclaims only to the perceived efficiency of arbitration. 2 Plaintiffs have *450 the right to proceed individually and may be able to form more tailored classes. See Jonites, 522 F.3d at 725 (noting that a collective bargaining agreement сannot preempt or waive a worker’s right to a judicial remedy for FLSA violations). Thus, if it appears plaintiffs are prepared to proceed individually or through separate classes, the district court must consider whether these other mechanisms for judicial resolution of their claims are more or less еfficient than a collective action comprised of various subclaims. Cf. Fravel, supra. In Jonites, the circumstances suggested that plaintiffs had “no stomach for proceeding case by case.” Id. at 726. Here, the twelve Caraballo plaintiffs filed their complaint as individuals and moved for summary judgment as individuals. Indeed, there is nothing apparent from the record to indicate that the fifty-four named plaintiffs in Alvarez were unwilling to proceed individually. Yet the district court dismissed their claims in favor of arbitration without considering whether it was better to address sixty-five individual claims or one collective action comprised of ten subclaims.
Finally, the district court erred when it dismissed the claims of the named plaintiffs. When а collective action is decertified, it reverts to one or more individual actions on behalf of the named plaintiffs.
See Hipp v. Liberty Nat’l Life Ins. Co.,
Sifting through the subclaims of each of the myriad plaintiffs is an unenviable task. But plaintiffs are nonetheless entitled to their day in court. Moreover, it appears that here, common questions prеdominate with regard to each theory of liability. The parties have already filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the merits of these common questions. After the district court determines the validity of these subclaims, calculation of each plaintiffs award (if any) will be largely mechanical. On remand, given that the claims оf the *451 named plaintiffs will still be before it, the district court should consider whether a collective action might be the most efficient judicial resolution of this matter after all.
III. Conclusion
We REVERSE the district court’s dismissal of the named plaintiffs’ claims and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. There may also be cases where despitе common questions as to liability, the remedy is so tailored to each particular plaintiff that a collective action is inappropriate.
Cf. Andrews v. Chevy Chase Bank,
. The parties dispute whether arbitration of these FLSA claims is permissible under the terms of the paramedics’ collective bargaining agreement. We need not reach this issue, as *450 it has no bearing on whether the plaintiffs are in fact similarly situated or whether they have the right to proceed individually.
. The City argues that plaintiffs have waived this argument. But in response to the City’s claim, in its cross-motion for summary judgment, that the collective action was “hopelessly heterogenous,” the Caraballo plaintiffs argued that they werе proceeding individually and that this argument was thus inapplicable to them. Because of tire course of litigation below, plaintiffs did not have an opportunity to present this argument more fully. With only the Caraballo plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment before it, the district court addressed both the Alvarez and Caraballo actions, deemed the Caraballo plaintiffs to be proceeding as a class, аnd not only decertified both classes but entered its judgment of dismissal without prejudice that same day. While plaintiffs do not argue that treating Caraballo as a collective action was error (indeed, it appears that at least one plaintiff attempted to opt in to the Caraballo action), this procedural posture does explain why the right to proceed individually was not addressed below.
