Posts tagged employee misclassification

    Unions, businesses urge legislators in opposite directions on independent contractor rules

    May 13, 2026 // “New Jersey’s labor department says it may consider some factors in one case but not in another case, so who knows what matters?” said Kim Kavin, a freelance writer long opposed to ABC regulations. “The department says it may consider factors that aren’t listed anywhere.”

    New Jersey: ‘Billions of Dollars’

    December 22, 2025 // Gonzalez and Asaro-Angelo are not the only people who have used the word billions. At the federal level, U.S. Congressman Bobby Scott of Virginia claimed in a January 2024 press release that misclassification was a nearly $4 billion per year problem—citing this research from, you guessed it, the Economic Policy Institute. But in December 2024, the U.S. Department of Labor announced that since January 2021—after nearly four full years of the Biden administration prioritizing the issue of employee misclassification nationwide—it had recovered only about $41 million in back wages for some 28,000 workers.

    Likely 1st AB5 trucking enforcement action in California snags 3 companies

    November 18, 2025 // The combination of penalties assessed plus interest totals $868,127.76. Of that, about $663,000 is expected to be paid to employees. California’s action is not a settlement with the three companies. Sources said the three are expected to appeal and the LCO spokeswoman said the case remains “in litigation.” According to state documents, the appeals process is not in state or federal courts, though presumably an unhappy company could turn to those venues at some points. Rather, they are with the state’s Labor Commissioner.

    Op-ed: America must lead on the gig economy — or others will set the rules

    June 10, 2025 // Look at California’s catastrophic Assembly Bill 5, which tried to reclassify most independent contractors as employees. Instead of improving livelihoods, it triggered chaos. Freelancers across media, transportation, tech, and the arts lost contracts overnight. Self-employment rates cratered. Only after a voter revolt and economic fallout did lawmakers scramble to undo the damage, carving out one exemption after another — a slow-motion admission that they had gone too far. Now, the ILO wants to make AB 5 the global gold standard for the gig economy.

    Interview: Independent Contractors and Union Reforms, How @VinnieVernuccio Champions Worker Choice

    September 12, 2024 // Unions are stuck in this turn of the last century industrial revolution, a one-size-fits-all adversarial business model that most workers today don't want. I do see a place for unions if they embrace a voluntary business model and become like professional service organizations. Unfortunately, they're not there. If you're under a union contract, you're stuck with the wages, the benefits, the vacations, [and] the hours they negotiate for you. It's actually impossible for the employer to unilaterally say, “you're doing a great job, I'm going to give you a raise,” or “I'm going to give you a bonus,” or, “hey, you want more vacation for a little less money?”