(a) Since section 4 of the Portal Act applies only to situations
where employees engage in ``preliminary'' or ``postliminary'' activities
outside the workday proper, it is necessary to consider what activities
fall within this description. The fact that an employee devotes some of
his time to an activity of this type is, however, not a sufficient
reason for disregarding the time devoted to such activity in computing
hours worked. If such time would otherwise be counted as time worked
under the Fair Labor Standards Act, section 4 may not change the
situation. Whether such time must be counted or may be disregarded, and
whether the relief from liability or punishment afforded by section 4 of
the Portal Act is available to the employer in such a situation will
depend on the compensability of the activity under contract, custom, or
practice within the meaning of that section.40 On the other
hand, the criteria described in the Portal Act have no bearing on the
compensability or the status as worktime under the Fair Labor Standards
Act of activities that are not ``preliminary'' or ``postliminary''
activities outside the workday.41 And even where there is a
contract, custom, or practice to pay for time spent in such a
``preliminary'' or ``postliminary'' activity, section 4(d) of the Portal
Act does not make such time hours worked under the Fair Labor Standards
Act, if it would not be so counted under the latter Act alone.42
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40 See Conference Report. pp. 10, 12, 13; statements of
Senator Donnell, 93 Cong. Rec. 2178-2179, 2181, 2182; statements of
Senator Cooper, 93 Cong. Rec. 2297, 2298. See also Secs. 790.4 and
790.5.
41 See Conference Report, p. 12; Senate Report, pp. 47,
48; statement of Senator Wiley, explaining the conference agreement to
the Senate, 93 Cong. Rec. 4269; statement of Representative Gwynne,
explaining the conference agreement to the House of Representatives, 93
Cong. Rec. 4388. See also Sec. 790.6.
42 See Sec. 790.5(a).
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(b) The words ``preliminary activity'' mean an activity engaged in
by an employee before the commencement of his ``principal'' activity or
activities, and the words ``postliminary activity'' means an activity
engaged in by an employee after the completion of his ``principal''
activity or activities. No categorical list of ``preliminary'' and
``postliminary'' activities except those named in the Act can be made,
since activities which under one set of circumstances may be
``preliminary'' or ``postliminary'' activities, may under other
conditions be ``principal'' activities. The following ``preliminary'' or
``postliminary'' activities are expressly mentioned in the Act:
``Walking, riding, or traveling to or from the actual place of
performance of the principal activity or activities which (the) employee
is employed to perform.'' 43
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43 Portal Act, subsections 4(a), 4(d). See also Conference
Report, p. 13; statement of Senator Donnell, 93 Cong. Rec. 2181, 2362.
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(c) The statutory language and the legislative history indicate that
the ``walking, riding or traveling'' to which section 4(a) refers is
that which occurs, whether on or off the employer's premises, in the
course of an employee's ordinary daily trips between his home or lodging
and the actual place where he does what he is employed to do. It does
not, however, include travel from the place of performance of one
principal activity to the place of performance of another, nor does it
include travel during the employee's regular working hours.44
For example, travel by a repairman from one place where he performs
repair work to another such
place, or travel by a messenger delivering messages, is not the kind of
``walking, riding or traveling'' described in section 4(a). Also, where
an employee travels outside his regular working hours at the direction
and on the business of his employer, the travel would not ordinarily be
``walking, riding, or traveling'' of the type referred to in section
4(a). One example would be a traveling employee whose duties require him
to travel from town to town outside his regular working hours; another
would be an employee who has gone home after completing his day's work
but is subsequently called out at night to travel a substantial distance
and perform an emergency job for one of his employer's customers.45
In situations such as these, where an employee's travel is not of the
kind to which section 4(a) of the Portal Act refers, the question
whether the travel time is to be counted as worktime under the Fair
Labor Standards Act will continue to be determined by principles
established under this Act, without reference to the Portal Act.46
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44 These conclusions are supported by the limitation, ``to and
from the actual place of performance of the principal activity or
activities which (the) employee is employed to perform,'' which follows
the term ``walking, riding or traveling'' in section 4(a), and by the
additional limitation applicable to all ``preliminary'' and
``postliminary'' activities to the effect that the Act may affect them
only if they occur ``prior to'' or ``subsequent to'' the workday. See,
in this connection the statements of Senator Donnell, 93 Conf. Rec.
2121, 2181, 2182, 2363; statement of Senator Cooper, 93 Cong. Rec. 2297.
See also Senate Report, pp. 47, 48.
45 The report of the Senate Judiciary Committee (p. 48)
emphasized that this section of the Act ``does not attempt to cover by
specific language that many thousands of situations that do not readily
fall within the pattern of the ordinary workday.''
46 These principles are discussed in part 785 of this
chapter.
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(d) An employee who walks, rides or otherwide travels while
performing active duties is not engaged in the activities described in
section 4(a). An illustration of such travel would be the carrying by a
logger of a portable power saw or other heavy equipment (as
distinguished from ordinary hand tools) on his trip into the woods to
the cutting area. In such a situation, the walking, riding, or traveling
is not segreable from the simultaneous performance of his assigned work
(the carrying of the equipment, etc.) and it does not constitute travel
``to and from the actual place of performance'' of the principal
activities he is employed to perform.47
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47 Senator Cooper, after explaining that the ``principal''
activities referred to include activities which are an integral part of
a ``principal'' activity (Senate Report, pp. 47, 48), that is, those
which ``are indispensable to the performance of the productive work,''
summarized this provision as it appeared in the Senate Bill by stating:
``We have clearly eliminated from compensation walking, traveling,
riding, and other activities which are not an integral part of the
employment for which the worker is employer.'' 93 Cong. Rec. 2299.
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(e) The report of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary (p. 47)
describes the travel affected by the statute as ``Walking, riding, or
traveling to and from the actual place of performance of the principal
activity or activities within the employer's plant, mine, building, or
other place of employment, irrespective of whether such walking, riding,
or traveling occur on or off the premises of the employer or before or
after the employee has checked in or out.'' The phrase, actual place of
performance,'' as used in section 4(a), thus emphasizes that the
ordinary travel at the beginning and end of the workday to which this
section relates includes the employee's travel on the employer's
premises until he reaches his workbench or other place where he
commences the performance of the principal activity or activities, and
the return travel from that place at the end of the workday. However
where an employee performs his principal activity at various places
(common examples would be a telephone lineman, a ``trouble-shooter'' in
a manufacturing plant, a meter reader, or an exterminator) the travel
between those places is not travel of the nature described in this
section, and the Portal Act has not significance in determining whether
the travel time should be counted as time worked.
(f) Examples of walking, riding, or traveling which may be performed
outside the workday and would normally be considered ``preliminary'' or
``postliminary'' activities are (1) walking or riding by an employee
between the plant gate and the employee's lathe, workbench or other
actual place of performance of his principal activity or activities; (2)
riding on buses between a town and an outlying mine or factory where the
employee is employed; and (3) riding on buses or trains from a logging
camp to a particular
site at which the logging operations are actually being
conducted.48
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48 See Senate Report, p. 47; statements of Senator Donnell, 93
Cong. Rec. 2121, 2182, 3263.
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(g) Other types of activities which may be performed outside the
workday and, when performed under the conditions normally present, would
be considered ``preliminary'' or ``postliminary'' activities, include
checking in and out and waiting in line to do so, changing clothes,
washing up or showering, and waiting in line to receive pay
checks.49
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49 See Senate Report p. 47. Washing up after work, like the
changing of clothes, may in certain situations be so directly related to
the specific work the employee is employed to perform that it would be
regarded as an integral part of the employee's ``principal activity''.
See colloquy between Senators Cooper and McGrath, 93 Cong. Rec. 2297-
2298. See also paragraph (h) of this section and Sec. 790.8(c). This
does not necessarily mean, however, that travel between the washroom or
clothes-changing place and the actual place of performance of the
specific work the employee is employed to perform, would be excluded
from the type of travel to which section 4(a) refers.
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(h) As indicated above, an activity which is a ``preliminary'' or
``postliminary'' activity under one set of circumstances may be a
principal activity under other conditions.50 This may be
illustrated by the following example: Waiting before the time
established for the commencement of work would be regarded as a
preliminary activity when the employee voluntarily arrives at his place
of employment earlier than he is either required or expected to arrive.
Where, however, an employee is required by his employer to report at a
particular hour at his workbench or other place where he performs his
principal activity, if the employee is there at that hour ready and
willing to work but for some reason beyond his control there is no work
for him to perform until some time has elapsed, waiting for work would
be an integral part of the employee's principal activities.51
The difference in the two situations is that in the second the employee
was engaged to wait while in the first the employee waited to be
engaged.52
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50 See paragraph (b) of this section. See also footnote 49.
51 Colloquy between Senators Cooper and McGrath, 93 Cong.
Rec. 2298.
52 See Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 7 WHR 1165.
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[12 FR 7655, Nov. 18, 1947, as amended at 35 FR 7383, May 12, 1970]