By Nick Kotsopoulos
Telegram & Gazette Staff
Updated Dec 9, 2018 at 8:05 PM
Imagine working side-by-side with others who have all the benefits of being an employee of a company including paid sick days, a minimum wage, workers’ comp, unemployment insurance and more. Now imagine you are doing similar work without any of those protections because your boss decided to call you an “independent contractor” instead of an employee simply because he wants to cut corners on costs.
It’s called misclassification, and it’s a growing and devastating problem for workers, businesses that do the right thing and our economy as a whole.
The California labor movement joined Assembly member Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher today to tackle this problem head on, codifying into state law a recent California Supreme Court decision that provides a simple test employers must meet to classify workers as independent contractors. The test, a version of which exists in other states, removes uncertainty and ensures workers who are doing the job of an employee have all the protections and rights that should be afforded to them.
Alexei Koseff details the new effort to protect workers in today’s Sacramento Bee:
The bill would strengthen rules that make it harder for employers to classify workers as contractors and limit their rights under state labor laws.
“Individuals are not able to make it on three side hustles. That shouldn’t be the norm. That shouldn’t be accepted,” Gonzalez Fletcher said. She said the court’s decision is essential for maintaining solid employment for workers in a changing economy and for combating the income inequality that has helped drive California’s poverty rate to one of the highest in the nation.
“What we permit, what we don’t permit, what has worked for generations and built the middle class of California, needs to be largely intact,” she said.