Marysville Appeal-Democrat

AB 5 will kill the gig economy

- By Kerry Jackson Special to Calmatters Calmatters Columnist

Propositio­n 13 was called the political equivalent of a sonic boom by economist Art Laffer.

In limiting how much local government­s could drain from California­ns through property taxes, fed-up voters changed the political landscape with the 1978 ballot measure in a way that few state policies have, before or since.

Howard Jarvis’ Propositio­n 13 swept the country and made headlines around the world.

Sounds a lot like Assembly Bill 5. The difference is Prop 13 is a force for good. AB 5 is a destroyer. Worse, other states are determined to duplicate California’s mistake.

AB 5, passed and signed last month, virtually bars California­ns from working in the gig economy. The law, which implements a California Supreme Court decision, imposes a threeprong­ed test that identifies who’s still free to be a contract worker and who has to be a hired employee.

A worker can be an independen­t contractor only if he or she:

A) Is free from the control and direction of the hirer in connection with the performanc­e of the work, both under the contract for the performanc­e of such work and in fact;

B) Performs work that is outside the usual course of the hiring entity’s business; and

C) Is customaril­y engaged in an independen­tly establishe­d trade, occupation, or business of the same nature as the work performed for the hiring entity.

Is there a freelance worker who could possibly pass Part B?

Under that requiremen­t, janitors could work as independen­t contractor­s only when they have contracts with companies not in the business of cleaning.

Is free from the control and direction of the hirer in connection with the performanc­e of the work.

Performs work that is outside the usual course of the hiring entity’s business.

Or a rideshare driver could work under a contract with Uber or Lyft only if those companies were primarily in the business of, say, selling vacuum cleaners.

It’s a rigid framework, says labor law firm Fisher Phillips, that will appear, if it already hasn’t, in “the nightmares of your average gig economy business executives.”

It’s already a bad dream for workers.

“Despite AB 5, Uber Drivers Would Rather Quit Than Be Employees,” reads the headline to the first installmen­t of a twopart series in the online publicatio­n, Los Angeleno. One driver interviewe­d for the story said that “when the lawmakers make these laws, they don’t live our lives.” “I have to pick my kids up or drop them off. I do that and come back to work, driving. What shift is going to let me do that other than this?”

Los Angeles Times columnist George Skelton, no puppet for corporatio­ns, recently wrote “there are tens of thousands of independen­t contractor­s who apparently don’t feel the slightest bit exploited. And they don’t want anything to do with formal employment or unions.”

The few able to pass the test and will remain independen­t contractor­s might not be independen­t for long.

In a signing statement, Gov. Gavin Newsom said the next step “is creating pathways

Is customaril­y engaged in an independen­tly establishe­d trade, occupation, or business of the same nature.

Full guidelines are listed in the column.

for more workers to form a union, collective­ly bargain to earn more, and have a stronger voice at work.”

It is “in this spirit,” he said, that he would persuade political, labor, and business leaders to support an effort in which “workers excluded from the National Labor Relations Act” would have “the right to organize and collective­ly bargain.”

When Skelton said that maybe the aim of AB5 was “to rope in more dues-paying union members,” he might have been more correct than he realized.

Where Propositio­n 13 set off an extended era of prosperity, AB 5 will rob workers of the freedom and flexibilit­y they want and sometimes need from freelance work, and force more companies to leave the state than already are. California’s once-dynamic economy is on track to becoming permanentl­y sclerotic. AB 5 is a historic mistake. No one knows what kinds of jobs Americans will be working in 50 years, not even 25, just as who lived through the Depression had no idea what work was going to be like in the 21st century.

Classifyin­g jobs through a government order is going to hold back the natural evolution of work. There are already regrets and there will be many more to come.

Kerry Jackson is a fellow with the Center for California Reform at the Pacific Research Institute. Pacific Research Institute is a non-partisan, free market think tank, kerryjacks­onpri@gmail. com.

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Kerry Jackson

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