Getty Images
Posted: 02/07/2013
CHICAGO (AP) - A federal lawsuit in Chicago claims scanning emails and answering calls from bosses on your smartphone after hours constitute work that should be compensated.
Chicago police Sgt. Jeffrey Allen claims in the suit that the city owes him and fellow officers overtime pay for work performed on department-requisitioned BlackBerry phones. If the plaintiffs eventually prevail, it could mean millions of dollars in back pay.
The suit claims police brass pressured subordinates to answer work-related calls and emails but told them not to file for overtime. The city counters that written policy is that officers should ask for overtime.
Allen's lawyers and city attorneys told a judge Wednesday they have agreed on the wording of documents to be sent to other officers asking if they want to join the lawsuit.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
National News
Dismissing a veto threat from President Barack Obama, lawmakers in the House passed legislation that links student loan rates to the ups and downs of the financial markets in a vote largely along party lines.
Top Stories
Dismissing a veto threat from President Barack Obama, lawmakers in the House passed legislation that links student loan rates to the ups and downs of the financial markets in a vote largely along party lines.