Judy Schurke Director, Department of Labor Industries PO Box 44000 Olympia, WA 98504-4000
Dear Ms. Schurke:
By letter previously acknowledged, you have requested our opinion on the following question:
Is the Department of Labor and Industries required toinvestigate wage complaints against public employers under the WagePayment Act?
In 1935, the legislature permitted the Department to become involved in wage claims between private employers and private employees. In that year, the legislature passed the Collection Of Wages In Private Employment Act, which allowed the Department to investigate and prosecute private employee wage claims. Laws of 1935, ch.
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excludes public employees.1 Laws of 1935, ch.In 2006, the legislature passed an act, entitled Wage Payment Requirements — Violations, commonly known as the Wage Payment Act. The Wage Payment Act is codified at RCW
The 1935 legislature expressly prohibited the Department from applying the Collection Of Wages In Private Employment Act to public employees. RCW
Nothing in RCW
49.48.040 through49.48.080 shall apply to the payment of wages or compensation of employees directly employed by any county, incorporated city or town, or other municipal corporation. Nor shall anything herein apply to employees, directly employed by the state, any department, bureau, office, board, commission or institution hereof.
RCW
The Wage Payment Act, enacted in 2006, is codified at RCW
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This becomes clear when we examine the definitions of employee and employer in the Wage Payment Act. That act defines the terms as follows:(5) "Employee" has the meaning provided in: (a) RCW
49.46.010 for purposes of a wage payment requirement set forth in RCW49.46.020 or49.46.130 ; and (b) RCW49.12.005 for purposes of a wage payment requirement set forth in RCW49.48.010 ,49.52.050 , or49.52.060 .(6) "Employer" has the meaning provided in RCW
49.46.010 for purposes of a wage payment requirement set forth in RCW49.46.020 ,49.46.130 ,49.48.010 ,49.52.050 , or49.52.060 .
RCW
Each of the definitions incorporated by reference in the Wage Payment Act includes public employees. The first of the two definitions of employee "includes any individual employed by an employer but shall not include" specific listed individuals. RCW
Under the maxim of expressio unius est exclusioalterius — to express one thing in a statute implies the exclusion of the other — omissions are deemed to be exclusions.In re Detention of Williams,
The second definition of employee incorporated by reference in the Wage Payment Act comes from RCW
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to the employee-employer relationship, it is helpful to consider the definition of employer in determining the meaning of employee. The corresponding definition of employer in the same statutory chapter specifically includes public employers. RCWThe definition of employer used for all wage complaints under the Wage Payment Act defines the term to include "any individual, partnership, association, corporation, business trust, or any person or group of persons acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee[.]" RCW
When the legislature enacted the Wage Payment Act, it chose the Wage Payment Act over other proposed legislation, which would have excluded public employees. In construing statutes, proposed legislation may be considered in helping determine the legislature's intent. See In re Marriage of Kovacs,
In the 2003 and 2005 legislative sessions — the sessions directly prior to the enactment of the Wage Payment Act — several bills were proposed that would have amended specific sections of the existing statutory scheme and supplemented various provisions of RCW
Several differences exist between the bills that did not pass the legislature in 2003 (H.B. 1548) and 2005 (S.B. 5240 and H.B. 1311) and the Wage Payment Act. The most noteworthy difference for our analysis is that S.B. 5240 and H.B. 1548 would have amended the existing statutory scheme, whereas the Wage Payment Act did not amend any existing statutes — it
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created new sections.2 Substitute H.B. 3185, 59th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2006) ("AN ACT Relating to violations of wage payment requirements; adding new sections to [RCW] 49.48; creating a new section; and prescribing penalties."). This fact is significant for the present analysis because the exclusion of public employees, pursuant to RCWFurthermore, the codification of these new sections as RCW
Based on the statutory framework analyzed above, the Department is required to investigate wage complaints made by public employees.
We trust that the foregoing will be useful to you.
ROB MCKENNA Attorney General
JENNIFER S. STEELE Assistant Attorney General
wros
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RCW 49.46.010 (5)
(5) "Employee" includes any individual employed by an employer but shall not include:
a) Any individual (i) employed as a hand harvest laborer and paid on a piece rate basis in an operation which has been, and is generally and customarily recognized as having been, paid on a piece rate basis in the region of employment; (ii) who commutes daily from his or her permanent residence to the farm on which he or she is employed; and (iii) who has been employed in agriculture less than thirteen weeks during the preceding calendar year;
b) Any individual employed in casual labor in or about a private home, unless performed in the course of the employer's trade, business, or profession;
(c) Any individual employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity or in the capacity of outside salesman as those terms are defined and delimited by rules of the director. However, those terms shall be defined and delimited by the director of personnel pursuant to chapter
(d) Any individual engaged in the activities of an educational, charitable, religious, state or local governmental body or agency, or nonprofit organization where the employer-employee relationship does not in fact exist or where the services are rendered to such organizations gratuitously. If the individual receives reimbursement in lieu of compensation for normally incurred out-of-pocket expenses or receives a nominal amount of compensation per unit of voluntary service rendered, an employer-employee relationship is deemed not to exist for the purpose of this section or for purposes of membership or qualification in any state, local government or publicly supported retirement system other than that provided under chapter
(e) Any individual employed full time by any state or local governmental body or agency who provides voluntary services but only with regard to the provision of the voluntary services. The voluntary services and any compensation therefor shall not affect or add to qualification, entitlement or benefit rights under any state, local government, or publicly supported retirement system other than that provided under chapter
(f) Any newspaper vendor or carrier;
(g) Any carrier subject to regulation by Part 1 of the Interstate Commerce Act;
(h) Any individual engaged in forest protection and fire prevention activities;
(i) Any individual employed by any charitable institution charged with child care responsibilities engaged primarily in the development of character or citizenship or promoting
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health or physical fitness or providing or sponsoring recreational opportunities or facilities for young people or members of the armed forces of the United States;(j) Any individual whose duties require that he or she reside or sleep at the place of his or her employment or who otherwise spends a substantial portion of his or her work time subject to call, and not engaged in the performance of active duties;
(k) Any resident, inmate, or patient of a state, county, or municipal correctional, detention, treatment or rehabilitative institution;
(l) Any individual who holds a public elective or appointive office of the state, any county, city, town, municipal corporation or quasi municipal corporation, political subdivision, or any instrumentality thereof, or any employee of the state legislature;
(m) All vessel operating crews of the Washington state ferries operated by the department of transportation;
(n) Any individual employed as a seaman on a vessel other than an American vessel;
(o) Any farm intern providing his or her services to a small farm which has a special certificate issued under section 1 of this act[.]
