Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Unpaid Interns: Learning Experience or Illegal Exploitation?

Top signs that your unpaid internship might be exploiting you:

  • Not a learning experience. You're supposed to be getting training similar to that you would receive in a vocational school -- something you could use in a future career. If you're filing, stuffing envelopes, answering phones, or just doing donkey work, that work has to be paid. Your internship assignments should build on each other so you develop more skills, similar to the way each chapter of a textbook builds on the other.
  • More benefit to your company than you. This is where most intern programs are an epic fail. If the company is getting most of the benefit, then you have to be paid. You should be getting training that benefits you, and you should be getting more benefit than the company. If they can make money off what you're doing, or if you're saving them from having to pay another employee, you probably have to be paid.
  • You displace a regular employee. That's a huge no-no. If you do the work of a regular employee, take a position they'd normally pay for, or, god forbid, actually replace someone they lay off, you have to be paid.
  • Little or no supervision. If you aren't being closely supervised and are left to work mostly on your own, you're probably an employee who needs to be paid.
  • Guaranteed job. I know, I know. You'd love to have them promise you a job at the end of your internship. But if they guarantee you a job once you complete your training period, you're likely a trainee and must be paid.
  • Surprise! No money. It has to be crystal clear to the intern when they're hired that there's no pay. If the employer sprung the no-pay status on you after you started, then you need to be paid. If you didn't understand going in that there would be no pay while you're training, then you're probably entitled to be paid.

If your employer got it wrong, they could have to pay your wages, any overtime, liquidated damages that equal the wages they failed to pay, and your attorney's fees. If your internship isn't what you thought it would be, and the opportunities promised don't pan out, you can come after them in two years, sometimes three, for the unpaid wages. That means that you may be able to wait to see if you get that job offer before you sue. You can sue on your own behalf and on behalf of all the other interns who didn't get paid.

Signed a waiver of your right to be paid? It probably won't hold up, so talk to a lawyer about it.

Sure, internships can be fantastic. Many students get college credits, learn lots, and then end up with jobs as a result of unpaid internships. But never, ever, let an employer exploit you. Before you accept an internship, get a clear understanding of your job duties, whether you'll be paid, and what the employer expects of you.

If you're not going to be in a great learning experience, then turn it down. It's your time.

Most employers will tell you that time is money. So make sure you get your money's worth out of your internship. Otherwise, you can spend the summer taking classes, getting a paid job, or going to the beach instead of wasting your time.


By Donna Ballman, Posted May 24th 2011 @ 7:05AM


To all students who are looking for an internship

The criteria for unpaid internships: Those criteria require that the position benefit the intern, that the intern not displace regular employees, that the training received be similar to what would be given in an educational institution and that the employer derive no immediate advantage from the intern’s activities.

Interns, Unpaid by a Studio, File Suit
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
Published: September 28, 2011 New York Times