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The Courts Transportation

California Overturns Uber's Appeal: Its Drivers Are Employees, Not Contractors 367

An anonymous reader writes: Uber's third attempt to overturn a California court ruling stating that its drivers are employees and not contractors has ended in failure, with the appeal dismissed by the California Employment Development Department (EDD). The California Labor Commission ruled in June on the matter, and in a later appeal one judge effectively decided that the difference between 'firing' a driver and deactivating their account is purely semantic.
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California Overturns Uber's Appeal: Its Drivers Are Employees, Not Contractors

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    A court ruling that helps labor! Better go buy a lottery ticket, these things come around only once every hundred years!

    • If it makes you feel any better, the ruling only affects one employee in one situation, so it will probably result in a minor policy change by Uber to avoid that situation in the future, a donation to the campaigns of the proper public officials, and life will continue as before.
  • A root of this issue is the 18th, 19th and 20th century concepts of employees / employers and an outdated set of definitions. Like so many modern issues near and dear, we will have to reassess out fundamental assumptions about all kinds of things, this being just one.

    If I set my own schedule, and take as much time off as I choose, am I under an employer's control?
    Can robots marry humans, and why would they want to aside from Scarlett Johansson?
    Do women have the right to choose... how their FICA re
    • A root of this issue is the 18th, 19th and 20th century concepts of employees / employers and an outdated set of definitions. Like so many modern issues near and dear, we will have to reassess out fundamental assumptions about all kinds of things, this being just one.

      I disagree. The fundamental concepts of employee and employer are as true now as they were then. It may take some time, but modern-day legal tools are more than capable of sorting out uber's employment issues without any fundamental shift in thought.

      • Old mindset : Employee is someone I set hours for, provide all materials, put on a schedule, mandate production & performance requirements, allot specific amount of days off for vacation, days allowed for maternity, set days allowed for illness absence, provide workspace, and so forth.

        New reality: A lot of gig jobs are on demand both ways; many people want the freedom to run themselves as a business, earn in a flexible / very few strings attached format, with an unlimited or unrestricted number
  • .... because an employer wasn't charging them, how is a former employee supposed to collect EI?
  • If the distinction "is purely semantic", then it is actually meaningful. That's not what you're trying to say, is it?
  • This is probably an attempt to make Uber bear a bigger burden in terms of being forced to include the drivers on their payroll.

  • Economy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday September 10, 2015 @10:21AM (#50494983)
    Anyone who accepts restrictions from a company and yet doesn't want full labor protection of an employee is either totally naive about how tenuous their situation really is, or is experiencing desperation brought on by a totally shitty economy. Either way, I applaud the California decision, because corporations should not be taking advantage of either.
  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Thursday September 10, 2015 @10:43AM (#50495229)

    There are all sorts of arguments about why Uber should or shouldn't have to act like a traditional taxi company. But in my opinion, that's less important than this question, for the broader economy and labor force. Social media, tech publications, and even the MBA rags have had all sorts of glowing stories about the "gig economy." Basically, they argue that the flexibility offered to workers by allowing them to string together contract jobs to make income outweighs the stability of traditional employment. Uber is cited as an example on the low end, day laborer style side, and of course, high flying "technology consultants" making $150+ an hour are put up as shining examples of why this should be the future of employment.

    I'm far from a Luddite, but I'm a big believer in stability. Especially as you acquire a family and grown-up responsibilities, life in the US revolves around a steady income, health insurance and a way to save for retirement. The high-flying tech consultants can arrange for these things, but lately I've been seeing more of these cheerleading articles advocating for all employees to switch to this model. Most average employees don't have the motivation or skills to market themselves the way these consultants do, and they may lack the skills that would make them good contractor candidates.

    It just seems to me that companies want a disposable labor force that they don't need to pay benefits, vacation, etc. for. Basically, they want to go back to a pre-Depression era where workers just turn up at the factory gates every morning and hope to get work. That may be appealing to Millenials who don't have any family ties and will move at the drop of a hat. If we have to go this way, then things like real estate transactions need to be streamlined, life has to be restructured around variable income levels, etc. and I think society isn't ready for it yet.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday September 10, 2015 @11:36AM (#50495839) Homepage Journal

      It just seems to me that companies want a disposable labor force that they don't need to pay benefits, vacation, etc. for. Basically, they want to go back to a pre-Depression era where workers just turn up at the factory gates every morning and hope to get work.

      The last backlash led to unions, worker's rights, etc. Will the next one lead to a Minimum Guaranteed Income? If we had that (and working national health care, not just health insurance) then we could work for any amount which suited us.

    • by plopez ( 54068 )

      I have worked gigs and as a true 1099 contractor, not an employee of a contract house (aka body shop), and liked it. I liked setting my own hours, selecting the jobs, setting the rates, etc. This "you're a contractor but we own your ass" thing that Uber does is BS. And I would call BS if it were any other company, not just an internet company.

  • This is great! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MarkvW ( 1037596 ) on Thursday September 10, 2015 @10:56AM (#50495353)

    Uber wants all the benefits of being an employer with none of the responsibilities.

    If you listen to Uber, every worker is an independent contractor and all the employee protection laws we fought so hard for over the last century don't apply any more.

    • This makes me wonder if schools are even teaching about how American society was before the great depression. Perhaps millennials are so wrapped up in themselves or so disallusioned by the lack of jobs that history is doomed to repeat itself.
  • by Mr. Droopy Drawers ( 215436 ) on Thursday September 10, 2015 @12:03PM (#50496121)
    They simply fixed the glitch. [youtube.com].
  • by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Thursday September 10, 2015 @12:11PM (#50496217) Homepage Journal

    The company and its franchisees pull the independent contractor status all the goddamned time while doing all they can to violate California law - charging you for uniforms (illegal under CA law) deduction of tips from credit card purchases (illegal just about anywhere) refusal to pay mileage reimbursement (IRS law violation) and much, much more.

    John Schnatter is a class-A business criminal and needs to be taken to task by the courts.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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