Labor Dept rule on independent contractors likely to land as early as
Tuesday - sources
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[October 11, 2022] By
Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A proposed
Department of Labor rule defining whether workers for rideshare, retail
and delivery companies are misidentified as independent contractors is
expected to be released as early as Tuesday, two sources with knowledge
of the matter said.
Details of the new rule have not been made public. But the department is
expected to model it on legal guidance that says people economically
dependent on a company are employees, or go further to expand the pool
of workers who should receive benefits, legal experts have said.
The Labor Department has scheduled a news conference at 9:30 am ET on
Tuesday with Solicitor of Labor Seema Nanda and Principal Deputy Wage
and Hour Administrator Jessica Looman but has not offered any details on
what they will discuss.
The Labor Department and the White House declined to comment.
The White House's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)
completed a review of the rule on Sept. 29, according to White House
records.
Tim Taylor, a litigation attorney and partner at Holland & Knight, who
had served as deputy solicitor at the Labor Department, said rules
typically are cleared in three weeks to a month, but the independent
contractor rule was with White House's OIRA for about three months.
He said the lengthy review period at the White House suggests that the
rule proposed by the Labor Department is either long and complex or that
the White House wanted something different than what the department
proposed.
"And typically when that happens it is because the White House wants
something more aggressive," he said.
Reuters recently reported that groups representing employers had been
trying, and failing, to convince a labor-friendly White House that any
broad rule would hurt workers who want to remain independent and have
flexibility.
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A food delivery person rides an electric
bike during a snow storm in New York City, U.S., February 19, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
More than one-third of U.S. workers, or nearly 60 million people,
performed some sort of freelance work in the past 12 months, a
December 2021 survey by freelancing marketplace Upwork showed.
Broadly defining independent contractors as employees would force
companies to pay benefits, such as overtime pay and health, that
hurt their bottom line. Employers can save about 30% by skipping
payroll taxes and unemployment and benefit costs, workers' groups
estimate.
During separate meetings with the White House to discuss the rule,
several worker groups argued a growing number of companies,
including in health care, are misclassifying hundreds of thousands
of workers. These workers are often left without social safety nets,
accident coverage or paid sick leave, and are squeezed by high gas
prices, they said.
This is President Joe Biden's second stab at resetting rules about
how employees can be defined. A federal judge in Texas ruled in
March that the Biden administration, which had withdrawn a Trump-era
rule that favored business groups on the issue, had not followed
proper procedure.
The proposed rule will be open to public comment before the Labor
Department issues a final rule, which companies are expected to
quickly challenge in court.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington, Additional reporting by
Dan Weissner and David Shepardson, Editing by Heather Timmons,
Colleen Jenkins and Gerry Doyle)
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