Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

9 hours ago

Ozzy Osbourne, Black Sabbath’s Bat-Biting Frontman, Dies at 76, BBC Reports

14 hours ago

What’s Fresno County Worth? Property Tax Roll Grows by Billions of Dollars

16 hours ago

Fresno County Authorities Seek Help Locating Missing Woman and Infant

16 hours ago

Maddy Institute Fundraiser to Highlight Central Valley’s Impact at State Capitol

16 hours ago

No Aid Supplies Left and Staff Are Starving in Gaza, Says Norwegian Refugee Council

17 hours ago

US Justice Dept. Asks Epstein Associate Maxwell to Speak to Prosecutors

17 hours ago

Trump’s Golden Dome Looks for Alternatives to Musk’s SpaceX

17 hours ago

Fresno Unified’s Free Immunization Clinics for Students Start in August

19 hours ago
Walters: Who's an Employee and Who's Not?
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 6 years ago on
April 8, 2019

Share

Lorena Gonzalez finds herself in an unusual political position this year — and clearly relishes it.


Opinion
Dan Walters
CALmatters Commentary

Lorena Gonzalez has introduced Assembly Bill 5, which would codify the decision, known colloquially as “Dynamex” for the package delivery company whose workers, having been classified as contractors, sued and won the right to be employees.
Gonzalez, a Democratic assemblywoman from San Diego, is best known as a fierce warrior for worker rights and benefits, and carries a heavy load of legislation, usually on behalf of unions and other advocacy groups.
That puts her in constant conflict with business and employer interests. Her legislation routinely appears on the California Chamber of Commerce’s “job killer” list of bills that would, employers say, raise their costs and discourage investment.
She’s still fighting those battles, but a landmark decision last year by the state Supreme Court, tightening up the legal definition of an employee, is now sending business lobbyists to her, figuratively with hats in hand, to ask for exemptions from the court’s definition.
By applying a three-part test of a worker’s duties, the court’s ruling would shift countless thousands of workers from contractor status to payroll-employee status. Unions and other critics have long complained that rampant “misclassification” has deprived workers of basic rights and benefits, including the ability to unionize.
Gonzalez has introduced Assembly Bill 5, which would codify the decision, known colloquially as “Dynamex” for the package delivery company whose workers, having been classified as contractors, sued and won the right to be employees.

Employers Have Been Pressing for Exemptions

The key part of the Supreme Court’s “ABC” test — already used in many other states — is the declaration that a worker can be classified as a contractor only if he or she performs work that is outside of the usual course of the employer’s business.
Thus, the court ruled, since Dynamex’s delivery drivers are the core of what the company does, they must become employees.
Dynamex is widely seen as a blow to the so-called “gig economy” of companies dependent on part-time workers, with ride services such as Lyft and Uber the best-known examples. Their drivers provide their own vehicles, but the companies make the connection with riders and collect a portion of their fees.
Ever since the decision was issued a year ago, employers — and some contract workers — have been pressing for exemptions.
A coalition of major business groups, headed by the Chamber of Commerce, pledged to support the bill if Gonzalez would agree to broader exemptions and “provide a more progressive and holistic approach that fits today’s modern workforce.”
“The coalition seeks exemptions for workers “who prefer to control their own schedule,” including consultants, travel agents, and truck, taxi and gig economy drivers” and exemptions for “short-term projects and business-to-business contracts.”

The Bill’s Final Shape Is Very Uncertain

Gonzalez has given some ground, agreeing to exempt insurance agents, doctors, stockbrokers, investment advisers, and some salespersons. But there’s a long line of employers and workers in other sectors seeking similar treatment.

“I’m willing to have those discussions. I’m committed to striking a balance.” — Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego)
“I’m willing to have those discussions,” Gonzalez told the committee. “I’m committed to striking a balance.”
They appeared at the bill’s first committee hearing last week, pledging to support the bill if given exemptions. Many of those seeking relief were owner-operators of heavy trucks, who said they prefer the flexibility and independence of working as contractors.
However, she said the bill needs to “send a message that rings loud and clear — enough is enough,” about misclassification she said is hurting workers and costing the state billions of dollars in potential tax revenue from payroll work. “Something is wrong with the way we’ve allowed these companies to operate.”
The bill cleared the Assembly’s Labor Committee easily, but its final shape is very uncertain.
CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics. or more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.
[activecampaign form=19]

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Unified Doesn’t Respond to Public Records Requests. Is District Hiding Something?

DON'T MISS

US Appeals Court Will Not Lift Limits on Associated Press Access to White House

DON'T MISS

Feds Award $93 Million to Key San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project

DON'T MISS

I Want Brooke Ashjian Reinstated to Measure C Committee, Says Mayor Dyer

DON'T MISS

Fresno Shooting Leaves One Dead, Authorities Looking for Witnesses

DON'T MISS

Epstein Files Fight Leads US House Republicans to Start Summer Break a Day Early

DON'T MISS

Obama Reiterates Conclusion of Attempted Russian Interference in 2016 Election

DON'T MISS

What Do Fresno Families Pay in Taxes? Study Says 11th Lowest Rate in Nation

DON'T MISS

Trump Says Received $16 Million Payment After Paramount Lawsuit Settlement

DON'T MISS

Farming Giant Boswell Silent as It Plans to Sink Tulare Lake Bed Another 10 feet

UP NEXT

I’m Not Leaving Measure C and COG Can’t Make Me: Brooke Ashjian

UP NEXT

I’m a Genocide Scholar. I Know It When I See It.

UP NEXT

California Is Finally Adopting Phonics, Fulfilling a Grandmother’s Dream

UP NEXT

New CA Budget Papers Over $20 Billion Deficit, Ignores Day of Reckoning

UP NEXT

Trump Is Winning the Race to the Bottom

UP NEXT

Why California Ag Is at Odds Over Converting Land to Solar Farms

UP NEXT

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

UP NEXT

Governors Should Be the Face of the Democratic Party

UP NEXT

MAGA Is Tearing Itself Apart Over Jeffrey Epstein

UP NEXT

Valadao, Other California GOP Members of Congress Might Regret Backing Trump’s Megabill

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

9 hours ago

Former Madera Charter School Executive Charged With Embezzling Federal Funds

10 hours ago

Fresno Unified Doesn’t Respond to Public Records Requests. Is District Hiding Something?

10 hours ago

US Appeals Court Will Not Lift Limits on Associated Press Access to White House

10 hours ago

Feds Award $93 Million to Key San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project

11 hours ago

With Backing From Dyer, Ashjian Reinstated to Measure C Panel

11 hours ago

Fresno Shooting Leaves One Dead, Authorities Looking for Witnesses

11 hours ago

Epstein Files Fight Leads US House Republicans to Start Summer Break a Day Early

12 hours ago

Obama Reiterates Conclusion of Attempted Russian Interference in 2016 Election

12 hours ago

What Do Fresno Families Pay in Taxes? Study Says 11th Lowest Rate in Nation

13 hours ago

Trump Announces Trade Deal With Japan, Including 15% Tariff

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced a trade deal with Japan that he said will result in Japan investing $550 bill...

8 hours ago

Containers are pictured at an industrial port in Tokyo, Japan, July 2, 2025. (Reuters File)
8 hours ago

Trump Announces Trade Deal With Japan, Including 15% Tariff

American Jews are fracturing over Israel’s war in Gaza, as a generational divide deepens between older Jews who see Israel as essential for Jewish survival and younger Jews who view its actions as a moral crisis incompatible with liberal values. (Shutterstock)
9 hours ago

Why American Jews No Longer Understand One Another

9 hours ago

Visalia DUI Operation Nets 17 Arrests Over Weekend

9 hours ago

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

A U.S. Justice Department logo or seal showing Justice Department headquarters, known as "Main Justice," is seen behind the podium in the Department's headquarters briefing room before a news conference with the Attorney General in Washington, January 24, 2023. (Reuters File)
10 hours ago

Former Madera Charter School Executive Charged With Embezzling Federal Funds

FUSD Fresno Unified paper shredder gvwire
10 hours ago

Fresno Unified Doesn’t Respond to Public Records Requests. Is District Hiding Something?

AP's members leave the U.S. District Court, on the day a judge hears arguments in the Associated Press' (AP) bid to restore access for its journalists to cover press events aboard Air Force One and at the White House, after the Trump administration barred the news agency for continuing to refer to the Gulf of Mexico in its coverage, in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 27, 2025. (Reuters File)
10 hours ago

US Appeals Court Will Not Lift Limits on Associated Press Access to White House

Artist Rendering of Sack Dame and Arroyo Canal Project Site for San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project
11 hours ago

Feds Award $93 Million to Key San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend