Employee Misclassification Under the FLSA
As the nation’s primary wage law, and one of the most crucial employment laws all businesses need to know, the FLSA provides a minimum wage and overtime protection for virtually all U.S. workers. However, some employers illegally and inaccurately treat their workers as independent contractors to avoid paying required overtime. Besides gig workers, misclassification often affects employees working in construction, hospitality, home care, trucking, delivery, and personal services. What’s more, this illegal employee misclassification denies employees benefits and protections to which they are legally entitled. It’s worth noting that employee misclassification is illegal even if the employee agrees to the erroneous classification.The Proposed Independent Contractor Rule
In brief, the proposed independent contractor rule focuses on an independent contractor’s economic independence from a client rather than the amount of income they earned or whether they have other income streams. To this end, the proposed independent contractor rule applies a six-factor economic reality test that examines the following areas:- the extent to which the performed work is integral to the employer’s business;
- a worker’s level of investment in facilities and equipment;
- the nature and degree of control in the working relationship;
- a possible contractor’s opportunity for profit or loss;
- the amount of foresight and initiative judgment the worker needs to be successful; and
- how permanent or temporary the work relationship is.