While the US Virgin Islands are not a US State, they are considered a United States territory and do fall under jurisdiction of many federal laws. One of these laws is the requirement for employers to post federal and local employment and labor laws. These posters need to be placed in an area where all employees have access such as a break room, mail room or work room – anywhere that the employees tend to gather on a regular basis is appropriate.

It’s also important for employers to make sure that the US Virgin Island posters they have posted are current. Labor and employment laws and details change frequently (sometime even annually). For example, the employers and employees of the US Virgin Islands now have a new EEOC office to report to in San Juan, and this information needs to be reflected on the posters.

The federal laws that need to be posted are USERRA – Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, Equal Employment Opportunity is the Law, Federal Minimum Wage, Employee Polygraph Protection Act, Family and Medical Leave Act and OSHA – Job Safety and Health Protection.

The US Virgin Island posters are important for both employers and employees. Employers can benefit from having the most current information available because they can use the posters as a reference to help them make sure they are upholding the laws and their employees’ rights. They can also use the posters as references whenever they have questions about specific laws pertaining to labor and employment. Employees can also benefit from this information because this is often their main source information on their rights and responsibilities when it comes to labor and employment law. The federal law posters also contain information on what agencies employees need to contact if they are having problems in their workplace.

Required Compliance Posters for the Virgin Islands (VI)

September 17th, 2006 Posted by Lindsay

The Virgin Islands, though not a state, operate as a state as far as the Department of Labor is concerned. That means that they follow all of the U.S. labor laws just like the fifty states. The employment practices in the Virgin Islands, should you choose to visit sometime, would look exactly like those in the United States.

Just like all the states, the Virgin Islands (VI) have a few employment labor posters that must be displayed in the workplace. Those posters are best put in a lunch room or an often used meeting room. Their purpose is to educate and inform all employees in the most current laws and what would constitute a violation of the law. They also tell employees about the statute of limitations for reporting violations or filing for unemployment. They give the name, address, and phone number of the appropriate office that handles each law or Act so that employees can contact them with questions.

The Virgin Islands (VI) Employment Labor Posters that must be displayed in the workplace include: Discrimination Notice, OSHA, Minimum Wage Law, and Unemployment Insurance.

There are also Federal labor law posters that are required to be placed in view of all employees. They are:

Equal Employment Opportunity is the Law

OSHA – Job Safety and Health Protection

Employee Polygraph Protection Act

Federal Minimum Wage

Family and Medical Leave Act

USERRA – Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Act

Everyone who is an employer is required to keep up with the employment labor laws and the changes to those laws. It is a lot of hard work to stay abreast of the changes, but it is necessary in order to avoid citations and/or fines. You need to update the poster any time that there is a change to the law.

Required Labor Law Postings in the Virgin Islands (VI)

September 15th, 2006 Posted by Derrick

Hello! I’d like to take a few minutes to tell you about the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands. Many people are a little confused over what types of labor laws and rules the Virgin Islands enforce because they aren’t a state. Hopefully, I’ll be able to clear up some or all of your confusion.

Although the Virgin Islands aren’t a state, they still follow many of the same laws and rules as the fifty states. They require their employers to display the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands. This is the same requirement that all the other states in the United States have.

Some of the required postings for the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands are: Discrimination, OSHA, Minimum Wage, and Unemployment Insurance. The Virgin Islands follow the same federal requirements as the states in the United States. These requirements for the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands include: Federal Minimum Wage, Equal Employment Opportunity, Employee Polygraph Protection Act, and the Family and Medical Leave Act.

Employers are required to display the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands in an area where all employees have a very good chance of seeing them. This means the posters need to be in an area where all employees are known to gather. Often the best place for the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands is in a break room or beside a time clock.

Employers also need to make sure they update the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands whenever a change is necessary. The posters are required to be updated whenever an applicable law changes. For example, if the minimum wage increased, an employer would have to update the Minimum Wage poster.

Employers need to ensure that all the laws and regulations for the labor law posters for the Virgin Islands are followed. Failure to follow the law may result in a citation and/or a fine.

Virgin Islands (VI) Compliance Posters

September 6th, 2006 Posted by Mark

The Virgin Islands are an unincorporated territory of the United States, and as being such, they don’t have the same rights and privileges that say a state in the Union would have. But the Virgin Islands so have their own laws that are very similar to state employment laws, and they even have their own Virgin Islands Compliance Posters. Hence, this blog!

So how different are the Virgin Islands Compliance Posters compared to the compliance posters of the 50 states, or nearby Puerto Rico for that matter, which is a commonwealth of the United States?

When it comes to your basic employment laws, which form the basis of course of all compliance posters, including the Virgin Islands Compliance Posters, the Virgin Islands aren’t all that different than the states in the Union. For instance, the Virgin Islands have their own minimum wage, which isn’t far off the federal minimum wage. The former is $5.65 per hour, while the latter is still at $5.15.

In the laws of the Virgin Islands Compliance Posters, employers are still required to pay overtime to employees that work more than a given set of time in a week or day. In the Virgin Islands, the rules are that employees must be paid time and a half—similar to many of the states and the federal rules—for all time spent working more than the standard eight hours in a day and or 40 hours in a week, including the sixth and seventh worked consecutive days in a week.

An exception to the Virgin Islands overtime rules—in the tourist and restaurant business, employees, overtime is only required on the seventh consecutive day worked in a week, whereas the sixth is exempt for these employees.

So as you can see, the Virgin Islands may not be incorporated in the United States for what it’s worth, but they still have pretty familiar rules and Virgin Islands Compliance Posters.

Virgin Islands Department of Labor Posters

September 1st, 2006 Posted by Jolie

As you probably already know, Virgin Island law states that all employers must post Virgin Island Department of Labor posters in an area that is visible and accessible to employees so that they can be informed of their labor law rights. These Virgin Island Department of Labor posters include individual and federal labor law notices that are mandated by the U.S. Federal Government.

The Virgin Island posters include Minimum Wage, Discrimination, Unemployment Insurance, and OSHA, while the federal posters explain Equal Opportunity Employment, Federal Minimum Wage, the Employee Polygraph Protection Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act, and OSHA’s Job Safety and Health Protection Act. Virgin Island Department of Labor posters also include the newly instituted Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA).

It is federal law that the Virgin Islands must comply with OSHA, but how they comply depends on the business. Private sector businesses must comply with Federal OSHA regulations, and must post Federal notices. Public sector employers are subject to the Virgin Island’s own occupational safety program, which is approved by the United States Department of Labor.

It is important to note that Virgin Island Department of Labor posters change frequently, and it is important for employers and employees to keep up to date with the most current laws? What is the best way to do this? By ensuring that posters are up to date.

Anyway, just wanted to make sure you were aware that Virgin Islands Department of Labor posters should be posted and change frequently. Be sure to take some time to read Virgin Island Department of Labor posters. I’ll be sure to keep you updated if I hear of anything else.

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