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Independent Contractors
Do’s and Don’ts
James P. Greene
Dykema
2723 South State Street
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104
(734) 214-7667
[email protected]
California | Illinois | Michigan | Texas | Washington, D.C.
www.dykema.com
Advantages to Employers
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Who Cares?

IRS
• More difficult to collect income taxes
from independent contractors

HHS
• More difficult to collect payroll taxes
from independent contractors

Department of Labor
• Potential abuse of minimum wage
and overtime laws
• Potential abuse of anti-discrimination
laws
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Who Cares?

State of Michigan
• More difficult to collect income taxes
from independent contractors

Michigan Unemployment Agency
• Employers are not contributing to the
UI fund

Michigan Workers Compensation
Agency
• Workers are not protected
• Employers are not contributing to the
WC fund
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How Big of a Problem?
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What’s Being Done?

Department of Labor
• 2011 FY Budget included $25 million
to combat misclassification of
employees as independent
contractors, including:
– $12M and 90 FTE to WHD for
targeted investigations
– $11.25M and 2 FTE for grants to
states to focus on misclassification
– $1.6M and 10 FTE to Solicitor of
Labor to pursue misclassification
litigation
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What’s Being Done?

Department of Labor
• 2012 FY Budget request of $50
million to pursue misclassification
• 2013 FY Budget of $14 million for
same
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Michigan Task Force
In February 2008, the State of Michigan
created an “Interagency Task Force on
Employee Misclassifications.”
The task force was established to discover
classification violations by working
cooperatively with local, state and federal
law enforcement agencies, including the
IRS.
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Risks Associated with
Employee Misclassification
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Risks (continued)

Insurance Premiums
• Back payment of premiums (if insurer
permits)

Penalties
• Government fines
• Payment of employment taxes
– 100% of FICA contribution
– Employer may not collect
employee amount from
misclassified worker
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Who is an independent
contractor?

Each governmental unit and/or agency
uses its own analysis to determine if a
worker is an “independent contractor”

No unit/agency has a precise definition –
the totality of the circumstances must be
analyzed.
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Michigan Economic Reality Test
The Michigan Unemployment Agency,
based upon court decisions, uses the
“economic reality test” to determine if a
worker is an employee or an independent
contractor.
No one consideration used in the test
answers the question; they must all be
considered together.
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Economic Reality Test

Whether the employer will incur liability if
the relationship terminates at will

Whether the work performed is an
integral part of the employer’s business

Whether the employee depends upon
the wages for living expenses

Whether the employee furnishes
equipment and materials

Whether the employee holds himself out
to the public as able to perform the
same tasks
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Economic Reality Test

Whether the work involved is
customarily performed by an
independent contractor

The factors of control, payment of
wages, maintenance of discipline, and
the right to hire and fire employees
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IRS Test
The IRS looks at the degree of control the
employer exerts over the worker and the
degree of independence exhibited by the
worker.
The IRS considers facts that provide
evidence in the following three categories:

Behavioral Control

Financial Control

Type of Relationship
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Behavioral Control

Control over when and where the work
will be done

Whether or not the employer provides
instruction on how the work will be done

Whether the worker uses the employer’s
or his/her own tools and equipment

Whether or not the employer provides
training to the worker

How the worker is evaluated (details or
end result)
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Financial Control

Extent of unreimbursed business
expenses

Extent of worker’s investment in
equipment and facilities

Extent to which the worker’s services
are made available to the relevant
market

Extent to which the worker can realize a
profit or loss

Method of payment
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Type of Relationship

Whether or not the employer provides
the worker with employee-type benefits
• Insurance
• Pension plan
• Vacation, holiday, or sick pay

Whether or not the worker is provided a
copy of the employee handbook

Whether or not the worker is engaged
with the expectation that the relationship
will continue indefinitely

The extent to which the worker’s
services are a key aspect of the
employer’s regular business
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US Supreme Court
In resolving disputes under the Fair Labor
Standards Act, the US Supreme Court has
said that no single factor is determinative,
but depends upon the whole activity. The
factors the Court has considered
significant include:
The
extent to which the worker’s services
are an integral part of the employer’s
business
The
permanency of the relationship
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US Supreme Court cont.
The
amount of the worker’s investment in
facilities and equipment
The
nature and degree of control by the
principal
The
worker’s opportunities for profit and
loss
The
level of skill require in performing the
job and the amount of initiative, judgment,
or foresight in open market competition
with others required for the success of the
claimed independent enterprise
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Painter Bob
A Straightforward Example

Painter Bob
• Bob advertises in the local
newspaper to get jobs
• He maintains his own brushes,
ladders, and drop cloths, and buys
his own paint
• He is paid by the job
• When the paint job is complete, Bob
no longer works for the
customer/employer
• Bob is an independent contractor
Painter John
A Straightforward Example –
Part 2

Painter John
• John reports to work at the same
company every day
• The company provides John with the
paint, brushes, ladders and other
materials to do the job
• The company sets John’s working
hours
• John works for the company full time
• John is an employee of the
company
Painter Paul
A Little Murky

Painter Paul
• Paul reports to work at the same
company 3 or 4 days a week. He
works only 3-4 hours each evening.
• Paul advertises in the local
newspaper to get additional day jobs.
• The company provides Paul with the
paint, brushes, ladders and other
materials to do the job.
• The company pays Paul by the hour
and Paul has some discretion on the
days he works.
• Paul has worked for the company in
this capacity for several years.
Treated as an Employee
How you treat a worker is part of the
total picture in determining his/her
classification as an employee or
independent contractor.

Did you give the worker an employee
handbook?

Did you give the worker some employee
benefits? (paid sick days, access to
EAP or reduced membership to gym?)

Did you evaluate the worker using the
same forms as are used for employees?
Employment Agencies Solve
the Problem,…Right?

Employment agencies hire, fire and pay
the workers.

Employment agencies are responsible
for withholding income and payroll
taxes, paying the employer’s portion of
FICA, and possibly providing fringe
benefits to the workers.

The contracting company pays the
agency with a vendor check.

So what could go wrong?
“Joint Employers”

A contracting company may be
considered a “joint employer” depending
upon the amount of control it exercises
over the worker during the term of the
assignment.

A determination is made by looking at
the entire relationship.
“Joint Employers”
Factors to consider in determining if
there is a joint employment relationship
include:

The nature and degree of control over
the worker

The degree of supervision exercised
over the work

The furnishing of work space and/or
equipment

The power each has to determine the
pay rates or method of payment

The right each has to hire, fire or modify
working conditions
Liability of a Joint Employer

Anti-discrimination
• May be liable for discriminatory
treatment or hostile work
environment

FMLA
• Leased employees who work for a
full workweek are counted toward the
50 minimum for FMLA coverage
• Agency responsible for notices
• Contracting employer may be
responsible for accepting a leased
worker returning from FMLA leave
Liability of a Joint Employer

FLSA
• Both employers are liable for
minimum wage and overtime
requirements

NLRA
• Temporary employees from an
agency may be included in a
bargaining unit if they share a
“community of interests”
• Both employers may be held liable in
an unfair labor practice
Liability of a Joint Employer

OSHA
• Leasing employer will likely be liable
for work-related injuries
Best Practices When Leasing
Employees

Seek an indemnity agreement in the
contract with the staffing agency so that
the
agency
retains
liability
for
employment-related claims and agrees
to indemnify the client for any losses
they may incur attributable to the actions
of the agency

Contract should include a provision
making the agency responsible for
payment of all employment taxes
Best Practices When Leasing
Employees

Employers should verify that the
employees are covered under the
agency’s workers’ compensation policy.

Employers should accommodate the
needs of a worker with a disability,
unless it would be an undue hardship.

Employers should ensure that leased
workers
are
not
subjected
to
discriminatory treatment or harassment.

Employers should review their policies
and benefit plans to ensure that leased
employees are not eligible for company
benefits.
IRS Voluntary Classification
Settlement Program
IRS Voluntary Classification
Settlement Program

Eligibility
• Are currently treating the workers as
non-employees
• Have satisfied Form 1099
requirements for the workers for the
past 3 years
• Have no current dispute with the IRS
or the DOL regarding the workers’
status
• Have not been previously audited by
the IRS or if so, have complied with
the results of the previous audit.
IRS Voluntary Classification
Settlement Program

Requirements
• Employer agrees to prospectively
treat the workers as employees in
the future
• Employer agrees to extend the
period of limitations on assessment
of employment taxes for 3 years
beginning after the date of the
agreement
IRS Voluntary Classification
Settlement Program

Benefits
• Employer will pay 10% of
employment tax liability that may
have been due on compensation
paid to workers for the most recent
tax year
• No interest or penalties on the
liability
DO

Review all relationships with
independent contractors and their duties
under the guidelines for all agencies
(IRS, DOL, State of Michigan)

Review all contracts/agreements with
leasing agencies

Review all contracts/employment
agreements with individual independent
contractors
DON’T

Treat independent contractors as
employees

Automatically refuse to address ADA
accommodation requests by
independent contractors
Thank You
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