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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Death of an Employer Scam
Harold Meyerson
The government cracks down on employers who pretend their workers arent really employees.
One of the most pervasive scams that employers use to lower their workers wages is misclassificationthat is, turning their workers into independent contractors or temps when they are actually employees. Misclassification shouldnt be mistaken for the whim of an errant employer. On the contrary, its a strategy that has been used to transform entire industries...the benefits of misclassification are clear. Turning a worker into a temp or a free agent obviates any need to provide him with benefits. It shields the employer from legal liability for health and safety violations, for industrial accidents, or from wage and hour violations. It invariably lowers such workers wages as well. It makes it impossible for workers to form unions.
Over the past decade, misclassified workers have turned up in more and more industries. The Nissan employees who assemble cars at the companys plants in Mississippi and Tennessee work alongside temps who do the same work as they but who make just a fraction of the employees pay. Misclassification is most widespread, however, in the supply chains of major retailers. The truck drivers who move imported goods from the nations harbors to the giant warehouses where they are sorted and packed for transporting to Wal-Marts and Targets have been labeled independent contractors for decades, though many of them do all their work for a particular trucking company. The warehouse workers who unload those trucks and assemble the pallets that go onto other trucks bound for major retail chains are almost universally employed by temporary employment agencies, though most of then have labored in the same warehouse, packing goods for just one retail chain, for years.
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Last Friday, the National Labor Relations Board took action as well. Its Los Angeles region ruled that drivers who haul cargo for Pacific 9 Transportation from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to the warehouses scattered around Southern California are actually employees, and therefore have the right to form a union. Like thousands of port truckers, the drivers for Pacific 9 could not drive for other companies. Their work and routes were scheduled by Pac 9; their payments to the company for equipment were prescribed by their employer; they were employees in everything but name. A recent study of port truckers by the National Employment Law Project, the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, and Change to Win concluded that roughly 49,000 of the nations 75,000 port drivers are misclassified as independent contractors, and that in California alone, the industrys wage and hour violations run to approximately $850 million every year. The study concluded that drivers misclassified as independent contractors made on average $28,800 a year, while employees made $35,000.
The decisions of the NLRB and the California Labor Commissioner signal that the days of industry-wide misclassificationat least, for port truckersmay be numbered. Even these rulings, limited though they may be, have been decades in the making. Since trucking was deregulated in the late 1970s, drivers at a range of American ports have sought in vain to form unions, but have consistently been thwarted by their legal status as independent contractors. Nearly 20 years ago, one Los Angeles-area union actually tried to help a local businessman create a company that could be the employer of record for the drivers, but the effort never came to fruition, in part because of the legal obstacle presented by the drivers ostensibly independent status. It took workers organizations, labor lawyers and Democratic administrations some time to home in on the strategy of combatting misclassification as the way to win adequate pay and benefits for the drivers. In the past yearand most particularly in the past weekthat strategy has begun to yield tangible results. It will take many more such weeks, however, before the effects of this scam will be significantly diminished.
http://prospect.org/article/death-employer-scam
Truck Drivers Handed Labor Victory That Could Reshape The Industry (updated)
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024705153
dipsydoodle
(42,239 posts)Last edited Wed Mar 26, 2014, 09:04 AM - Edit history (1)
If the master / servant relationship is one to one i.e the employee only does work for a single employer, then the employee is employed by the master : not self employed. Its material here in respect of NHS payments / taxes quite aside from employer liability.
Covered by Vicarious Liability Acts. Master and servant are mere legal terms in this context. http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Master+and+Servant
ProSense
(116,464 posts)closeupready
(29,503 posts)like the Queen is 'merely a figurehead'.
Not really disagreeing with you, more commenting on the abundance of pretense in UK society.
dipsydoodle
(42,239 posts)I used a link to the USA.
closeupready
(29,503 posts)To be honest, though, as an American worker, I don't think I have ever encountered a legal document referencing a 'master'/'servant' dichotomy - probably due to the legacy of human slavery and the association of these terms with that horrific institution. They may still be legitimate terms, but perhaps are archaic, like 'nonetheless' or 'thereupon'.
Cheers.
dipsydoodle
(42,239 posts)Its more or less only used here in some court cases between HMRC , that's Revenue and Customs - your IRS , and employers who are using a scam to duck out of NHS payments for employees payable for our National Health system.
Ms. Toad
(34,066 posts)(in the US). They designate a legal relationship which (often) makes the master responsible for the acts of the servant. Not archaic at all - more terms of art.
ProSense
(116,464 posts)justhanginon
(3,290 posts)It's good someone's doing something about it. 1099 fraud has been pretty common for a long time. It's really common in construction with some of the shadier companies, and with those it's a double-whammy. Workers are responsible for more taxes than they should be, and they're not covered by the company's workman's comp or insurance. So they're working in a dangerous field, and if they get hurt they're pretty well screwed.