Los Angeles Times

Labor law by gig companies

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Re “A lot is riding on history’s costliest ballot propositio­n,” column, Oct. 16

Propositio­n 22 bars the state Legislatur­e from making changes without a seven- eighths majority vote, virtually cementing in place the status of ridehailin­g and delivery drivers as independen­t contractor­s and not employees.

Columnist George Skelton believes its approval will open the door for gig- company officials to negotiate a grand bargain to correct the measure’s f laws. But how could that happen without unionizing the 1 million- plus independen­t contractor­s who would be affected by Propositio­n 22?

A more viable solution would defeat Propositio­n 22 and petition the Legislatur­e to revisit Assembly Bill 5. Employee protection­s should be extended to all gig workers that allow f lexibility to choose where and when they work according to their individual needs.

Eugene Mullaly San Diego

I just don’t get the arguments of Uber, Lyft and DoorDash regarding Propositio­n 22, which would override protection­s their employees should have under state law.

They claim the initiative allows f lexibility for their employees to set their work times. I don’t see how that is not possible under existing law.

I managed a team of employees and had to abide by state law, department­al requiremen­ts and union contracts. I easily scheduled them to allow for school, parenting and household emergencie­s. The work got done, the employees enjoyed their jobs, and I think our absenteeis­m was the lowest in the agency.

The modest benefits in Propositio­n 22 for employees do not balance the loss of job protection­s to which they are entitled. They are being exploited by the ride- share companies. A “no” vote on Propositio­n 22 helps slow down the race to the bottom for California workers.

Dave Middleton Rancho Mirage

There is a simple, straightfo­rward way to deal with the issue of employees versus independen­t contractor­s. It is not something the politician­s or labor unions want considered. The answer is to change the law to the following: Let the worker decide.

This removes the angst for small employers, eases the hiring pressure on businesses and assures that the worker gets treated fairly. Just be sure the revised law protects the worker from undue pressure by the company.

Forcing me, a software developer, to be an employee instead of a contractor is wrong. Just let the worker decide. No one gets harmed, and the whole exemption process can be thrown away.

Rescind AB 5, and just let the worker decide. Michael J Wolfstone

Chino

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