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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, January 8, 2007

Sales reps sue for overtime wages

By Dave Collins
Associated Press

Dana Higgs, of Harrisburg Pa., is a plaintiff in one of several class-action lawsuits seeking tens of millions of dollars in back pay from nine drug companies.

DANIEL SHANKEN | Associated Press

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HARTFORD, Conn. — Susan Schaefer LaRose quit her sales job in May after 18 years with pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly and Co., frustrated by long workweeks that frequently encroached on weekends and vacations.

And then she sued.

Her lawsuit, part of a series of class-action claims filed last month against nine major drug companies, seeks tens of millions of dollars in back pay for the thousands of drug company sales representatives across the country.

The lawsuits, filed in New York, California, New Jersey and Connecticut, are the latest in a series of mass tort claims seeking overtime pay from U.S. businesses in recent years. IBM Corp. last month agreed to pay $65 million to 32,000 technology workers who claimed their jobs were wrongly classified as overtime-exempt.

The pharmaceutical company lawsuits seek overtime wages dating back two to six years, under federal and state statutes of limitations. Other companies affected are Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals Inc., AstraZeneca PLC, Pfizer Inc., Johnson & Johnson, Amgen Inc., Hoffmann-La Roche Inc., GlaxoSmithKline PLC and Bayer AG.

Dana Higgs, another plaintiff who worked for Pfizer for more than 20 years, said the increasingly long workweeks have had an impact on families, especially single mothers who have been forced to make last-minute childcare arrangements and pay caregivers when called to work overtime.

"What they required of us was unfair," said Higgs, who lives in Pennsylvania. "My boss told me that I needed to be engaged in business 24/7."

ALLEGATIONS DENIED

Some of the companies deny the allegations, while others are reviewing the lawsuits before commenting.

Abby Baron, a spokeswoman for AstraZeneca, said her company adheres to all labor laws. "We intend to defend our position vigorously and we have the utmost confidence in the legal process," she said.

Pfizer spokesman Bryant Haskins said the company would vigorously contest the lawsuit.

In the case that Schaefer LaRose is part of, federal labor law allows outside sales forces to be exempt from overtime pay in recognition of the unique abilities offered by a skilled sales staff. Schaefer LaRose said she was able to draw on her skills, using her own discretion in how she pitched the company's products to doctors when she started with Lilly in 1988.

"I was told when I started with Eli Lilly that I was exempt from overtime," said Schaefer LaRose, a 50-year-old mother of two from Chittenango, N.Y., about 17 miles east of Syracuse. "I figured they were the large employer and I never thought to question it."

But within a decade, drug companies began carefully scripting sales pitches for fear of competitors' lawsuits or scrutiny by the federal Food and Drug Administration.

"They no longer had that freedom for what the exemption was designed," said New York attorney Charles Joseph, who brought several of the lawsuits. "The job has changed, and it has changed for the worse."

LONGER WORKWEEKS

Schaefer LaRose said her 45-hour workweeks began lengthening as cell phones and e-mail became more prevalent. Two co-workers were chastised by a district manager last spring, she said, for not checking their e-mails during vacations. She also said Lilly does not allow sales reps to log onto the company's computer system between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., prime hours for calling doctors, which forces reps to do reports on nights and weekends.

"Those things were supposed to simplify our lives. They didn't," Schaefer LaRose said.

Lilly spokesman Phil Belt said the company would not respond to any of Schaefer LaRose's allegations because of the pending lawsuit. But he said the company values its employees and compensates them in accordance with all laws and regulations.

Not all sales reps support the lawsuits.

Anthony DeMeis, a co-founder of the Pharmaceutical Representative Society of New York, said it was unfortunate that some people are looking for ways to get more money from their employers. He said he doesn't know of many other jobs that offer college grads $60,000 to $80,000 a year with a free car and free cell phone.

"Everyone I know who does their job well works 60 or more hours a week," DeMeis said. "The harder you work, the more work you make for yourself. I think they're getting paid for overtime, through the bonuses they're getting."