"Wow, you really do not understand what is going on at all do you? You don't understand that you have potentially (or actually) been breaking the law for many years and that your state (CA) has finally become fed up with it and has put measures in place to force you to honor the law."
Apparently it is you LdiJ who "really do not understand what is going on at all". And I have been breaking the law for years? What a conclusion jump!
I chose the word "potentially" because I do not know whether or not you have been misclassifying the worker under federal law. You have never said what the worker actually does or what your industry is. And yes, I did misunderstand the scope of the law. It does seem that it goes beyond enforcing existing rules.
"The idea that a functioning human being can't be trusted to make the call for him or her self whether they are being "abused" and need protected from a 2nd income by people who believe they can run that person's life better than he or she can"
yes, I agree "by people who believe they can run that person's life better than he or she can", it's about bringing socialism to California. All these subcontractors chose their gigs voluntarily, they aren't being abused, they have the freedom to choose another path anytime.
I still disagree with you about this part. Many workers accept subcontractor or independent contractor jobs just because they are having a hard time finding regular jobs. Many companies absolutely misclassify there workers as independent contractors or sub contractors when what the workers do clearly indicates that they are employees. They do this to avoid providing benefits, to avoid providing worker's compensation insurance, to avoid providing unemployment insurance, and to avoid paying the employer's share of Social Security and Medicare Taxes. The laws absolutely SHOULD come down hard on those types of companies.
In my tax practice I have seen full time insurance office employees treated as contractors, office staff for construction companies treated as contractors, office staff for all kinds of companies treated as contractors, assembly line workers in factories treated as contractors, doctor's office staff treated as contractors, retail staff treated as contractors, and many many other situations where workers were clearly misclassified.