Uber Drivers Deemed To Be Employees By Swiss Insurance Provider (techcrunch.com) 121
An anonymous shares a TechCrunch article: Uber has suffered another setback to its operational model in Europe after a Swiss insurance agency ruled that Uber drivers are employees, not freelance contractors as the company claims -- meaning it must pay social security contributions. This follows a similar ruling by a UK employment tribunal in October which found that the two Uber drivers bringing the claim were employed as workers by Uber, rather than being freelance contractors. Swiss broadcaster SRF says the Suva agency made its decision on the status of Uber drivers in the market on account of their inability to set price or payment type, and because they are threatened with consequences from Uber if they do not fulfill its requirements. The Suva described its decision on the classification as a "clear conclusion." The public sector insurer is involved in determining whether workers are freelance or not as a provider of compulsory on-the-job accident insurance which is required for certain high risk professions.
In the end... (Score:2, Insightful)
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I was born in a hospital. My mother was present (very present indeed, considering I came out of her), and there were nurses and a doctor present. Maybe you're the one human being that was hatched out of egg in the middle of nowhere, but the rest of us weren't alone when we were born.
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Might happen one day; humanity builds birthing pods. When the central AI decides humanity needs to increase population it drops some DNA into a birthing pod and when it is matured, out pops Anonymous Coward.
There is a 0.000023% chance that Anonymous Coward is a time traveling being who was born in a birthing pod.
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>There is a 0.000023% chance that Anonymous Coward is a time traveling being who was born in a birthing pod.
I would LOVE to see the probability equation you used to come up with so exact a number...
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I could show you, but they don't let you post pictures of people pulling things out their arse on Slashdot.
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So the graph in your paper is just goatse ?
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And dying alone is generally reserved for truly horrible people. If you were even a little nice to people during your life - there will be loved ones by your side when the time comes, not to mention - these days, probably a bunch of doctors and nurses too.
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From just how primitive a species ? Hell even spiders and scorpions don't abandon their hatchlings. Ants and bees care for theirs.
The few creatures that leave hatchlings to fend for themselves (frogs, turtles etc.) they generally lay LOTS of eggs - so how were you not hatched along with loads of siblings ?
Re:In the end... (Score:5, Insightful)
I suppose I see it that if human beings have the ability to work together for collective endeavors, like government, then there's no reason why we should not try to structure such to get the best balance of outcomes.
Companies like Uber and Lyft are not "ride sharing" companies despite whatever verbiage they attempt to use to describe themselves. They're passenger livery services. Laws that govern the passenger livery service apply to them whether they want them to or not. Also, the way they've structured themselves, they retain enough control over those that work for them to where those individuals are employees. They're running the opposite of the taxi model where the drivers actually are contractors in many cases; lots of taxi companies lease the car to the driver for a daily figure, provide dispatch for pickups if the driver wishes, and otherwise the driver is free to use the car to transport all the fares that the driver can, local laws (like airport rights) not withstanding. Those taxi drivers can drive as much or as little as they want, and short of engaging in bad behavior that reflects on the car owner, doesn't have a lot to answer for to the company itself.
By so tightly controlling the drivers and how they're compensated it's clear that the drivers are not simply contractors, and the only other class by and large is employee. And in my view that's as it should be.
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People contribute labour. Nobody has EVER contributed a resource.
A resource BY DEFINITION is FOUND.
Just because you bought the land it's found on, does NOT make you a 'contributor' of it. We managed just fine for some 100-thousand years accessing resources WITHOUT the land they were on being attached by a piece of paper to one particular individual. The only thing THAT addition has added is to give some individuals the abiltiy to WITHHOLD resources from others.
It didn't make contributors, it created greater
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I was explicitly trying to avoid buzz words like labor and capital so as to not trigger the Marxist/Leninist sympathizers. The ones who think that I have to voluntarily participate in some collective vision of the economy.
We managed just fine for some 100-thousand years accessing resources WITHOUT the land they were on being attached by a piece of paper to one particular individual.
Really? Take a look at the GDP of countries without defensible land title systems. Nobody is going to invest in a crop when the tribe next door can just wander in and take it.
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>I was explicitly trying to avoid buzz words like labor and capital so as to not trigger the Marxist/Leninist sympathizers.
That line is a direct paraphrasing from John Locke's labour theory of value - which, it is true, from a lot of the basis of Marx... but it was ALSO the basis for Adam Smith. Capitalism and Communism are BOTH founded on that theory. They are both utterly dependent on it. It is not limited to one or the other.
> The ones who think that I have to voluntarily participate in some collec
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You might be thinking of "natural resource" which is a specific type of resource. General use of "resource" would actually include labor, intellectual property, usage rights to your physical property, etc.
Also I find it very hard to believe that we went 100k years without the idea of territory. We're territorial animals. Even during our nomadic phases, we had the concept of personal space and territory that we defended from others.
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>. We're territorial animals. Even during our nomadic phases, we had the concept of personal space and territory that we defended from others.
Yes, and even hardcore anarcho-socialists and communists recognize that - and it doesn't contradict what I said. There's a huge difference between the two concepts. The land you're using, you should be able to use freely to develop value from - and should not be imposed unduly upon. No what unduly would mean varied over time but we have some references. The Mosaic
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you really need to work on your definitions.
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In other words, you and I agree that there should be mandatory contributions to a government for some things, and that other things should be controlled by individuals. We just differ about which things.
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Most people actually like the idea of something that allows people that are unemployed to not become destitute. The argument is only over for how long the person may remain on this sort of assistance and the initial conditions that allow for the individual to get on it in the first place.
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I'm calling for regulation of industries that have a proven track record of causing harm. I did not call for government to be business. I invoke government as a function of the populace to regulate the specific ills that individual people would commit against others in the name of their own personal benefit.
If you're so wrapped-up in anti-government rhetoric that you cannot divorce the concept of government from socialism then I feel sorry for you.
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and not even that is guaranteed.
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we're all freelance contractors. You were born alone, you'll die alone, and the only one who really cares about you is you.
Considering the immense amount of care required for a newborn to reach self sustenance I believe that you are full of shit my friend.
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The core message of Buddhism is: 'every man for himself'.
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Is that you, Otto?
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The core message of Buddhism is: 'every man for himself'.
I'm not a Buddhist, yet I am offended by this mischaracterization.
Buddhism's core message is that suffering is an inherent part of being human, and one deals with suffering through a discipline of mental and moral self-purification. And when it comes to one's relationship with others, Buddhists adhere to the principle of Karma.
Buddhists generally have a humanistic world-view. Their spiritual journey is an inner and reflective one, but that doesn't mean it's "every man for himself."
Re: In the end... (Score:2)
thanks for stepping in - I don't characterize myself as Buddhist (in a religious sense) either, but after ~2 decades of Buddhist martial arts, the philosophy inevitably begins to creep in. what you say is the western interpretation of it: it kind of describes Buddhism, but doesn't quite do the idea right.
Buddhism, as I understand it, actually has one core principle, which leads to two main consequences.
the principle is: all separation (between parts of the "universe" - us, others, animals, objects...) is on
Re: In the end... (Score:2)
No need to chew on anything.
I think it's a far stretch from plants exchanging information via pheromones to postulating empathy, but to each their own. If you think they hurt, you may want to not put them to agony (why would you?) Then again, if *I* thought they hurt, I'd probably try to stop you if I caught you; but I don't, so I won't.
As to the imposing views on others... The guy stealing acts according to his belief (or whatever). I act according to mine in stopping him (or not, depending on the context)
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Damn you guys are dense.
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Fair points. Thanks for the improvements.
I misspoke when I said Buddhists have a humanistic "world-view." I meant to say that Buddhists have a regard for others that is humanistic in the informal sense of having compassion and respect for others. And I suppose that means I'm mischaracterizing humanism, which is much more than that.
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Some core beliefs in Buddhism aren't mystical. You can be a materialist and still believe in the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Way. Meditation is an act that can be practiced, and does not itself imply spirituality or mysticism. You can consider nirvana to be an optimal brain state. You can think of Gautama as a possibly mythical person who gave very good advice. You can come up with something recognizably Buddhist or Buddhism-derived that isn't mystical.
Traditional Buddhism does get into a lo
They are looking at it all wrong (Score:2)
If someone agrees to drive for Uber as an independent contractor, then Uber is that person's client. If an independent contractor agrees to work for a client who isn't willing to negotiate their pay rate, then that's on that person, that doesn't mean they are suddenly not an independent contractor just because they don't have any ability to control their rate of pay. Further, the passengers are not the driver's clients, they are Uber's, so any negotiation with the passengers over price or how the passenge
Re:They are looking at it all wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Agreed with all. But I'll take a stab at those other reasons.
First, around here anyway, any "business owner" needs to have more than one client, to be able to call that business a business and pay taxes accordingly. That means that an Uber driver would need to drive for more than just Uber to be considered a driver-for-hire. It's true for bakers, and for candlestick makers around here. I can't have a programming business if I only program for one client. I used to need to prove that to my clients' accounting departments, or they'd start taxing my business revenue, as though it were personal income.
Second, Uber just set a policy of zero sexual conduct between drivers and passengers. That's not a thing that a client can do to contractors. Can certainly fire contractors for it, but can't promise passengers that contractors will do or not do anything. Can only refund payments at the Uber level. Can't even dodge paying the drivers -- because policies aren't contractual.
How'd I do?
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Pretty good. Let me add this.
I googled "contractor vs. employee" and came up with an interesting link on the USA IRS website. [irs.gov]
TL/DR: Common Law specifies three rules that determine whether someone is an employee:
(1) Behavioral (Does the company control or have the right to control what the worker does and how the worker does his or her job?)
(2) Financial (Are the business aspects of the worker’s job controlled by the payer? (these include things like how worker is paid, whether expenses are reimbursed,
Re:They are looking at it all wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
The precise rules differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but on a balance what I'm seeing is that in multiple jurisdictions in Europe and North America, Uber's relationship with its drivers is viewed by taxation and labor authorities as being a employer-employee relationship. Here in Canada, I've had experience with how the Canada Revenue Agency (our version of the IRS) views contractor vs employee, and it applies similar standards that basically amount to "if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck". Over the years I've seen many an attempt by employers large and small to treat what are clearly employees as private contractors for the purposes of ducking their responsibility on collecting and remunerating payroll taxes to taxation authorities, not to mention hoping to sneak past overtime pay and other labor rules like meal breaks. It's a scam some employers keep trying over and over again, so Uber is hardly the first company to try to pull this stunt.
Of course, the real irony of Uber is that even with this withholding tax-dodging scheme, they're still losing vast amounts of money, so I expect that once many jurisdictions force it to treat its drivers as employees, it will either collapse or just turn into a regular taxi service.
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Maybe I'm misunderstanding what Uber drivers do, but I'd say they are clearly not employees under #1. Isn't driving for Uber completely up to the driver on a moment by moment basis? Like I can say, oh I don't feel like working from 9am-11am, so I wont. You can't do that at a real job and keep your employment. Likewise you choose your car and you choose where you drive every day. I don't see how that's anything like a normal job in terms of controlling employee behavior.
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I'm a software developer. If I don't want to work from 9 to 11, I don't have to. I should notify some people here if I'm not going to, much like an Uber driver has to notify someone whether he or she is on or off duty.
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What company do you work for that allows unlimited unpaid leave at your discretion? Or if you're not willing to say, can you say whether it's not wholly or in part owned by you or a relative of yours?
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Maybe I'm misunderstanding what Uber drivers do, but I'd say they are clearly not employees under #1. Isn't driving for Uber completely up to the driver on a moment by moment basis? Like I can say, oh I don't feel like working from 9am-11am, so I wont. You can't do that at a real job and keep your employment. Likewise you choose your car and you choose where you drive every day. I don't see how that's anything like a normal job in terms of controlling employee behavior.
As I read the Common-Law rules, the key question appears to be: who controls the relationship? Under rules 1 and 2, it seems pretty clear that it's Uber, not the driver. Yes, the driver supplies the car and fuel. But that's because Uber says so. As for rule 3, there's no question that what the driver does is a "key aspect of the business" Uber is in. They're not hiring the drivers to do anything other than their primary business. I think that supports the argument that the drivers are employees.
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the key question appears to be: who controls the relationship? Under rules 1 and 2, it seems pretty clear that it's Uber, not the driver. Yes, the driver supplies the car and fuel. But that's because Uber says so.
I'm not sure how you determined that. If we look at a more clear cut case like a plumber, it seems like the same things hold. I've never been asked by a plumber to provide his tools or other supplies, and I would find it highly inappropriate and unprofessional if that came up. I don't think that makes me his employer or gives me more or less power in the relationship.
For #3 you're right, but how do you square that with concepts like subcontracting? A subcontract is obviously part of the primary business of
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Ontario.
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Ah, poor lass: "how much control" is directly proportional to percentage of revenue. It always comes down to money.
Everything's a big long complicated thing. But there are instant outs. For example, your words have zero value, because you're not willing to put your name to them. Similarly, I'm not loading your random ppt file; nice try.
Put your own neck through the system, then comment on how it actually works. As anyone who's been through it can tell you, it makes absolutely no difference what "a legal
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True... to an extent. But there is nothing stopping an independent contractor from only working for one client at any given time. Somebody I hired as an independent contractor can't turn around and tell me that he's supposed to be an employee just because he doesn't have any other clients at the moment.
Uh... no..
First of all, if business is slow you mi
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"at any one time" -- taxation year. When it comes time to declare revenue, write-off expenses, and pay taxes, you'll need to have more than one client.
Obviously, everyone understands ramp-up periods, and slow-down periods. So generally, like any depression, you'll get a year of flux. And obviously, if you're small, no one's going to look close enough for a few years at least.
But you won't survive an audit with two contiguous years of only one client -- presuming that you're spending full-time on that one
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No one cares what you think is absurd. It's not about you. Write your local representative if you have an opinion. We're talking about what is, not about what you'd like it to be.
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That's not a thing that a client can do to contractors. Can certainly fire contractors for it, but can't promise passengers that contractors will do or not do anything.
What are you trying to say? If the threat of being fired doesn't keep a contractor honest, neither will the the threat of being fired keep the same person honest if you call him an employee instead. So that has no bearing on whether someone is a contractor or an employee.
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It's not about "bearing" it's about accountability.
If corporate makes something clear to employees, and trains employees on it, and enforces it, and then an employee does it anyway, then corporate is only accountable to prove that the employee was trained appropriately, and then to fire the employee.
But with a contractor, corporate is accountable at all. It doesn't need to train contractors. It doesn't need to prove that contractors understood anything. It doesn't even need to fire the contractors. Ther
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If corporate makes something clear to employees, and trains employees on it, and enforces it, and then an employee does it anyway, then corporate is only accountable to prove that the employee was trained appropriately, and then to fire the employee.
Right, so the employee gets fired. But let me note that it's not like it's required by law that the employee gets fired. That's the company's choice.
But with a contractor, corporate is accountable at all. It doesn't need to train contractors. It doesn't need to prove that contractors understood anything. It doesn't even need to fire the contractors.
I don't understand... if the contractor misbehaves, that will likely breach the contract, and the company is probably not going to enter a new agreement with that person. Why do you think nothing would happen? Wouldn't the broker lose a lot of credibility?
Brokers don't set policies, they simply decide whom to broker. Recruiting agencies don't set hiring requirements either.
They can decide whom to broker based on a set policy though. For instance it's common to have a service lik
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If you've ever lived and died by contractual agreements, then you've heard the term: "teeth". You can write anything you want into a contract. You can write that "the driver will do jumping jacks every morning, and take ballet lessons at night, before watching jay leno". All parties can sign, and it can be completely legal.
But you've forgotten the teeth.
What happens when the driver doesn't watch jay leno one night? Your agreement doesn't have any cansequences. And hence, if the driver doesn't watch jay
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Every country has their own rules about contractor vs Employee.
This is because there is usually a financial incentive to have you workers be contractors.
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This is because there is usually a financial incentive to have you workers be contractors.
Financial incentive for Uber, yes. Also there's a financial incentive for the drivers to be contractors. But governments hate it, particularly in the USA. Because taxes and gov't interference in businesses all tend to be keyed to 'protecting the employee'. Screw the protection. I want the tax loopholes and freedom from the nanny state for myself.
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Re:They are looking at it all wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Also, the drivers themselves need to have a Public Chauffer's License, meaning (minimalist) special training, clean background (no DUIs, etc.) and periodic drug/health* testing. Again, without that, people (potential drivers) would cheat. What's the acceptable/allowable Blood Alcohal Content??
Uber seeks to outflank all of that: the vehicle condition is the subcontractor's responsibility, the drivers fitness is the subcontractor's responsibility, all Uber does is makes a profit.
My question is: how long before some front-page uber**-tragic wrongful death lawsuit drives them out of business?
* Think: diabetes and epilepsy
** OK, pun intended, mea culpa
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Save for the problem that Uber isn't making a profit. Even with what amounts to wage slavery and a large-scale payroll tax evasion scheme, it still can't actually turn a profit. It has managed to disrupt taxi services in many places, screwing over drivers, and in some cases fucking up consumers as well, and for what exactly?
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It is being run just like most dotbombs. A carefully managed charade to pump up values for the IPO so that vulture 'er' venture fun capitalists can cash in big time with the backing of "it's a great investment" banksters, whilst they privately bet on the side it will fail. https://ftalphaville.ft.com/20... [ft.com]. How has it managed to convince investors, it hasn't, the banksters and culture 'er' venture capitalists did that, next they dump it, bet on loses and rake in the profits.
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So far as I understand it, in most jurisdictions in North America and Europe employers are responsible for collecting withholding taxes for employees. If you're a true private contractor, then it is your obligation to pay the taxes, but in general in most places if you're an employee, it is your employer's job to collect those payroll taxes and pass them on to the government.
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Also, if you're a private contractor, you're required to pay the portion of Social Security taxes that your employer would have: i.e: you pay 1.5x what a standard employee would. Does anybody know? Does Uber issue 1099s to their "contractors"?
I've been in many 'working/gigging' bands, and they way that the money is typically handled is that the bar/venue either pays the band member who is designated as the 'manager/accountant' in cash or check, who then pays the band members in either cash or check (usually depending on whether the band is of the long-term variety or 3-5 local guys landing the occasional summer gig) and the 'manager/accountant' will issue the band member a 1099 either mailed (or delivered in person) at the time they're paid or a
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I think the growing consensus in many jurisdictions is that Uber is operating a taxi service.
Re:They are looking at it all wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
Further, the passengers are not the driver's clients, they are Uber's
The moment you start down that road Uber is a taxi service, which they very strongly insist that they are not. They're just a matchmaking service, like eBay for car rides. The "ride sharing" are private agreements between drivers and passengers, Uber just takes a commission like on eBay. At least that's their narrative on the customer side. Their problem is that they're not really much like eBay at all, when you start regulating in detail what you can sell, how you can sell it and to what price sooner or later you'll cross the line where you're not an independent seller but a store employee.
It's like trying to claim the fry cook at McDonald's is an independent contractor delivering burgers and the company just takes a commission for matching him with hungry customers, even though they decide the menu, branding, price, commission rate, opening hours and everything else. You could simply stop driving for Uber any time, but in an at-will state you could walk out at any time. That alone doesn't make you a contractor.
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If Uber was actually trying to create a franchise, they might have a better argument. Franchisee agreements still give the mother corp a helluva lot of control over operations, even down to prices, but then again, franchises usually involve contracts between two companies. So if Uber drivers were something like 148123812 Inc. or the like then Uber might have an argument, but in general, the "contract" is between Uber and private individuals, which means even the wall that franchise agreements have doesn't e
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You could simply stop driving for Uber any time, but in an at-will state you could walk out at any time. That alone doesn't make you a contractor.
An Uber driver can stop driving at any time, and then start again at any time. That's a huge difference. I can't walk out of my job with no notice or approval and then come back in 8 weeks and say "Well that was a nice vacation!" You can't do that at any job that I know of. Full freedom of setting your own schedule is practically the definition of "being your own boss."
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"If someone agrees to drive for Uber as an independent contractor, then Uber is that person's client. If an independent contractor agrees to work for a client who isn't willing to negotiate their pay rate, then that's on that person"
It doesn't work like that, you need to look up the legal definitions of an employee and an independent contractor and how the law distinguishes between them.
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Actually it does. Though a special kind - ever heard of a "casual worker" - that is considered a type of employee.
You are not under the same regulations for that - because you're a private individual and some other factors, but you are their employer for the time being. If you pay a COMPANY to do it, then you're not. If you start a company where you pay kids $5 to snovel other people's snow and you charge those people 6 dollars taking a one dollar commission for matching snow-shovelers to driveway owners th
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And you also have it wrong.
If Uber is the client of the driver, then sure the driver may not be able to negotiate the pay rate with uber..... but they should be allowed to set their prices for their OWN customers on the other end of the transaction.
So say Uber says "to use our service you must pay us $2 per transaction"
OK, thats fine. If the driver wants to charge the people they are providing rides for $10 or $20 and then pay uber their flat $2 that is all well and good.
BUT Uber is setting the prices that
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The passengers are not the driver's customers in the first place, so he has no business trying to negotiate any payment details with them. The passengers are clients of Uber, not the driver.
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By your argument - there are no such thing as employees then. Since what you say describes every employment contract ever. Ultimately an employer/employee relationship is defined by the existence of authority. Somebody sets your rates, sets your hours, and you agree to submit to their authority and let them do these things to you - if those things are present, then you're an employee.
A contractor does not submit to the authority of the client, they agree on a job - he does the job, he gets paid the agreed a
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It's less a matter of authority than it is an issue of control. Uber does not have place requirements in how much work there is for its drivers to do or how often they must work for Uber. Uber does *NOT* cover any of the costs that the driver mig
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"Does Uber require that the person they are paying to drive actually be the driver? If so, then the drivers are definitely employees, but if the person they are paying is allowed to subcontract someone else to do their work (and presumably still make a profit while doing so), then the driver is not"
Silent coder confirmed that you were oversimplifying with your snow shoveling response.
It sounds to me like you're still oversimplifying.
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>It's less a matter of authority than it is an issue of control.
Those are synonyms.
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You are just making stuff up now. Authority is literally defined as "the ability to control". It has the same root-word as "author" (a word which describes the absolute power a writer has over his characters") and that root word is the Greek word for "Deity".
Authority is the ability control. Not all authority is absolute of course, and there are limits to the authority of an employer. But he most certainly does control you - when you agree to work for him, you agree to take orders regarding what to do, you
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Yes, authority is defined as the ability to control, but that's just it.... it is an ABILITY, and does not necessitate that said control is necessarily being exercised at any given time, while control itself is a much more absolute concept.
My point, however, remains... Uber does not control the number of drivers that it has, while an employer chooses to have a specific number of employees. Uber does exert some control over the vehicles that the drivers are permitted to use, and this is probably the stro
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Except that what you think is some amazing breakthrough - is the very point we are making when we say "they don't get to negotiate fares with passengers" - when we say "this makes them employees" we just don't bother to add "because the passengers are not their customers" because it's so utterly bleeding obvious that it's not worth mentioning.
You're taking the reason why what we're saying matters, and pretending it's some amazing revelation that alters the conclusion - no, it's just the premise that's too o
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The unwillingness of Uber to negotiate a price beyond what they offered for the job does not make one working for them an employee. For example, if I say that I will pay $15 to somebody to shovel my walkway after it snows, and I am firm on that amount, if somebody agrees to do it, they don't get to turn around and say that just because they coul
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All of them ... except one- and a lot of the third world countries too. In some ways - America has managed to not learn anything for 200 years and keep repeating mistakes everybody else has stopped making after seeing the results one too many times. And a significant chunk of the population wants to undo even the lesons they did learn.
I suppose it's easy to think OSHA is just bothersome regulation which should be scrapped if you can't even remember the great New York City garment factory fire - and how well
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So when an uninsured penniless motorist hits you and cripples you for life, you'll be good eh?
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He has insurance to cover himself.
I live in a state that requires it, and was hit by someone who didn't have it anyway.
You live in more of a fantasy world than he does. Besides, requiring someone to get insurance before putting someone else, unasked, at risk is small potatoes on the libertarian scale compared to the rest of what government does.
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Libertarianism: the mental illness that makes you think a traffic signal is an unconscionable intrusion on liberty.
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Your freedom ends where mine begins.
You need a fucking drivers license because I drive on the same roads and I have thus got a RIGHT to demand nobody gets to do so who hasn't proven at least a minimum level of competency. You don't want freedom. You want the right to kill people. You want to take MY freedoms AWAY.
I'm less certain about car insurance - but I can see the logic. If you bang my car to hell then I have a right to be compensated. If you can't afford to do so I'm just screwed ? If you have insuran
So when can Uber start scheduling shifts? (Score:3)
If they are employees, certainly Uber can demand that they work specific hours or not be employees anymore?
I've never heard of "employees" who can work or not work at their own whim just by signing into or out of an app.
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Sure I have (Score:2)
But I wonder if you meant "piece work". Shift work still requires employees to work a set schedule, but which may be a night shift, etc. Indeed, it's why I asked if Uber can start requiring their drivers to work scheduled shifts.
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You've never seen a time clock? They come in app form now, too.
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If they are employees, certainly Uber can demand that they work specific hours or not be employees anymore?
They can. They currently don't. At the point where there is a surplus of Uber wannabee drivers and public demand for Uber, I expect that Uber may put more demands on their drivers so they can guarantee supply.
I've never heard of "employees" who can work or not work at their own whim just by signing into or out of an app.
Most employers don't, but Uber does. Someone I know used to work for a credit counseling service from home part time. She would sign in when she was able to work, sign out when she wasn't.
Re:So when can Uber start scheduling shifts? (Score:4, Informative)
So it's not just about dictating work hours. A good analogue is workers from a temp agency. The temp agency matches up temporary jobs with temporary workers, but the workers are considered employees of the temp agency. If they tried to act like Craigslist or eBay - simply providing a place for people looking for temp work and people looking to hire temp workers to meet up, and took a cut of the payment - they'd probably be classified as contractors. But when you start to meddle with the individual transactions (creating uniform pricing, dictating standards for worker behavior, etc) you're starting to encroach on employee territory.
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But when you start to meddle with the individual transactions (creating uniform pricing, dictating standards for worker behavior, etc)
Sounds like what Amazon is doing with their new service options. I bought a kitchen faucet last month on Amazon and they gave me the option of adding installation. Uniform pricing, at least some standards (they claim they handpick the businesses involved, require screening, and set standards on scheduling and cancellation).
I wonder if they are considered Amazon employees? I would think not.
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>If they are employees, certainly Uber can demand that they work specific hours or not be employees anymore?
Uber already can and does do this. You lose access if you don't log in often enough.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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If they are employees, certainly Uber can demand that they work specific hours or not be employees anymore?
I've never heard of "employees" who can work or not work at their own whim just by signing into or out of an app.
Sigh, just because an employer can set hours, does not mean they have to.
It is not unheard of for an employer to pay based on work delivered. In fact it's quite common in some construction trades (I.E paid by the brick) or logistics (paid by delivery).
There are a few services where an employee can pick the job, bike courier for one. You certainly don't pay them for the time they spend standing around or holding up traffic.
If Uber drivers are truly independent contractors... Why does Uber forbid the
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Everything is negotiable, or I'm just not interested. If someone says 'not negotiable' you 'negotiate' by walking away and working for someone that cares if the person they hire is competent. If you're at all good (and the job requires someone good), they change tunes real quick. If not, you didn't want to work for Infosys (or EDS aka HP shitslingers) in the first place.
I _wish_ the true bottom feeders would put their cheapness right in the job listings. Would save a lot of time. As it is, you just 'shit
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And if there are too many parameters set on how you do your work, you may very well be an employee. Uber is just the latest and perhaps largest example of how companies try to evade payroll taxes and labor laws by claiming they're in a contractor relationship with their workers, but they're hardly the first. In general terms, contract work is supposed to give you pretty wide latitude in how the job gets done. Contracts can set up due dates, and to some extent even milestone dates, can set up remuneration sc
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So if I flip burgers at MacDonalds for 8 hours a day and then go wait tables at Marcos Pizzeria for 4 hours every night and earn some extra cash dancing at the local stripclub on a saturday night... I'm not an employee of any of those three business because I work for all three ?
The stripclub could argue I'm a casual worker - maybe even have an arrangement where I pay THEM for my slot on the pole and work for tips (I don't think this is done anywhere since I don't think tips are THAT good)... but the two re