Texas Nurses Attorney
Texas Nurses
Nurses are the backbone of our healthcare system and David Langenfeld, a Texas nurses attorney, fights for your rights.
Whether you are a Registered Nurse (RN), Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN), Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CNRA), or a Licensed Vocational Nurse (LVN), David can help you in a variety of different legal areas including defense in licensure and disciplinary actions initiated by the Texas Board of Nursing and claims to collect unpaid overtime wages from employers and former employers.
Consult a Texas Nurses Attorney for Investigations
by the Texas Board of Nursing
Board investigations usually arise because a patient, a patient’s family member, or a healthcare facility files a complaint with the Texas Board of Nursing, or the “Board” or “BON” as it is often called.
Some of the most common complaints include:
- Patient abuse or neglect
- HIPAA violations
- Failure to document medical charts
- Falsely documenting medical charts
- Medication errors
- Drug diversion or impairment
- Failure to properly waste medication
A BON investigation usually begins with the BON sending a letter to the nurse informing them that they are the subject of an investigation to determine whether they have violated the Nursing Practice Act.
The letter will summarize the allegations and request a written response within a certain amount of time, usually 30 days.
It is important to respond and to challenge the allegations because Board discipline can be severe and can result in public sanctions on your license.
Based upon the severity of the allegations and the evidence involved, the BON will usually either dismiss the investigation or offer to informally settle the matter with an Agreed Order. The Agreed Order can range from a confidential non-disciplinary Corrective Action to a public disciplinary Order which may include:
- Remedial education
- Warning
- Reprimand
- Licensure suspension or revocation
This is where having an experienced Texas nurses attorney representing you can make a big difference.
The Nurse or the Nurse’s attorney may negotiate with the Board to lower the sanction level or to include language in the Order more favorable to the Nurse.
At some point the Board may offer to conduct a meeting, called an “Informal Settlement Conference” (ISC), to attempt an agreed resolution. If this informal settlement process is not successful, and no agreement can be reached, the case will typically move to formal disciplinary proceedings.
Formal discipline begins with the filing of formal charges by the Board of Nursing with the State Office of Administrative Hearings, often referred to as SOAH.
Failure by the Nurse to file an Answer to the charges may result in a default judgment being taken against the Nurse and a disciplinary Order being entered. Once the Nurse files an Answer the case may proceed with the discovery process, which can include interrogatories, requests for production, requests for admissions, and depositions.
The parties may continue to attempt a negotiated resolution, but if that fails the case will go to a formal hearing, much like a trial, before an Administrative Law Judge who will decide whether the allegations against the Nurse are true.
If the judge decides the allegations have been adequately proven, they will issue that ruling and the Board may impose discipline accordingly
Unpaid Overtime for Texas Nurses
Texas Nurses work long hours taking care of us and our loved ones.
Unfortunately, employers often deny Nurses the overtime wages they deserve.
This may be intentional or may be the result of neglect or ignorance on part of the employer. Regardless, Texas Nurses need to be paid every dime they’ve earned, and David Langenfeld, a proven Texas nurses attorney, fights to make that happen.
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) generally requires that employees who work more than 40 hours in a week receive overtime pay at a rate of one and one-half times their regular rate.
Sometimes employers in the healthcare industry may pay overtime for hours worked over eight in any workday and eighty hours in a fourteen-day work period. Regardless of the method used to calculate overtime, many Texas nurses and healthcare workers are entitled to overtime pay.
Employees of nursing homes, assisted living centers, home health agencies, and hospitals are often the victims of overtime wage theft.
If you’re a Texas nurse and think you have an overtime claim, contact David Langenfeld, a Texas nurses attorney who will fight for everything you’re owed.
Common Overtime Violations a Texas Nurses Attorney Can Help With
Nursing homes, assisted living centers, and hospitals:
- Requiring work off the clock
- Automatic time deduction for meals when the employee does not receive an uninterrupted meal period
- Working or preparing for a shift before the shift begins
- Completing job duties and patient care after the shift ends
- Completing charts and notes after the shift ends
- Unpaid meetings, training, and seminars
Home Health Agencies:
- Fixed rate per visit without an increase for hours over 40 in a week
- Failure to pay for travel time between visits
- Unpaid meetings, training, and seminars
- Failure to pay for charting at home or after hours
Other common violations:
- Misclassifying employees as exempt employees simply because they are paid a salary. Just because an employee receives a salary does not mean they are not entitled to overtime pay.
- Misclassifying LVNs and LPNs as exempt professional employees. These nurses do not qualify as exempt professional and are almost always entitled to overtime pay.
- Misclassifying RNs as exempt professional employees when they are not working in a clinical setting. For example, RNs working as Medical Coders and Utilization Review Nurses are often entitled to overtime pay, even if they receive a salary.
- Misclassifying Nurses as “Independent Contractors.” Nurses working through medical staffing companies are often labeled as contractors or 1099 employees and receive the same hourly rate for all hours worked, even those over 40 in a workweek. Even so-called contract workers are often entitled to overtime pay.
If you have worked more than 40 hours per week as a nurse in Texas without receiving additional compensation for overtime, you need to speak with a qualified Texas nurse attorney today about recovering up to three years of overtime back payments plus penalties and lawyer’s fees.
A Texas Nurses Attorney Who Will Protect Your Rights
David Langenfeld is an experienced Texas nurses attorney who will fight for you in defense of licensure and disciplinary actions by the Texas Board of Nursing licensing, as well as unpaid overtime disputes. Call David today for a free consultation.