(1) If after investigation the director is of the opinion that the conditions of employment surrounding said employees are detrimental to the health or morals or that a substantial number of workers in any occupation are receiving wages, whether by time rate or piece rate, inadequate to supply the necessary costs of living and to maintain the workers in health, the director shall proceed to establish minimum wage rates either directly or by the indirect method described in subsection (2) of this section. If he selects the direct method, the director shall establish the minimum wage rates.
If he adopts the indirect method, the director shall establish a wage board consistingof not more than three representatives of employers in the occupation in question, and of an equal number of persons to represent the employees in said occupation, and of an equal number of disinterested persons to represent the public, and someone representing the director if it is desired. The director shall name and appoint all members of the wage board and designate the chairman thereof. The selection of members representing employers and employees shall be, so far as practicable, through election by employers and employees respectively, subject to approval and selection by the director. The members of the wage board shall be compensated at the same rate and fees for service as jurors in courts of record, and they shall be allowed their necessary traveling and clerical expenses incurred in the actual performance of their duties, to be paid from the appropriations for the expenses of the division.
The proceedings and deliberations of such wage board shall be made a matter ofrecord for the use of the director and shall be admissible as evidence in any proceedings before the director. Each wage board has the same power as the director to subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, and compel the production of books, papers, and other evidence. Witnesses subpoenaed by a wage board shall be allowed the same compensation as when subpoenaed by the director.
Source: L. 17: p. 384, § 9. C.L. § 4270. CSA: C. 97, § 244. CRS 53: § 80-9-8. C.R.S. 1963: § 80-7-8. L. 69: p. 606, § 91. L. 77: (1) an (2) amended, p. 430, § 8, effective July 1.
Cross references: For juror's fees, see § 13-33-101; for mileage fees of jurors, see § 1333-103.
Wage board - duties - report - quorum. The director may transmit to each wage board all pertinent information in his possession relative to the wages paid or material to the subject of inquiry of the occupation in question. Each wage board shall endeavor to determine, if requested so to do by the director, the standard conditions of employment; the minimum wage, whether by time rate or piece rate, adequate to maintain in health and to supply with the necessary cost of living an employee of ordinary ability in the occupation in question, or in any branches thereof; and suitable minimum wages, graded, so far as practicable, on a rising scale toward the minimum allowed experienced workers, for learners and apprentices. When a majority of the members of a wage board agree upon standard conditions of employment or minimum wage board determinations, they shall report such determinations to the director, together with the reasons therefor and the facts relating thereto. A majority of the members of any such wage board shall constitute a quorum.
Source: L. 17: p. 385, § 10. C.L. § 4271. CSA: C. 97, § 245. CRS 53: § 80-9-9. C.R.S. 1963: § 80-7-9. L. 69: p. 606, § 92. L. 77: Entire section amended, p. 430, § 9, effective July 1.
Director to review report. (1) Upon the receipt of a report from a wage board, the director shall review the same and may approve or disapprove any determination or recommit the subject to the same or a new wage board. If the director approves any of the determinations of the wage board, said director shall publish notice not less than once a week for two successive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county in which any business directly affected thereby is located, that he will, on a date and at a place named in said notice, hold a public meeting, at which all persons in favor of or opposed to said recommendations will be given a hearing.
After publication of notice and the meeting, the director, if so desired, may make andrender such an order as may be proper or necessary to adopt the recommendations and carry the same into effect and require all employees in the occupation directly affected thereby to preserve and comply with such recommendations and order. Such order is effective thirty days after it is made and rendered and shall be in full force and effect on and after that day. After the order is effective, it is unlawful for any employer to violate or disregard any of the terms of the order or to employ any worker in any occupation covered by the order at lower wages or under other conditions than authorized or permitted by the order. The director shall, as far as is practicable, mail a copy of any such order to every employer affected thereby; and every employer affected by the order shall keep a copy thereof posted in a conspicuous place in such employer's establishment. Such order shall include a notice of the contents of sections 8-12-105 (3), 8-12115 (4)(b)(II), and 8-12-116 (2).
In case of an emergency the director may authorize or permit the employment of anyperson for more hours per day or per week than the maximum now fixed by law.
Overtime, at a rate of one and one-half times the regular rate of pay, may be permitted by the director under conditions and rules and for increased minimum wages which the director, after investigation, determines and prescribes by order and which shall apply equally to all employers in such industry or occupation.
Source: L. 17: p. 386, § 11. C.L. § 4272. CSA: C. 97, § 246. CRS 53: § 80-9-10. C.R.S. 1963: § 80-7-10. L. 69: p. 607, § 93. L. 77: (2), (3), and (4) amended, p. 431, § 10, effective July 1. L. 86: (4) amended, p. 472, § 33, effective July 1. L. 2000: (2) amended, p. 1487, § 2, effective July 1.
Cross references: For the maximum number of hours minors may be employed, see § 812-105; for the general eight-hour day requirement, see article 13 of this title.