Unpaid internships in jeopardy after court ruling
SAM HANANEL, AP
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Unpaid internships have long been a path of opportunity for
students and recent grads looking to get a foot in the door in the
entertainment, publishing and other prominent
industries, even if it takes a generous subsidy from Mom and Dad.
But
those days of working for free could be numbered after a federal judge
in New York ruled this week that Fox Searchlight Pictures violated
minimum wage and overtime laws by not paying
interns who worked on production of the 2010 movie "Black Swan."
The
decision by U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III may lead some
companies to rethink whether it's worth the legal risk to hire interns
to work without pay. For many young people
struggling to find jobs in a tough economy, unpaid internships have
become a rite of passage essential for padding resumes and gaining
practical experience.
"I'm
sure this is causing a lot of discussions to be held in human resource
offices and internship programs across the country," said David Yamada,
professor of law at Suffolk University
in Boston.
There
are up to 1 million unpaid internships offered in the United States
every year, said Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the Economic Policy
Institute, a liberal-leaning think tank.
He said the number of internships has grown as the economy tumbled and
he blamed them for exploiting young workers and driving down wages.
"The
return on a college investment has fallen, students are facing higher
and higher debt burdens, and the reaction of employers is to make
matters worse for them by hiring more and
more people without paying them," Eisenbrey said.
In
the ruling, Pauley said Fox should have paid the two interns who filed
the lawsuit because they did the same work as regular employees,
provided value to the company and performed
low-level tasks that didn't require any specialized training.
The
interns, Eric Glatt and Alexander Footman, performed basic
administrative work such as organizing filing cabinets, tracking
purchase orders, making copies, drafting cover letters
and running errands.
"Undoubtedly
Mr. Glatt and Mr. Footman received some benefits from their
internships, such as resume listings, job references and an
understanding of how a production office works," Pauley
wrote. "But those benefits were incidental to working in the office
like any other employees and were not the result of internships
intentionally structured to benefit them."
Chris
Petrikin, a spokesman for 20th Century Fox, said the company believes
the ruling was erroneous and plans to appeal. Fox had argued that the
interns received a greater benefit than
the company in the form of job references, resume listings and
experience working at a production office.
Juno
Turner, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said it was the first time a
court had given employee status to young people doing the types of
duties commonly associated with interns. The
case is one of several that have been filed in recent years demanding
that all interns deserve a salary.
"This
is an incredibly important decision as far as establishing that interns
have the same wage and hour rights as other employees," Turner said.
"You can't just call something an internship
and expect not to pay people when the interns are providing a direct
benefit to the company."
In
ruling for the interns, the judge followed a six-part test outlined by
the Labor Department for determining whether an internship can be
unpaid. Under the test, the internship must
be similar to an educational environment, run primarily for the benefit
of the intern as opposed to the employer, and the intern's work should
not replace that of regular employees.
Glatt,
the lead plaintiff, lamented the fact that unpaid internships have
become so normal "people do it without blinking an eye."
"It's just become a form of institutionalized wage theft," he said Wednesday in a conference call with reporters. Glatt has an MBA from Case Western Reserve University and said he is
currently studying law at Georgetown University Law Center.
Another
prominent lawsuit is challenging unpaid internships at Hearst
Magazines. Last month, a federal judge in New York declined to let the
interns pursue their case against Hearst as
a class action.
Camille
Olson, an attorney who represents employers in workplace litigation,
said the Fox decision was just one judge's opinion that may be
overturned on appeal. But she said many employers
are now "taking a harder look at the issue."
"There's
a lot more interest in making sure intern programs are structured
correctly or, if an employer doesn't want to have any risk, then paying
minimum wage," Olson said.
She
said many employers believe they don't need to pay interns because they
offer counseling and mentoring similar to what a teacher might offer in
a vocational program.
"They view themselves as actually spending a lot of resources on these programs," Olson said.
But
Yamada, the law professor, said the growth of unpaid internships
unfairly leaves out students and graduates from lower economic levels
who can't afford to work for free.
"If
you're a college kid that has to make some money over the summer, maybe
you go work for a food store instead of applying for that fancy
internship in the entertainment or arts industry,"
he said. There's nothing wrong with a tryout program that lets them
scout out the talent, but they should at least pay minimum wage."
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