How do Trump’s DEI Orders Affect Independent Contractor Retention?

In Canadian folklore, the Wendigo is an evil creature that can possess humans and turn them into cannibals. Wendigos cannot control their bloodlust and will even eat their loved ones, according to facts.net. The term “Wendigo Psychosis” has been used to describe a psychiatric condition in which patients experience intense desires to eat human flesh.

And that brings us to Trump’s executive orders on DEI.

On Friday, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals lifted a nationwide injunction that stalled enforcement of Trump’s DEI orders. The injunction was lifted for technical legal reasons, not because of policy reasons. In fact, two of the three judges wrote concurring opinions to show their support for DEI initiatives, even though they agreed the injunction should be lifted.

In one concurrence, Judge Albert Diaz expressed his frustration that they were unable to address the real substantive issue, referring to DEI initiatives (which he favors) as“a monster in America’s closet.” But hopefully not a Wendigo.

So how do the DEI orders affect independent contractors, and what should businesses do?

First, every business should be conducting an overall DEI audit right now. Programs and initiatives that overtly favor one group need to go. Scholarships and internships available only to certain racial or ethnic groups should be changed. Hiring quotas or targets must be removed. There’s a lot of gray area too, and there are a lot of things we are doing for clients in this area, but this post isn’t about DEI audits, so I’ll stop there.

Second, here’s what to look for with contractor relationships:

  • Check your supplier retention policies.
  • Eliminate any requirements to retain a certain percentage of minority or women-owned businesses.
  • Remove contractor (or supplier or vendor) selection criteria that consider race or sex.
  • Make sure that your supervisors who make retention decisions are not evaluated based on their performance in reaching targets to retain contractors based on race or sex.
  • Check supplier and vendor contracts for staffing criteria that favor or disfavor any protected group.

The attack on DEI is real, and companies who rightly remain committed to ensuring fair opportunities for all need to evaluate how they are seeking to achieve these goals. The government has an appetite for consuming companies whose DEI initiatives go too far. Like the Wendigo.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2025 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Image from https://www.giantbomb.com/wendigo/3005-21605/images/

Death Whistle for IC Tests: New Bill Would Create Unified Standard

The Aztec Death Whistle is shaped like a human skull and produces a hideous shrieking sound, as if conjuring up 1000 piercing human screams. These whistles have been discovered in burial site excavations. Scholars believe that they played a role in warfare or burial ceremonies.

Either way, they make a pretty awful sound. Here’s a youtube video demonstration. Enjoy! 😳

Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-CA) hopes that two new bills will sound a death whistle to the confusing morass of independent contractor tests.

The Modern Worker Empowerment Act (MWEA) would codify the test for employee status under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). The new test would create a two-part test. It would be a blend of the Right to Control Test and the Economic Realities Test.

An individual would be deemed an independent contractor if (1) the hiring party does not exercise significant control over how the work is performed, and (2) the person performing the work has the opportunities and risks inherent to entrepreneurship.

The bill would also prohibit consideration of certain facts, such as any requirement to comply with legal and safety standards.

The Modern Worker Security Act (MWSA) would create a safe harbor so that companies could provide portable benefits to independent contractors.

These laws would apply only to classification under the FLSA and NLRA. The bills do not attempt to modify the IRS’s Right to Control standard or any state law tests.

So are these bills a death whistle for the current IC tests?

Probably not. My Aztec-themed prediction device says the bills are not likely to become law. But I like the thinking. Any increase in clarity for the IC tests would be helpful to the business community.

Meanwhile, if you’d like to learn more about Aztec death whistles, there’s an actual study published in Nature that investigates the “Psychoacoustic and Archeoacoustic nature of ancient Aztec death whistle.” Here’s the link.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2025 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Toast! Trump DOL Signals an End to the 2024 Biden Independent Contractor Rule

This Thursday, Feb 27 marks National Toast Day, an important annual celebration that commemorates this versatile form of bread. Toast for breakfast? Toast for brunch? Snack? PB&J? Is there anything toast can’t do?

National Toast Day is celebrated on the last Thursday of February each year, which means that this year it overlaps with National Polar Bear Day, National Strawberry Day, and National Kahlua Day.

Put all those things together and you’ve got one helluva picnic.

But why do I mention toast? Because of independent contractor classification tests, of course. Here’s what I mean.

Remember the 2024 DOL independent contractor rule — you know, the one that the Biden DOL passed in January 2024? We hardly had a chance to get acquainted.

I’ll tell you something that won’t surprise you. The Trump Administration is likely going to rescind it. Or maybe ignore it. Or maybe allow a court to reject it. One way or another, it’s gonna be toast.

There are several lawsuits challenging the 2024 rule, and one of them — Frisard’s Transportation v. US DOL — was scheduled for oral argument at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in early February.

The DOL, however, asked the court to postpone oral argument to allow it time to consider how it wants to proceed. How it wanted to proceed under Biden was to defend the rule. Now, not so much.

However the case proceeds, we can expect that the Trump DOL will not apply the Biden Administration’s independent contractor test.

So what does that mean for the independent contractor test?

In reality, not much.

That’s because, first, the rule applied only to the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which is the federal wage and hour statute. It didn’t apply to tax law, benefits law, labor law, unemployment or workers’ comp law, or any state law.

And second, the test for who is an employee under the FLSA has always been an Economic Realities Test, and courts know what that test is. Every circuit court has a long line of case law describing the Economic Realities test. The courts don’t need the Biden or Trump Administration to tell them how to interpret the FLSA. The FLSA has been on the book since the 1930s, back when Biden and Trump were mere teenagers.

So what does this mean for employers? Again, not much. Employers should assume that under federal wage and hour law, the test for whether someone is an employee or independent contractor is the same as it has been for decades.

This anticipated change is not really going to change anything at all.

Now, if instead of toast, the Trump Administration made the rule into Kahlua, that would seem to be worth celebrating.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2025 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Join Me for the 2025 Master Class in Cleveland, Feb. 26

So what are you doing on Feb 26th? I hope you can join me for the 2025 BakerHostetler Master Class on Labor Relations and Employment Law.

This is our group’s signature annual event, and we are bringing it back to Cleveland. Be ready for a full day of high-level discussion on cutting edge topics and what companies need to know for 2025. This is not a basic lecture series, like you might have attended elsewhere. Instead, the Master Class program features small group sessions with lots of opportunity for interaction.

You can click here for registration, which is complimentary.

The program allows each participant to choose from various elective sessions throughout the day, so you can customize your agenda to focus on the topics that most interest you. The agenda is linked here.

I will be leading the 2:30 session called Avoiding Accidental Employment: A Strategy Session on Independent Contractors and Joint Employment.

I hope to see you there, and please contact me if you have any questions. When you register, be sure to list me as your BakerHostetler contact so that I will be notified. CLE, HRCI, and SHRM credits will be provided.

Feel free to forward the invitation to others. All are welcome, so long as each attendee registers.

I hope to see you there!

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2025 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Hospital Blues? Joint Employer Test Under Review By DC Appeals Court

I ran a search for songs about Washington DC. I didn’t recognize any that popped up, but there is one that caught my eye — and ear.

“Washington DC Hospital Center Blues” is a 1966 release by blues guitarist Skip James. You can check it out here.

Although it may seem like nothing newsworthy is happening in DC lately (tee hee hee, bahahahaha), there is a DC Court of Appeals case worth watching.

The NLRB had ruled that Google is a joint employer of YouTube contract workers, who are represented by the Alphabet Workers Union. The impact of NLRB’s decision would be that Google is forced to the bargaining table to negotiate with workers it does not directly employ. Google defied the order and appealed to the DC Court of Appeals, arguing that it is not a joint employer.

There are a few joint employment issues in the case that are worth watching:

First, what is the proper test for joint employment under the NLRA? Historically, courts have held that a common law right-to-control test applies, but the NLRB keeps issuing its own regulations defining (and changing) the joint employer test.

Second, will courts pay any attention to what the NLRB thinks the test is? If the proper test is a common law test, then the courts don’t need the NLRB to tell it what the common law is.

Finally, whatever the DC Circuit decides, will the NLRB listen? Historically, the NLRB follows the doctrine of non-acquiescence. That’s a fancy of way of saying it doesn’t care what the courts say. If it wasn’t the Supreme Court that ruled, the NLRB tends to ignore the ruling, except as it applies in that particular dispute.

If you’re looking for something interesting that might be happening in DC, this case is a good one to follow.

Oral arguments are scheduled for today.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Did Joni See It Coming? Two Companies Forced to Reclassify All Gig Workers as Employees

They paved paradise and put up a parking lot.

When Joni Mitchell wrote “Big Yellow Taxi,” she had just arrived in Honolulu. She was inspired by the view outside her hotel window, with beautiful green mountains in the distance and, closer to the hotel, a “parking lot as far as the eye could see.” Ugly.

For business owners, the beautiful green mountains are successful business operations, with the business having been built the way you wanted and cultivated over a number of years. Paving over that paradise with a parking lot is the government coming in and forcing you to change how you do business. Ugly.

That’s what is happening to companies that rely on independent contractors but aren’t deliberate enough in how they set up their IC relationships. Looking back at 2024, here’s what I mean, with two specific examples.

Two companies with nationwide operations were forced to convert all independent contractors to employees, at least those working in California.

WorkWhile and Qwick provide gig workers to fill empty shifts. Qwick operates in the hospitality industry, and WorkWhile operates across multiple fields, including manufacturing, hospitality, and general labor.

The companies treat the gig workers as independent contractors. The City of San Francisco sued each company on behalf of the State. The lawsuits alleged that the gig workers were misclassified and should have been treated as employees under California law.

In 2024, both companies settled. Each agreed to pay a seven-figure settlement and to reclassify all gig workers as employees. (Press releases are here and here.)

Before the lawsuits, both companies had operated their businesses this way for years. They didn’t get sued and didn’t have to reclassify the contractors — until they did.

This case is a good reminder of two important rules.

1. Just because you have been doing it this way for years doesn’t mean it’s lawful.

2.The fact that you haven’t been sued means only that you haven’t been sued yet.

Before the lawsuits were filed, the companies had options.

They could have been proactive about changing the facts of the relationships and the contracts. They could have molded the facts the way they wanted without government oversight, in a way that would better insulate them from misclassification claims. This would have been difficult in California, with its strict ABC Test, but not impossible. But it would have taken hard work and a willingness to make changes proactively.

Or they could have converted their contractors to employees, but done it on their own terms, without the government telling them how they have to operate their business.

Now, as part of their settlements, these companies are forced to allow the government to monitor and dictate how they interact with these workers.

Don’t it always seem to go / that you don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone?

Once the government is monitoring how you do business, you’ve lost the flexibility to adapt and build on your terms. It’s too late. The time to act is before you get audited, investigated, or sued. See Rule #2.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Get Skinny in 2025: Adopt a Handbook Just for Temps

Everyone has New Year’s Resolutions. Except me. My wife asks me every year, and every year I politely decline. She doesn’t like when I do that.

Some people pledge to lose weight, to get skinnier. This post is about getting skinny with your handbook for 2025—just for temps.

Do you provide your employee handbook to staffing agency temps? Should you?

Generally, I would say no, you should not. The handbook is filled with information about benefits that apply only to your direct employees, not temps. The handbook also probably directs and controls what your workers do, in ways that could make you a joint employer.

Instead, consider rolling out a skinny handbook just for temps.

There are a few polices that should apply to staffing agency temps, and it’s to your benefit to make clear—in writing— that these policies apply. It can be about 6-8 pages. That’s all you need.

Outline for Handbook for Temps

1) Equal Employment Opportunity

  • Anti-Discrimination
  • Anti-Harassment
  • Complaint Procedure
  • No Retaliation

2) Site Safety

  • Drug and alcohol
  • Weapons
  • Workplace Threats and Violence
  • Accidents, Emergencies, Reporting of Injuries
  • Searches, Screening

That’s it. You can include a welcome message too if you’d like. Maybe add a call-off procedure. Check whether references to “employees” should be changed to “workers” or something similar that doesn’t sound like you are conceding joint employer status.

Creating a skinny handbook for temps should take no more than 2-3 hours. If you want to start the year with a quick accomplishment that will add value, this is a good one. And you can even claim it as your New Year’s Resolution.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Billy Ocean, Billy Gibbons… Bill of Rights? NYC Poster Lists Contractors’ Legal Protections

There have been many notable Bills in rock music. There’s Billy Joel, Billy Idol, and Billy Ocean. Remember Billy Ocean? “Carribean Queen”? Subtitled “(No More Love on the Run).” Billy O gave us this ridiculous video that screams 1980s and includes such bad lip synching that you know, right away, he never could have pulled off a Milli Vanilli.

There’s another Bill that some businesses need to be aware of, including those that are working with independent contractors.

New York City requires businesses to post and to provide all employees the new Worker’s Bill of Rights, which includes information that applies mostly to employees but also, in some cases, to independent contractors. There is no separate requirement, however, to provide the Bill of Rights to independent contractors.

Independent contractors’ rights addressed in the notice include anti-discrimination, anti-harassment, and Freelance Isn’t Free Act rights.

Restaurant delivery app drivers also have enumerated rights, including that the app companies must:

  • pay you a minimum pay rate;
  • tell you how much the customer tips for each delivery;
  • tell you your total pay and tips for the previous day;
  • allow you to limit how far you will go from restaurants and refuse to use certain bridges or tunnels;
  • tell you route details before you accept a delivery; and
  • pay you at least once a week.

The Bill suggests contacting the NY State DOL if you recognize that you may have been misclassified as an independent contractor. The notice doesn’t tell contractors how they might recognize misclassification.

You’d probably recognize most of the Bills in rock that I listed above, but the award for most recognizable Bill in rock goes to Billy Gibbons, guitarist and vocalist for ZZ Top. Yes, he has one of the band’s two fantastic beards, the other belonging to the late Dusty Hill.

Fun fact about ZZ Top: The only band member without a fabulous beard was the drummer. His name? Frank Beard.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

Don’t Get Jailed Because of Your Fat Friend: More Tips on Arbitration Agreements and Joint Employment

A South Korean man was sentenced to one year in prison for binge eating and getting too fat.

It isn’t always illegal to get fat in South Korea, but it is if you do it to dodge mandatory military service, which is what this guy did. His friend, who created the weight-gain plan, was sentenced to six months for aiding and abetting. Yes, really. And his defense was that he didn’t think his friend would go through with it.

One criminal eater, but two men end up in the pokey. Getting in trouble for what someone else does sounds exactly like joint employment.

One issue that often arises in litigation is whether arbitration agreements apply to all defendants in a joint employment dispute. If a plaintiff has an arbitration agreement with his main employer but sues two companies as joint employers, can the second company rely on the first company’s arbitration agreement to get the whole case moved to arbitration?

Sometimes yes, but courts are split. It’s going to depend on the relationship between the parties and how the arbitration agreement is drafted. Let’s quickly address each of those points.

1) Courts are split.

In a recent California case, a grocery store employee sued his employer and a related entity for wage and hour claims. He argued that both were joint employers. He had an arbitration agreement only with the primary employer.

The California Court of Appeal (2d district) ruled that the arbitration agreement required the claims against both parties to go to arbitration. The plaintiff was not allowed to allege that the parties were so interrelated as to be joint employers, but too distinct for both to be covered by the arbitration agreement. The outcome may have been swayed by the close corporate relationship between the defendants. The outcome could be different if the alleged joint employers were unrelated, such as in a staffing agency relationship.

A few years earlier, however, the California Court of Appeal (1st district) reached the opposite conclusion, finding that a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement could not enforce it.

2) It depends on how the agreement is drafted.

The best way to avoid this problem is to draft arbitration agreements to take the joint employment risk into account. Be thoughtful when defining the scope of covered claims and covered entities.

The agreement should apply to claims against the primary employer and related entities, as well as managers, supervisors, etc. Also consider adding third-party beneficiaries.

If employees will be providing services to another entity, such as in a staffing agency relationship, make sure those services are covered.

If your company is receiving the services and another company is the primary employer, check to see whether there’s an arbitration agreement in place, and review its scope.

If I am representing the company receiving the services, I like to require that as a condition of being allowed access to the property (or receiving confidential information, or whatever else), each individual must sign an arbitration agreement that covers claims against the company receiving the services. These can be short, one-page arbitration agreements. If drafted correctly, they do not suggest that there is any employment relationship.

Takeaways

  • Individual arbitration agreements with class waivers are a great way to avoid class action exposure and keep disputes out of public courts — but only if their scope is broad enough to cover the claims and parties.
  • If you are the company receiving services, ask the primary employer whether there are individual arbitration agreements in place and ask to see them.
  • Require anyone providing services, even if not your employee, to sign a contract agreeing to arbitrate claims, and make it a condition of being allowed to work on the property.
  • And most important of all, never help a skinny Korean get fat to avoid military service.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge
 

What is the S.G. Borello Test? (Hint: It’s No Ashley Paradox)

Remember Rick Astley? Yes, this guy. And this song. I assume he had other songs but I know of none of them.

I recently read a Reddit post that offers the Astley Paradox. And it’s a good one.

If you ask Rick Astley for his copy of the movie Up, he cannot give it you as he will never give you up. However, in doing so, he lets you down. Thus creating the Astley Paradox.

California’s tests for determining independent contractor status are not paradoxical, But they are complicated.

There are essentially two tests, the ABC Test and the S.G. Borello Test. The ABC Test is the default test, and it’s the hardest to please.

There are a gazillion exceptions to the ABC Test, and you can find these in California Labor Code sections 2776-2784. But when an exception applies, it doesn’t mean the worker is an independent contractor. It means you use the S.G. Borello test to make that determination instead of the ABC Test.

The S.G. Borello Test is a balancing test. In contrast to the ABC Test, you don’t have to satisfy every factor.

Here’s the S.G. Borello test, with some bonus commentary from the California Department of Industrial Relations:

The California Supreme Court established the Borello test in S.G. Borello & Sons, Inc. v. Dept. of Industrial Relations (1989) 48 Cal.3d 341. The test relies upon multiple factors to make that determination, including whether the potential employer has all necessary control over the manner and means of accomplishing the result desired, although such control need not be direct, actually exercised or detailed. This factor, which is not dispositive, must be considered along with other factors, which include:

  1. Whether the worker performing services holds themselves out as being engaged in an occupation or business distinct from that of the employer;
  2. Whether the work is a regular or integral part of the employer’s business;
  3. Whether the employer or the worker supplies the instrumentalities, tools, and the place for the worker doing the work;
  4. Whether the worker has invested in the business, such as in the equipment or materials required by their task;
  5. Whether the service provided requires a special skill;
  6. The kind of occupation, and whether the work is usually done under the direction of the employer or by a specialist without supervision;
  7. The worker’s opportunity for profit or loss depending on their managerial skill;
  8. The length of time for which the services are to be performed;
  9. The degree of permanence of the working relationship;
  10. The method of payment, whether by time or by the job; 
  11. Whether the worker hires their own employees;
  12. Whether the employer has a right to fire at will or whether a termination gives rise to an action for breach of contract; and
  13. Whether or not the worker and the potential employer believe they are creating an employer-employee relationship (this may be relevant, but the legal determination of employment status is not based on whether the parties believe they have an employer-employee relationship). 

Borello is referred to as a “multifactor” test because it requires consideration of all potentially relevant facts – no single factor controls the determination. Courts have emphasized different factors in the multifactor test depending on the circumstances. For example, where the employer does not control the work details, an employer-employee relationship may be found if (1) the employer retains control over the operation as a whole, (2) the worker’s duties are an integral part of the operation, and (3) the nature of the work makes detailed control unnecessary. (Yellow Cab Cooperative, Inc. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (1991) 226 Cal.App.3d 1288.) 
As the Supreme Court has explained, Borello “emphasizes statutory purpose as the touchstone for deciding whether a particular category of workers should be considered employees rather than independent contractors for purposes of social welfare legislation.” (Dynamex, 4 Cal.5th at 935.) The emphasis on statutory purpose “sets apart the Borello test for distinguishing employees from independent contractors from the [common law] standard . . . in which the control of details factor is given considerable weight.” (Id.)

Most contractor relationships won’t satisfy all of the factors, but you’re going to need to satisfy most if you want independent contractor status under the S.G. Borello test. There’s no precise mathematical formula for how many factors you need, and different judges may evaluate the same set of facts differently, so it’s important to satisfy as many factors as you can.

California law isn’t as forgiving as Rick Astley. California law will often let you down and desert you.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.

2018_Web100Badge