Barks v. Silver Bait LLC

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Silver Bait operates, on 750 acres in Tennessee, housing, growing, and packaging bait worms for sale to retailers. Silver Bait imports baby worms from Europe and feeds and grows them in seven concrete structures, 540 feet long and 50 feet wide, with a 10-foot wide tractor driveway down the center, with worm beds on either side. Durant grows his own corn in to ensure the quality of the feed. Workers send corn silage through a grinder and combine it with peat moss, lime, and water. Silver Bait also makes its own customized bait cups using an injection-molding machine. Believing its employees fell within a Fair Labor Standards Act exemption for agricultural workers, Silver Bait did not pay overtime. In 2010 the Department of Labor issued a report finding Silver Bait’s employees exempt, ordering Silver Bait to pay overtime for one four-week period when the company acted as a wholesaler, importing worms and immediately reselling them to retailers. After obtaining consent forms from other workers, employees filed a private action under 29 U.S.C. 216(b). The Sixth Circuit affirmed a declaratory judgment in Silver Bait’s favor. Although not a specifically enumerated farming activity, there is little to distinguish Silver Bait from a traditional farm other than the unfamiliarity of worm farming. View "Barks v. Silver Bait LLC" on Justia Law