But if you worked OT you earned less money.

It may be more complicated than you realize. With a written policy, if it is not enforced uniformly, you are begging for a class action suit. Price tag goes way up if discrimination of a protected class can be shoehorned in. And if you start getting willy-nilly about when it is work time, paid break time, and unpaid break time you get opened up beyond a civil suit and the government may start investigating and really ruin your year. Every suit, or potential suit is going to start burning clock time from the legal department plus likely an outside specialist consultant lawyer.wjbarricklow wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2019 8:22 am We're not legally required to give employees a lunch break, and many of them like to work through lunch. But our HR department in Massachusetts thinks the employees are legally required to take lunch, so that's what we have to do.
I used to do that at an old job and they got very pissy about it very quickly.
They say take a half lunch, not a half hour. Take half of you sandwich and be done with it.