Many employers are doing away with unpaid internships.Unpaid internships are legal only if they meet stringent Labor Department criteria. For example, programs must provide training and benefit interns, not employers. Some firms are modifying programs by rotating interns among several departments, says lawyer Brian Dixon of Littler Mendelson. During and after the recession Current DateTime: 10:59:11 08 Mar 2012
LinksList Documentid: 44817528Last month, Xuedan Wang, an unpaid intern at Harper's Bazaar in 2011, sued parent Hearst, saying she shuttled fashion samples between the magazine and vendors, among other menial tasks. "This is the kind of work that's done by a (paid) fashion assistant," Wang, 28, said in an interview. Hearst says its programs "are designed to enhance the educational experience of students," who get academic credit. In a lawsuit against Fox Searchlight Pictures last September, two interns on the film “Black Swan” said they tracked purchase orders, petty cash, and other paperwork. Fox spokesman Russell Nelson says the plaintiffs interned for the film's production company, not Fox. Lawyer Elizabeth Wagoner of Outten & Golden, which filed the two lawsuits, says such internships favor those who can afford to work for free. But Michael Aitken of the Society for Human Resource Management says an overreaction by employers could doom legitimate internships. "That's a lost opportunity for students," he says. This story first appeared in USA Today.
No comments:
Post a Comment