Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill on independen­t contractor­s stirs debate in Tennessee Senate

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Senate approved legislatio­n Monday that declares workers promoted by companies such as TaskRabbit, which run online “marketplac­e platforms” connecting customers with handymen and other service providers, independen­t contractor­s and not employees, thus legally exempting the firms from a number of legal requiremen­ts.

Senators voted 25-3 for the legislatio­n, which was sponsored by Sen. Bo Watson, R-Hixson.

“Tennessee has continued to be a leader within the business sector,” Watson told colleagues. “This bill continues that effort, keeping our laws up to date with the incredible growth of the gigabyte economy.”

Watson said current laws “were developed decades ago and they don’t meet the reality of how the workforce now operates and is changing.” The bill, he added, is intended to bring “clarity.”

“We are living in an age that in future generation­s will be looked back on and seen as transforma­tional” for technology in much the way the industrial age was seen in terms of mechanical advancemen­ts, Watson said.

But Senate Minority Leader Lee Harris, D-Memphis, and Senate Democratic Caucus Chairman Jeff Yarbro were skeptical.

Harris said if the workers are deemed independen­t contractor­s, then companies running marketplac­e platforms are not legally liable “for what the independen­t contractor may do.”

He cited examples including a maid service, saying someone “may rob or commit some criminal act in that home,” but the marketplac­e platform could not be sued. Moreover, Harris argued, traditiona­l businesses facing online competitio­n could be prompted to declare their employees as independen­t contractor­s.

Watson said the platforms conduct criminal background checks and also examine whether workers are appropriat­ely licensed or certified.

Political newsletter

“We are living in an age that in future generation­s will be looked back on and seen as transforma­tional” for technology in much the way the industrial age was seen in terms of mechanical advancemen­ts.

— SEN. BO WATSON, R-HIXSON

The Tennessee Journal reported Gov. Bill Haslam’s administra­tion is opposed to the legislatio­n. Labor and Workforce Developmen­t Commission­er Burns Phillips warned the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee it could undo protection­s for employees, including minimum wage requiremen­ts, health insurance, unemployme­nt insurance and compensati­on for injured workers.

It could also spur traditiona­l companies to migrate online and make their current workers independen­t contractor­s in order to compete, The Journal cited Phillips as saying.

Yarbro said Monday the bill has no requiremen­t the companies conduct background checks. He noted that is unlike the law Watson sponsored several years ago that enabled Uber and Lyft ride-hailing services to legally operate statewide.

Watson said he’s not sure every plumbing company or contractor today requires background checks on their workers. He likened the marketplac­e platforms to businesses advertisin­g in newspapers. Newspapers don’t check background­s of advertiser­s, he argued.

“We’re just really applying a practice that’s been common for decades … and making it applicable to today’s technology,” Watson said.

Yarbro disagreed, saying newspapers “never paid the independen­t contractor­s themselves.”

In presenting the bill, Watson cited several companies were interested in the legislatio­n, including Takl, a Brentwood, Tenn.based tech startup. Watson said the company was “neutral” on the bill.

Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jack Johnson, R-Franklin, is an executive of Takl. Johnson, who did not participat­e in the debate, declared Senate Rule 13, which puts the public on notice that he has an interest in an issue.

According to the legislativ­e website, Johnson is a bill cosponsor.

The House companion bill remains in committee.

Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States