Labor News & Commentary January 9, 2024 Las Vegas hospitality workers announce their upcoming strike
https://onlabor.org/january-8-2024-2/
By Sunah Chang
Sunah Chang is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary: the Department of Labor finalizes its rule on independent contractors, Las Vegas hospitality workers announce their upcoming strike, and the New York Times profiles the American labor movements attitudes towards the Israel-Gaza war.
Today, the Department of Labor released a final rule, which would make it more challenging for companies to classify workers as independent contractors under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The rule aims to crack down on the misclassification of employees as contractors, which has allowed companies to skirt their workers rights to minimum wage and overtime pay. While the rule does not single out any particular industry or job, the rule will likely have far-reaching impacts on construction, trucking, and healthcare industries where misclassification is commonplace. The policy is also expected to disrupt business models like Uber and Lyft, which rely on hiring drivers as gig workers rather than as employees.
The new rule replaces the independent contractor rule promulgated by the Trump administrations DOL in 2021, which established a business-friendly rule for examining independent contractor status. The Trump-era rule focused on two core factorsthe nature and degree of control over the work and the workers opportunity for profit or lossto drive the independent contractor analysis. However, under the new rule, the agency will employ a totality-of-the-circumstances approach for analyzing whether a worker is properly classified as an independent contractor. In particular, the rule provides six factors to be considered on an equally weighted basis: the workers opportunity for profit or loss, investments by the worker and the employer, degree of permanence of the work relationship, nature and degree of control, extent to which the work is performed is an integral part of the employers business, and specialized skill and initiative. This multi-factor framework is expected to tip the scales away from the pro-business Trump-era rule. The new rule, which will be officially published in the Federal Register tomorrow, is scheduled to go into effect on March 11, 2024.
Yesterday, unions representing Las Vegas hospitality workers announced that they plan to go on strike on February 2nd unless contract agreements are reached before then. The Culinary and Bartenders Unions are in ongoing contract negotiations with 21 hotels and casinos in Las Vegas. The unions are demanding higher pay, improved safety measures, protections against technology, among other benefits. If the strike occurs as scheduled, it would arrive just days before Las Vegas hosts its first Super Bowl on February 11th.
FULL story at link above.