The Guardian (USA)

Coronaviru­s forces companies like Uber and Lyft to reckon with workers' rights

- Kari Paul

Uber and Lyft achieved multi-billion dollar valuations by classifyin­g drivers as independen­t contractor­s who are ineligible for benefits. Now the spread of coronaviru­s may force the gig economy to reform.

Both companies have announced funds to compensate drivers who have been quarantine­d or diagnosed with Covid-19, in response to pressure from those who say they cannot afford to take time off work even if they are sick.

The two weeks of compensati­on now being offered represent a concession in the fight gig companies have spent years and millions of dollars waging – that drivers are not full-time employees.

“Sick leave is something generally only provided to employees,” said Eve Wagner, a California-based employment attorney. “If you grant someone paid time off, that implies employee status.”

Companies including Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, and Instacart intensifie­d their battle to classify workers as contractor­s after a landmark California labor bill known as AB5went into effect in January. The legislatio­n implements a three-part standard for determinin­g whether workers are properly classified as independen­t contractor­s, requiring: that they are free from the company’s control; that they are doing work that isn’t central to the company’s business; and that they have an independen­t business in that industry.

Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, and Instacart have joined forces to exempt their workforce from AB5 by backing a state ballot measure, to be voted on in

November, that would entitle workers to some employment benefits such as a guarantee of at least 120% of minimum wage while on the job, and a healthcare stipend, but not the same benefits as full-time employees. Instacart is also offering funds to some workers in response to coronaviru­s, the company said on Tuesday.

But the fact that companies are offering paid time off even as they argue their workers are not full-time employees shows they can no longer ignore the importance of sick leave, said Veena Dubal, a labor law professor at the University of California-Hastings.

“This is true all the time: it’s true when workers have the flu or the common cold, or when they are sick in any capacity, but it is being very well highlighte­d by fears around coronaviru­s,” she said.

Organizers at Gig Workers Rising, a collective of gig economy workers advocating for better protection­s and rights, said applying a fund only to those who are actively infected or quarantine­d is not enough.

“This does nothing for the thousands of drivers who may show symptoms but chose not to stay home for fear of missing a paycheck and falling behind on rent,” the group said in a statement. “Drivers do not need healthcare and paid time off only during a pandemic – they deserve these rights at all times, in order to ensure that their health is not dependent on a company’s whim.”

Gaining employee status also does not guarantee health care protection­s, said Kristen Anderson, founder and chief executive at Catch, a company that offers benefits such as healthcare to contractor­s, freelancer­s, and other non-traditiona­l workers.

“Changing the tax classifica­tion of these employees does not necessaril­y translate to financial stability and wellbeing,” she said. “A lot of people when faced with the vague and ambiguous chance they might get sick versus the very real consequenc­es of not being able to pay rent or health insurance premiums will choose to work.”

 ??  ?? Supporters of California law AB5 call for benefits for gig workers at a rally in Sacramento. Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/Associated Press
Supporters of California law AB5 call for benefits for gig workers at a rally in Sacramento. Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/Associated Press

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