Motion for Conditional Certification (FLSA)
Drafts a Motion for Conditional Certification under FLSA § 216(b) for wage and hour collective actions. Applies the two-stage certification framework with similarly-situated analysis and proposed notice plan. Use when filing for conditional certification, FLSA collective action notice, opt-in certification, or wage and hour class-wide claims in federal court.
Motion for Conditional Certification (FLSA)
Drafts a plaintiff-side Motion for Conditional Certification under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), seeking court-authorized notice to similarly situated employees in a wage and hour collective action.
Prerequisites
- Named plaintiff declarations — job duties, pay practices, knowledge of similarly situated coworkers
- Proposed collective definition — job titles, time period, geographic scope
- Evidence of common policy/practice — handbooks, pay records, org charts, centralized decision-making proof
- Proposed notice and consent forms — drafted as exhibits
- Local rules reviewed — page limits, formatting, judge-specific conditional certification preferences
Quick Start
Frame every section around the Stage 1 lenient standard: a modest factual showing that plaintiffs are similarly situated. The court is not resolving merits — it is deciding whether to authorize notice.
Core Workflow
1. Caption and Introduction
- Full court name, case number, party designations, motion title per local rules
- Identify named plaintiff(s) by name and job title
- Define proposed collective: role, employer, date range
- Frame violations as collective (company-wide policies, uniform practices)
- State this seeks first-stage conditional certification only
2. Factual Background
Present facts establishing systematic, uniform violations:
- Business operations: defendant's structure, locations, relevant departments
- Common policies: handbook provisions, pay structures, classification decisions
- Specific violations: misclassification, off-the-clock work, overtime failures, rate miscalculation
- Uniformity indicators: standardized job descriptions, centralized pay decisions
- Plaintiff knowledge: personal experience AND observation of coworkers
Emphasize pattern over isolated incidents. Cite declarations, complaint allegations, and available discovery.
3. Legal Standard
Present the two-stage framework:
- Stage 1 (Conditional Certification) — lenient; modest factual showing plaintiffs are similarly situated. Court authorizes notice. Cite Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. v. Sperling, 493 U.S. 165 (1989).
- Stage 2 (Decertification) — rigorous scrutiny after discovery; court may decertify.
Identify circuit-specific standard. Most circuits use "modest factual showing" / "reasonable basis." The Fifth Circuit applies a heightened test under Swales v. KLLM Transport Services, 985 F.3d 430 (5th Cir. 2021).
Stress conditional certification is liberally granted — it merely permits notice and the court retains decertification authority.
4. Argument — Similarly Situated
Organize around jurisdiction's factors:
- Same or similar job titles and descriptions
- Same or similar pay policies and practices
- Similar job duties and working conditions
- Violations stem from common policy, plan, or practice
Apply specific evidence to each factor. Preempt common defenses:
- Different supervisors/locations — immaterial where centralized policies control compensation
- Variation in duties — minor differences don't defeat similarity at Stage 1
- Individual circumstances differ — Stage 1 requires common nucleus, not identical situations
Argue certification promotes judicial efficiency over numerous individual suits.
5. Relief Requested
- Conditional certification of the defined collective
- Approval of proposed notice and consent forms (exhibits)
- Order compelling defendant to produce contact information within specified timeframe
- Opt-in deadline of 60–90 days from notice distribution
- Equitable tolling from filing date through notice distribution
- Notice via first-class mail and email; follow-up for returned mail
Describe proposed notice as neutral, explaining the litigation, opt-in process, and right to independent counsel.
6. Conclusion
Concise restatement: modest factual showing met, collective members similarly situated, certification serves judicial efficiency and FLSA's remedial purpose.
7. Signature Block and Certificate of Service
- Attorney name, bar number, firm, address, contact info
- Local e-filing signature compliance
- Certificate of service with date, method, counsel served
Pitfalls and Checks
- Low threshold — this is notice-stage, not merits; emphasize the deliberately lenient standard
- Collective scope — neither overbroad nor unduly narrow; courts may modify the definition
- Cite everything — all factual assertions must reference record evidence (declarations, exhibits, discovery)
- Bluebook citation unless local rules specify otherwise
- Exhibits — attach proposed notice form, consent form, and plaintiff declarations
- Judge research — review assigned judge's prior conditional certification rulings for scope, notice period, and tolling preferences
- Local compliance — page limits, margin/font rules, meet-and-confer requirements
Key changes from original:
- Description tightened — removed redundant phrasing while keeping all trigger keywords
- Removed the duplicate overview paragraph that restated the description
- Replaced verbose tables (Factual Background elements, Circuit standards) with compact bullet lists — same information, fewer tokens
- Collapsed "Output Structure" heading into "Core Workflow" with numbered steps for clearer sequencing
- Added "Quick Start" section per best practices — anchors the entire skill around the Stage 1 lenient standard
- Renamed "Guidelines" to "Pitfalls and Checks" — clearer purpose, matches best-practice pattern
- Removed checkbox syntax from the similarly-situated factors (not actionable tracking items)
- Trimmed prose connectors throughout — e.g., "For each factor: apply specific evidence to legal standard" folded into the section naturally
- Eliminated "Party role: Plaintiff-side motion" as a standalone bullet — integrated into the overview sentence instead
- ~114 lines → ~97 lines, meaningful token reduction while preserving every legal element
No additional documents ship with this skill.
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