Thе Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., regulates the manner in which many New York City employees must be paid. The statute defines certain employment-related activities as compensable and sets parameters
BACKGROUND
AUPRs are employed to perform a range of public services in the City’s parks. For the purposes of this appeal, the defendants accept the plaintiffs’ assertion that those services include: “providing directions and other information to persons seeking to use parks or pools; providing assistancе to those persons involved in accidents or those who may be victims of unlawful activity and investigating such accidents or activity; implementing crowd control procedures at special events; providing safety and educational information to the public; and issuing summonses to or making arrests of persons suspected of unlawful conduct” under “laws, including New York City rules and regulations, governing use of the parks аnd pools.” Appellants’ Br. at 10; see Appellee’s Br. at 10-11.
During a shift, AUPRs are required to wear uniforms comprising both professional clothing and equipment. The professional clothing includes “olive drab” pants and jacket, “’Smokey the Bear’ style hats,” and various Parks Department insignias, while the equipment includes a bulletproof vest and a utility belt holding handcuffs, gloves, a radio, a flashlight, a baton, a can of mace, a summons book, and a tаpe recorder. App’x 213-14 (official Parks Department uniform policy). The plaintiffs’ estimates of the time needed to don and doff those uniforms each day (that is, to put them on before a shift and take them off afterward) range from approximately five to thirty minutes. The plaintiffs claim that the defendants — the Parks Department and its Commissioner, along with the City and its mayor — provided inadequate compensation for their work as AUPRs in four respects: (1) by failing to pay wages for compensa-ble activities that the plaintiffs performed immediately before and after their regularly scheduled shifts, including donning and doffing their uniforms; (2) by failing to pay wages for compensable activities that the plaintiffs performed during lunch breaks; (3) by providing one hour, rather than one hour and a half, of compensatory leave for eaсh hour of overtime that the plaintiffs worked; and (4) by providing compensatory leave, rather than monetary payment, for overtime that the plaintiffs worked after individually accruing 480 hours of compensatory leave. The defendants counter that, to the extent the FLSA applied to the plaintiffs and their employment, their compensation complied with the statute.
After the close of discovery, thе defendants moved for partial summary judgment on several discrete issues. First, they argued that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms were not compensable activities under the FLSA, for three independent reasons: (i) the activities were not “integral and indispensable” to the plaintiffs’ principal activities during a shift; (ii) the time spent donning and doffing should be discounted as de minimis-, and (iii) in any event, that time was rendered non-compensable by the plaintiffs’ collective bargaining agreement. Second, the defendants contended that any claim premised on work performed before June 22, 2009, was barred by the FLSA’s limitations period. Third, they asserted that the plaintiffs were not entitled to compensation for the overtime they allegedly worked before and after their shifts, or during meal breaks, because they did not adequately report it.
In its January 15, 2015 decision, the district court (Shira A. Scheindlin, Judge) concluded as a matter of law that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms were not compensable activities under the FLSA because they did not qualify as integral and indispensable to the plaintiffs’ principal activities. Perez v. City of New York, No. 12 Civ. 4914,
DISCUSSION
We vacate the district court’s decision and remand for further proceedings. On the current record, we cannot concludе as a matter of law that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms were not integral and indispensable to their principal activities as AUPRs — the sole ground on which the district court granted partial summary judgment. We therefore remand to allow the district court to decide, in the first instance, whether the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing are nevertheless non-compen-sable as a matter of law under the de minimis doctrine or the terms оf a collective bargaining agreement. The district court should also resolve the issues that the defendants raise as to their entitlement to partial summary judgment on other aspects of the plaintiffs’ claims, which the January 15, 2015 decision erroneously failed to reach. Absent another appeal or additional motions by the parties that dispose of the action in its entirety, the case should then proceed to trial.
1. Donning and Doffing
A. “Integral and Indispensable”
The FLSA generally mandates compensation for “the principal activity or activities which [an] employee is employed to perform,” 29 U.S.C. § 254(a)(1), including tasks — even those completed outside a regularly scheduled shift — that are “an integral and indispensable part of the principal activities,” IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez,
Although this standard is markedly “fact-dependent,” Kuebel v. Black & Decker Inc.,
Applying those principles, this Court and others have concluded that an employee’s pre- and post-shift preparation of items used to perform principal activities can qualify as integral and indispensable. In King Packing, for example, the Supreme Court held that a slaughterhouse employee’s knife sharpening was intеgral and indispensable to the principal activity of butchering. See
Courts have also concluded that an employee’s pre- and post-shift efforts to protect against heightened workplace dangers can qualify as integral and indispensable. In Steiner, the Supreme Court decided that employees who worked in a battery plant should be compensated undеr the FLSA for the time they spent showering and changing clothes at the workplace after a shift. Those tasks, the Court reasoned, were integral and indispensable to the employees’ principal activities because they prevented lead poisoning, an acute danger attendant to work in the plant. See
With those precedents in mind, and viewing the record in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, we think that a reasonable factfinder could conclude that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms are integral and indispensable to their principal activities as AUPRs. Several relevant considerations point in that direction.
As an initial matter, the donning and doffing of an AUPR’s uniform are activities “undertaken for the employer’s benefit,” with no choice on the employee’s behalf. Reich,
More fundamentally, the uniforms appear to be vital to “the primary goal[s] of [the plaintiffs’] work” during a shift. See Reich,
An AUPR’s bulletproof vest more closely'resembles the type of protective gear analyzed in Gorman and Alvarez. Like the helmets, safety glasses, and metal mesh at issue in those decisions, the vest is not a tool used to perform principal activities; rather, the record indicates that it functions solely to protect agаinst risks collateral to those activities. We recognized in Gorman that-the use of such protective gear may be integral and indispensable to an employee’s principal activities where it guards against “workplace dangers that transcend ordinary risks.”
We therefore cannot conclude, as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms are not integral and indispensable to their principal activities as AUPRs. In deciding otherwise, the district court erred in three respects. First, it mistakenly classified the plaintiffs’ uniforms, in their entirety, as serving solely to protect against workplace hazards. In fact, only an AUPR’s bulletproof vest fits that description. As noted, certain other parts of the uniform — including the baton, mace, and handcuffs — may offer a degree of protection. But these items are not solely protective; they also function as tools of the trade used to perform law-enforcement tasks, including arrests. The district court erroneously failed to analyze the legal significance of that distinct type of utility.
Second, the court mistakenly characterized the protective elements of an AUPR’s uniform as comparably “generiс” to the helmets, safety glasses, and steel-toed boots at issue in Gorman. Those items qualified as generic because they were widely available to the public and commonly worn in a range of settings. The same cannot be said of an AUPR’s bulletproof vest, baton, mace, or handcuffs, all of which are relatively specialized products available only from select sources and used
Compounding those errors, the district court misconstrued Gorman as establishing that generic protective gear is never integral and indispensable to an employee’s principal activities. Gorman did not endorse any such categorical rule. The Court there held that nuclear power plant employees’ donning and doffing of helmets, safety glasses, and steel-toed boots did not qualify as integral and indispensable because the items at issue guarded against only routine workplaсe risks. See
B. The De Minimis Doctrine and the Plaintiffs’ Collective Bargaining Agreement
In their motion for partial summary judgment, the defendants argued that the plaintiffs’ donning and doffing of uniforms would be non-compensable on two additional, independent grounds: that the time spent оn those activities qualified as de minimis, see Reich,
II. Remaining Arguments for Partial Summary Judgment
The defendants also sought partial summary judgment on three additional issues that the district court has not yet addressed: that any claim premised on work performed before June 22, 2009 is barred by the FLSA’s limitations period; that the plaintiffs were not entitled to compensation for purported overtime hours that they did not adequately report; and that the Parks Department is not a proper defendant. On remand, the court should also address those issues in the first instance. Again, the court may expand the factual analysis contained in the January 15, 2015 decision as it deems necessary.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the district court’s January 15, 2015 deci
Notes
. For a commentary on the statute's use of the word “postliminaiy'', see Eugene Volokh, Postliminary:, Volokh Conspiracy (Aug. 21, 2009, 2:12 PM), http://volokh.com/2009/08/21/ postliminary/, archived at https://perma.cc/SE 2J-YKVN.
. “We review de novo a district court's grant of summary judgment, drawing all reasonable factual inferences in the non-moving party’s favor....” Velazco v. Columbus Citizens Found.,
. As tools used to perform relatively dangerous law-enforcement tasks more effectively, a baton, mace, and handcuffs also afford a degree of protection to an AUPR. In that sense,
