Ifa company agrees to an evalution and possible pay raise every6 monthsbut has done neither in over2 years, is this legal?

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Ifa company agrees to an evalution and possible pay raise every6 monthsbut has done neither in over2 years, is this legal?

No one at this location has received a pay increase in over 2 years and the majority are minimum wage employees. There are several that have not received a pay increase in longer than that. I asked a manager today and he/she said that they have received many pay raises in their total 6 years.

Asked on February 2, 2012 under Employment Labor Law, South Carolina

Answers:

SJZ, Member, New York Bar / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney

Answered 12 years ago | Contributor

The key issue is whether they contractually obligated themselves to provide raises--or if, as you write, they merely agreed to provide a "possible pay raise" every 6 months. A "possible" raise means that the employer does not have to provide a raise--they have not committed or obligated themselves to anything. Therefore, from what write, it would seem to be legal to not provide raises.


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