Cindy ADAIR; Paul Straub, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. ConAGRA FOODS, INC. a Delaware corporation; ConAgra Foods Packaged Foods, LLC a Delaware Limited Liability Company, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 12-3565.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: April 11, 2013. Filed: Aug. 30, 2013.
728 F.3d 849
Mark Aloysius Kistler, argued, Overland Park, KS, for Appellee.
Before COLLOTON, MELLOY, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
This interlocutory appeal arises out of an action brought by two laborers against their employer, ConAgra Foods, Inc., pursuant to
I.
Since 1980, ConAgra has operated a facility in Marshall, Missouri, where it produces frozen foods. ConAgra employs hourly production and maintenance laborers at the Marshall Facility. Those laborers are represented by either the United Food and Commercial Workers Union or the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (collectively, “the Unions“), and have been represented by the Unions continuously since ConAgra acquired the facility.
ConAgra requires laborers at the Marshall Facility to wear certain protective gear, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement. To ensure that the products made at the facility are sanitary, ConAgra and the Unions have agreed that ConAgra will “furnish and launder” this gear, which remains at the facility overnight. Because their uniforms are kept on site, the laborers must change into and out of them in changing stations at the Marshall Facility—that is, they cannot arrive at or depart the facility while dressed for work. After donning their uniforms, the laborers walk to a time clock where they punch in for the day; at the end of the day, they punch out at the time clock and then walk back to the changing stations to doff their uniforms. ConAgra has never compensated the laborers at the Marshall Facility for time spent changing into and out of uniforms, or for time spent walking in either direction between changing stations and the time clock.
Two laborers at the Marshall Facility brought this action on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated. They claimed, as relevant to this appeal, that ConAgra violated the Fair Labor Standards Act,
The Act requires employers to pay covered employees at a rate of time-and-a-half for hours worked in excess of forty hours in a week.
The scope of the workday has limits. Congress twice amended the Act in response to the Supreme Court‘s broad understanding of that concept. First, in 1947, Congress passed the Portal-to-Portal Act, § 4 of which excludes from the workday time spent “walking, riding, or traveling to and from the actual place of performance of the principal activity or activities which [an] employee is employed to perform,” and time spent performing “activities which are preliminary to or postliminary to said principal activity or activities.”
In the district court, the laborers first argued that ConAgra was required to compensate them for time spent changing clothes, because
The district court rejected these contentions, ruling that the time spent changing clothes was lawfully excluded under
The laborers argued in the alternative that donning and doffing their uniforms are principal activities of their employment, even if changing time is excluded from their hours under
The district court noted “substantial disagreement in the case law” on the issue, but concluded that an activity‘s “principal” nature is unaffected by whether it is compensable. The court then determined that donning and doffing uniforms begin and end the workday, because wearing those uniforms is “integral and indispensable to [the laborers‘] principal work activity,” whether or not the employees are compensated for time spent changing clothes. As such, the court denied ConAgra‘s motion for summary judgment on the walking-time issue. The court then granted the
II.
The laborers contend that when the time walking to and from the time clock is included, they worked more than forty hours per week and must be compensated accordingly. The Act provides that an employer must compensate a covered employee “for a workweek longer than forty hours ... at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed.”
The Act, however, links the concept of principal activity to employment. In providing that an employer need not compensate an employee for walking to and from the place of performing a principal activity, or for conducting preliminary or postliminary activities, the statute contemplates that a “principal activity” is one “which such employee is employed to perform.”
We know from
To be sure, IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez, 546 U.S. 21, 126 S.Ct. 514, 163 L.Ed.2d 288 (2005), like Steiner, said that an activity that is “integral and indispensable to a principal activity is itself a principal activi-
We acknowledge the Department of Labor‘s current position that an activity excluded from the workday under
In summary, the time spent by the laborers donning and doffing their uniforms is excluded by agreement from the hours for which they are employed. As such, donning and doffing is not an activity that the laborers are employed to perform, and it is therefore not a principal activity that begins and ends the workday. It follows that time spent walking between the clothes-changing stations and the time clock is not part of the workday and workweek for which the employer is liable to pay overtime compensation under the Act.
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The order of the district court denying ConAgra‘s motion for summary judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
