chrisjchrisj
Junior Member
California AB-5 law for independent contractors went into effect Jan 1, what if a sub-contractor that I use doesn't want to be an employee?
I have only read a little bit about it, but one sure way for the subcontractor to remain a subcontractor is to create a business entity such as an S-Corp. There could also be legitimate subcontractors. It seems to me that the purpose of the law is to prevent employers from misclassifying employees as subcontractors.California AB-5 law for independent contractors went into effect Jan 1, what if a sub-contractor that I use doesn't want to be an employee?
That is way too broad a statement to make about a law that has yet to see the inside of a courtroom.I have only read a little bit about it, but one sure way for the subcontractor to remain a subcontractor is to create a business entity such as an S-Corp. There could also be legitimate subcontractors. It seems to me that the purpose of the law is to prevent employers from misclassifying employees as subcontractors.
for some reason, I don't think that is what the law is aboutThen you will replace him with an employee.
The subcontractor is a business entity, and has other clientsI have only read a little bit about it, but one sure way for the subcontractor to remain a subcontractor is to create a business entity such as an S-Corp. There could also be legitimate subcontractors. It seems to me that the purpose of the law is to prevent employers from misclassifying employees as subcontractors.
There is nothing broad about that. If a subcontractor becomes an S-corp then they are no longer operating as an individual and therefore cannot be treated as an employee. That is a statement of fact that doesn't have any direct corulation to the new CA law.That is way too broad a statement to make about a law that has yet to see the inside of a courtroom.
This law has seen courtrooms, and went to the calif supreme courtThat is way too broad a statement to make about a law that has yet to see the inside of a courtroom.
Logically, then that would mean that the subcontractor would remain a subcontractor. However the law is very new and untested, and if the type of entity is one that might be considered to be "disregarded", like a single member LLC, then that might not be the case.The subcontractor is a business entity, and has other clients
What the law is about and what the consequences of the law are, are often two very different things.The subcontractor is a business entity, and has other clients
What caused the law is what has seen court.This law has seen courtrooms, and went to the calif supreme court
Here is the 3 part test that the law requires.The subcontractor is a business entity, and has other clients
There is no "what if." You don't have a choice. If he meets the statutory definition of employee, you treat him as an employee. If he doesn't like it he can walk.California AB-5 law for independent contractors went into effect Jan 1, what if a sub-contractor that I use doesn't want to be an employee?
AB-5 codifies the decision rendered in Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court of Los Angeles (2018) 4 Cal.5th 903.What caused the law is what has seen court.
Thanks for all the replies, so, the law and consequences are untested, some entities "might" be considered to be "disregarded"; what is a small business supposed to do? If another business is in the software consulting business, as I am, I can't hire their services, I have to find someone to hire with equal knowledge and experience as that business person? Even if I just need them for just one client of mine, just for a limited amount of time?What the law is about and what the consequences of the law are, are often two very different things.
I don't think you have actually read the law. There is nothing in it that would stop you from contracting with a bonified business. The primary thing this law does is codifies the "employer" has the burden of proof that the contractor shouldn't be, under the law, an employee.If another business is in the software consulting business, as I am, I can't hire their services,