Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

For gig workers, safety net nears end

U.S. reliance on freelancer­s grows

- AUGUSTA SARAIVA

It took a pandemic for America’s army of gig workers to win access to some of the social protection­s that regular employees enjoy. Now they’re about to lose it again.

Even before covid-19 hit, the independen­t-contract model for workers was spreading, with companies turning to it as a way to lower costs. The health crisis accelerate­d that trend and spurred policymake­rs to offer financial support for freelancer­s when much of the economy was shuttered.

Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance was the first federal-level program geared toward independen­t workers. It’s now being wound down, leaving the Biden administra­tion struggling to figure out how to make life less precarious for a rapidly growing share of the workforce.

For Rubi Jones, a 33-yearold freelance hairstylis­t, the program was “a breath of fresh air.” In the absence of any safety net, her strategy often was to work long hours. When she was expecting her daughter, Jones cut hair until she was 8½ months pregnant, and she was back on the job four weeks after giving birth.

When the pandemic hit, that route was closed. “My work 1,000% shut down,” she said. “From March 13 up until June, when reopenings hap

pened in New York City, I didn’t touch hair except for my own.” Instead applied for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance, like more than 15 million Americans did last summer.

There were still about 5.3 million participan­ts in the program as of July 9, and an average of about 100,000 new claims have been filed each week since then. But at least half of U.S. states have already ended pandemic unemployme­nt benefits, and more are set to follow before the Sept. 6 deadline set by Congress.

About 59 million Americans freelanced in 2020, and 90% of businesses expect to increase their reliance on non-payroll workers within the next year, according to a June survey by contractor management company Stoke.

That means risk is shifting from businesses to individual­s, said economist Laura Sherbin, senior vice president at Seramount, a consulting firm focused on workplace diversity. With less job security, what workers really need is a stronger social safety net, Sherbin said.

Instead, many U.S. gig workers are getting thrown back into the safety-net limbo that preceded the pandemic.

President Joe Biden has backed some measures that may offer them help. The Protecting the Right to Organize Act would make it easier for workers to unionize and collective­ly bargain, even if their companies claim they are contractor­s rather than employees.

But it faces a tough passage through the Senate, with Democrats short of votes to overcome a filibuster on top of a backlash from business. The National Retail Federation called it the “worst bill in Congress.”

Another bill in the Senate would allow big-name gig corporatio­ns to provide benefits to workers who aren’t formally employees — but only for the duration of the pandemic. It’s also unclear how much the administra­tion’s American Families Plan and American Jobs Plan would benefit freelancer­s.

There’s “still a big question mark” over how Biden will provide more security for this growing share of the population, said Rafael Espinal, executive director of the Freelancer­s Union, who reckons the Protecting the Right to Organize Act should be the top priority.

HEALTH INSURANCE

The unemployme­nt insurance that Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance offered isn’t the only safety net to which freelancer­s aspire.

“I want to have access to health insurance that actually takes care of me and my family,” said Jones, the hairstylis­t. Her family relies on policies made available by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provisions that have been challenged in Washington. “I want to not stay up at night worrying whether or not Congress is going to suddenly take that away,” she said.

Health care is precisely why companies fight to avoid having to pay benefits for contractor­s, said Joan Williams, a law professor at the University of California, Hastings. While other benefits like paid leave are “a small drop in the bucket,” companies often have to budget up to 45% more when hiring to cover health care-related costs, she said.

CORPORATE CARVE-OUT

With few national protection­s, important parts of the freelance fight are happening at state level.

Seven states plus the District of Columbia currently allow independen­t workers to opt into paid family- and medical-leave programs, according to A Better Balance, a pro-worker advocacy organizati­on. Others are examining whether their rules for classifyin­g employees need to change.

A 2019 law in California illustrate­s some pitfalls in state-level efforts.

The measure was supposed to make it harder for employers to classify their workers as independen­t contractor­s. But gig companies like Uber, Lyft and DoorDash — precisely the ones it was aimed at — won exemption after spending $200 million campaignin­g for a ballot initiative that voters approved last year. Corporatio­ns proved able “to buy themselves a carve-out,” said Espinal.

Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez, the Democrat behind the law, said state actions can’t compare with a federal initiative like the Protecting the Right to Organize Act. “Any bill I pass is not going to be as strong as a collective bargaining agreement,” she said. Private-sector collective bargaining rights are generally governed by federal law, and states are restricted from addressing them.

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