Saturday, March 13, 2021

Square Gigs, Round Economy

Our legislative affairs correspondent in the Outer Banks weighs in meatily. And since he's subcontracted posting to me because he claims that he's just a simple caveman blogger and doesn't understand this newfangled technology, I believe this post is relevant to my employment status.

A piece of legislation working its way through Congress applies to few of you and is by no means a cinch to pass, so of course I’ll bore you with details.

H.R. 842, the Preserving the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, is labor legislation that aims to bolster the rights of workers to negotiate for higher wages, increased benefits and safer work environments. It was introduced by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), chair of the Labor and Education Committee and a liberal presence in the House of Representatives for almost 30 years, with beaucoup Dem co-signers.

Hard out here for a pimp in the jig economy
The PRO Act debate lines up predictably on many fronts. Many left-leaning advocates argue that worker rights and benefits have eroded, particularly during the pandemic. They say that workers must be able to organize and unionize without retribution, and that companies should be held accountable for monkeying with those efforts. Conservative critics gripe about union over-reach, added cost to businesses, right-to-work legislation already on the books, and onerous government control.

Except it’s not quite that simple. Among those who could be hurt by the PRO Act are segments of the self-employed, retirees and semi-retirees who do consulting work, freelance writers (raising my hand), and part-time workers. In short, independent contractors who arrange work with various employers. If certain criteria aren’t met, companies could not classify someone as a contract worker and would be required to hire them full-time to comply with the law. In some cases, companies would opt out and work opportunities would simply evaporate. In others, workers would opt out, rather than subject themselves to the constraints of full-time employment.

Austen Bannen, a senior policy analyst for the conservative, Koch brothers-founded Americans for Prosperity, wrote that the PRO Act “would hurt both employers and employees by putting numerous government roadblocks to the flexible work arrangements both are seeking. Instead of being able to work your own way as an independent contractor, the PRO Act could lead to both government and unions dictating the terms of your employment.”

I’m forever skeptical when pro-business mouthpieces yammer about what’s best for workers, since many corporations regard workers as furniture with a pulse. But in this case, there’s at least a kernel of truth. Whether by force or by choice, the gig economy is upon us and expanding.

The PRO Act would introduce a three-prong, ABC test to determine if someone should be classified as an employee and not an independent contractor. According to language within the draft of the bill: “An individual performing any service shall be considered an employee and not an independent contractor, unless,

A) “The individual is free from control and direction in connection with the performance of the service, both under contract for the performance of service and fact;

B) “The service is performed outside the usual course of the business of the employer;

C) “The individual is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business of the same nature as that involved in the service performed.

An independent consultant might pass B) and C), but flunk A) if an employer dictates terms of service. A freelance writer might pass C), but flunk A) and certainly flunk B), since articles are part of the “usual course of business” for publications.

A similar bill passed the House of Representatives last year, but died because the Republican-controlled Senate refused to take it up. Now, with a 50-50 Senate split and VP Harris holding the tiebreaker vote, many think the current bill will at least get a hearing. Several conservative Dems and those whose constituents are less than thrilled with the bill could decide its fate and take Harris out of the equation.

The PRO Act is comparable to one that went into effect in California in 2020. Assembly Bill 5 (AB5), the so-called “gig worker bill,” required companies that use independent contractors to re-classify them as employees, with some exceptions. It was aimed at companies that hire a lot of independent workers, such as Uber, Lyft and DoorDash. However, it also swept up still and video photographers, editors, freelance writers, content contributors and artists.

Griping grew so loud that California amended the bill – twice. One piece of legislation created exemptions for many workers, such as writers and artists. A ballot initiative allowed app-based drivers to remain independent contractors. 

Near as I can tell, most of you have traditional work. Company structure. Set schedule. Salary. Benefits. But as businesses consolidate or downsize staff, more people are thrown out of work and find themselves part of the gig economy. As many of you approach your seventh decade, you may choose to hop off the hamster wheel and peddle your knowledge and expertise part-time or as a freelancer, because you prefer the flexibility or because companies increasingly lean that direction in employment practices.

No telling what the PRO Act will look like after Congresscritters start slicing and dicing. Certainly, workers deserve protection and fair wages (hello, meat packers and supply chainers in a pandemic). But one-size-fits-all legislation that caters to unions in an evolving economy appears unwise. Babies and bath water, and all that.


40 comments:

TR said...

That's a nice photo of Kilgore (joke for four)

Mark said...

Anybody else lifting while listening to Easy Lover today? No? Just me?

Marls said...

TR - I LOL'ed

TR said...

No Mark, but I lifted to Don’t Sweat the Technique yesterday.

I am anti-Collins.

Mark said...

I’m not super pro-Collins but he has some jams I enjoy.

Spring has arrived in Florida. My kid and her friend are in the pool and the wife is laying out in our hammock.

Whitney said...

I’m pro-Collins pre-1987. “I Don’t Care Any More” takes me way back.

Dave said...

don't get me started on "sussudio." i'm even pissed that i thought of it.

Whitney said...

It’s not as bad as you think

Mark said...

Update on the kid’s first season playing baseball: She got the game ball on Thursday night. 3-3 and made a couple great stops at third. I think she’s hooked. Can’t blame her as baseball was my fist love too buuut I’m quite fearful that this is the beginning of me spending my summers sweating my ass off on softball fields across south and central Florida.

Mark said...

Also: Illinois will be my pick in the majority of my brackets. They good.

Mark said...

There may not be a football/basketball coach combination in high major D1 sports that I dislike more than Kirk Ferentz and Fran McCaffrey.

rob said...

pour some out for marvelous marvin hagler

Mark said...

Oh shit. That bums me out.

rob said...

gheorghetown is on a 34-3 run against creighton. pat’s gonna own msg after this.

zman said...

zdaughter is taking over Dave’s role as daylight savings curmudgeon. We talked about it tonight and how it helps farmers have an extra hour of light. Her reply: “Why don’t the farmers just get up an hour earlier? Why do I have to lose an hour of sleep?”

rootsminer said...

Amen, zdaughter! I usually hate it for a few days, then am grateful for the extra evening light until the hour returns

Mark said...

I hate the loss of an hour of sleep but the extra hour of outdoor time is invaluable during the Florida spring and summer.

TR said...

In the pre-pandemic days, the 5-530 AM wakeups for my job made the week after daylight savings brutal. It was so dark I felt like I was waking up at 3 in the morning as I drove to NYC or took a train there. Not an issue this year!

A year ago today was a Saturday, the first real day the pandemic sunk in. We went hiking with another family b/c we realized we need to start getting used to this "walking around outdoors" stuff, b/c it would be our only option. I remember the trails being very crowded and everybody being sorta creeped out about walking by other folks.

Good to be able to see the other side of this, but we still have a fuckton of <50 y/o adults to vaccinate. I want to believe I'll get mine before Memorial Day, but I'm skeptical.

Danimal said...

I appreciate the post Dave, as one who has been following AB5 and now 2257 (which includes caddies as a carve out). Joey Bide's/Kamala/DOL are going to begin applying pressure in the form of enforcement and penalties for those that intentionally misclassify their workers as independent contractors. Uncle Sam needs its tax rev, badly. (see 1.9 trillion stimulus)
More to write on this - perhaps I'll contribute this year.

Mark said...

Bama-LSU is a fun game. Both teams playing at a high level offensively.

rob said...

nate oats with some animosity for lsu. here for it.

Mark said...

We have a very large fish tank in our house. We’ve had it for about 15 years. I walked by it this morning and noticed a huge puddle underneath it. It sprung a leak at some point late last night and was slowly dripping water all over our floor. Luckily there was no floor damage but it’s resulted in a less than relaxing Sunday around here.

Mark said...

One of the assistants from my time at Chowan is good friends with Nate Oats. He’s also a Louisiana native and huge LSU fan. Tough day for my guy.

rob said...

ohio state/illinois also fun

TR said...

You know what’s really fun in my house? When my wife goes nuts at Vineyard Vines and then makes the boys try on a million different ensembles, none of which they would ever ever wear if they had a choice. Screams, complaints, yells and tears. And the kids make noise too.

TR said...

So yeah, Sunday scotch.

rob said...

i'm long on big 10 teams in my first bracket. definitely recency bias, because i watched so much more of that league than any other this year.

Unknown said...

Got my first dose of the vaccine yesterday. A bit sick today, which they say is normal for those who've had COVID.

rob said...

first four acts at the grammys all killed it. auspicious beginning.

Mark said...

I rarely watch the Grammys because I don’t listen to much pop but my kid is at the age center hat she listens to all this and my wife likes pop as well. Performances have been strong to quite strong.

And I’m late on this but Illinois-Ohio State was highly entertaining.

Mark said...

Not sure how autocorrect got “center hat” from a misspelling of “where” but here we are.

rob said...

i've only really watched the grammy on purpose the past few years, and the performances can be uneven. but this year's have been terrific so far. and dua lipa...i had no idea.

rob said...

through three quarters against the cavs this evening, nate knight has 12 points (3-4 fgs, 1-1 3fg, 5-6 ft), 4 boards, and 2 blocks. mvp.

Mark said...

Anderson.Paak is my dude. He’s incredibly talented and his story is great. His performances tonight with Bruno Mars have been a lot of fun.

rob said...

this is a pretty amazing telling of his story:

https://www.google.com/amp/s/theundefeated.com/features/the-family-that-gave-us-grammy-awards-winner-anderson-paak/amp/

rob said...

and nate finished with 16 and 8 with 2 blocks and a +17 in 23 minutes. if he stays healthy, he’s gonna make some money in the league.

TR said...

I am very surprised by the Grammys interest tonight. Guessing it has to do w/ having daughters.

TR said...

FYI - tonight’s win makes it 9 in a row and 11 out of 12 for the Islanders. Quite a run.

Mark said...

Nice Killer Mile cameo with his verse from Walking in the Snow.

Mark said...

And my Grammy interest is 100% daughter related. She’s on spring break this week so we’ve let her stay up late to watch.