Latest news with #independentcontractor

Wall Street Journal
a day ago
- Business
- Wall Street Journal
Politicians Don't Understand Young Workers
Regarding 'Democrats Attack Gig-Worker Benefits' (Review & Outlook, July 23): Expanding benefits to more people isn't partisan—it's common sense. A poll conducted last year found that a majority of Americans, including 71% of Democrats, supported companies like DoorDash providing benefits for independent workers and keeping independent contractor status. Now members of Congress from both parties can deliver just that. Sen. Bill Cassidy's (R., La.) legislation is an important step toward making it easier to expand portable benefits. The bill generated thoughtful discussion at a recent Senate hearing, not only from Republicans on the committee but also from Democrats such as Sens. Tim Kaine (D., Va.), John Hickenlooper (D., Colo.), Andy Kim (D., N.J.) and Lisa Blunt Rochester (D., Del.).

Travel Weekly
11-07-2025
- Business
- Travel Weekly
A conundrum for host agencies
Mark Pestronk Q: In your Feb. 10 column, you predicted that the Trump administration would repeal the Labor Department's rules governing what constitutes an independent contractor versus an employee. Those rules, adopted during the Biden administration, established rather difficult criteria for true IC status. Has the repeal happened? If not, has the Biden rule been upheld in court? If so, would the court's decision now be affected by the Supreme Court's recent case holding that nationwide injunctions are generally not allowed? A: The Trump administration has made clear that it intends to roll back the Biden‑era Labor Department independent contractor rule (finalized in March 2024) and revert to the more host‑friendly test effective during Trump's first term. The staff at the Labor Department has even been instructed to stop enforcing the Biden rule. However, as of now, the 2024 Biden rule remains in effect for private lawsuits because the Trump administration has not yet repealed it or adopted any new rule. Recently, a federal court in New Mexico upheld the Biden rule against various legal challenges from employers. So, host agencies are confronted with the unusual legal circumstance where an IC or a group of ICs can sue for minimum wages and overtime under the Biden rule, but the federal agency in charge of minimum wages and overtime will not do so or help the plaintiffs. In a nutshell, the Biden rule requires a company to treat workers as employees when they are "economically dependent" on the company for work. A relationship under which an IC depends on the host for training, marketing or referrals might well fail the Biden test. This means that the IC could successfully sue for employee benefits, at least for the time being. The more employer-friendly Trump test applied an "economic-reality test" that primarily considers just two main factors: the nature and degree of the individual's control over the work and the individual's opportunity for profit or loss. A relationship under which an IC can decide how, when and where to work would probably pass muster. So which rule should a host try to comply with right now? Fortunately, it is possible to comply with both rules, and that is what I advise my host agency clients to try to do. For example, hostees should be required to develop their own clientele and should not be told how, when or where to work. That said, there is another set of host agency legal considerations that are frankly more important than the ever-changing Labor Department rules: To prevent fraudulent activities affecting clients, suppliers and the host itself, hosts need to prohibit activities such as depositing client funds into the IC's own bank account, even though such a prohibition tells the IC "how" to work. In general, fraud prevention is more important than reclassification prevention. The Supreme Court's recent precedent limiting nationwide injunctions does not apply to challenges brought under the Administrative Procedure Act, which governs appeals from federal rules. So a federal court can still enjoin rules nationwide.


Malay Mail
13-05-2025
- Malay Mail
Signed, sealed and soiled: Amazon driver caught defecating on LA porch
LOS ANGELES, May 13 — A delivery driver dropped off more than an Amazon package on her weekend route when she stopped to relieve herself outside two different houses. Security camera footage captured the courier, wearing an Amazon vest, climbing the steps of a home in Los Angeles with a parcel in hand. When she walked away from the front porch — pulling up her shorts — a human poop was left on the bottom step. Homeowner Tamara Bedoy told broadcaster KTLA her husband was confronted with the mess when he went to get her a Mothers' Day coffee and to pick up the gift that had been delivered. 'He went downstairs and was greeted by not only one package, but a second inappropriate, disgusting package, which was essentially human feces and what looked to be urination,' Bedoy said. 'I was really disgusted. It was a horrible experience.' Barely half an hour later, the same driver was seen on another home's security camera dropping her pants and urinating close to the package she had just delivered. A spokesman for Amazon told AFP that the driver, who was an independent contractor, was no longer delivering for the company. 'We're deeply disturbed by the unacceptable behaviour of this delivery driver and apologise to the customers involved,' Richard Rocha said. — AFP