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Lawsuit Claims Kansas City Skirting Court Mandate on EMS Overtime Pay
May 13--Three years after Kansas City settled claims that it had failed to pay certain overtime wages, Fire Department medical staff are back in court saying the city is circumventing the court's ruling.
A lawsuit filed Thursday in Jackson County Circuit Court on behalf of certain emergency medical technicians and paramedics says the city has lowered some pay scales -- so that the plaintiffs continue to work overtime hours but haven't seen higher wages.
"They (the city) had a clear mandate to pay overtime," plaintiffs' attorney Mike Hodgson said, referring to the 2014 federal court ruling. "We believe this is an attempt to avoid paying (higher wages for) overtime by manipulating employees' rate of pay."
A spokesman for Kansas City said it has treated the employees fairly in accord with the court and the Fair Labor Standards Act.
"The City believes it took proper steps to comply with the FLSA following the Court's 2014 order, while maintaining an efficient, responsive medical unit," the city's statement said. "The City will review the new lawsuit and respond appropriately."
The city agreed to two settlements, in 2014 and 2015, that Hodgson said totaled $3.475 million, affecting 160 employees.
The situation arose after the Fire Department merged with the Metropolitan Ambulance Service Trust in 2010. The original lawsuit claimed that certain medical personnel were incorrectly being treated as exempt fire personnel who work "static" shifts that earn overtime only after more than 49 hours a week are worked.
Since the settlement, the plaintiffs contend, the affected medical staff are now getting paid overtime, but their pay scales were reduced so their wages did not increase.
The lawsuit comes as the Fire Department is under criticism for how it manages its staffing and high overtime costs. This year, the department has budgeted $9.5 million to cover overtime.
Joe Robertson: 816-234-4789, @robertsonkcstar
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