The Reporter (Vacaville)

Bills might exempt newspapers from law

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The measures face an uphill battle in part because they were introduced by a Republican state senator.

SACRAMENTO >> Freelance writers and newspaper carriers would be exempted from a broad new California labor law requiring that many be treated as employees rather than independen­t contractor­s under legislatio­n announced Thursday by a state senator.

The measures face an uphill battle in part because they were introduced by a Republican, Sen. Patricia Bates of Laguna Niguel, in a legislatur­e dominated by Democrats who support the labor law, and because the law’s author opposes at least one of the rollbacks.

However, Democratic Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez of San Diego, who heads a powerful gatekeeper committee, has been meeting regularly with those who want changes to her law that took effect Jan. 1. Gov. Gavin Newsom also has said he anticipate­s tweaks to the law he signed that aim to give wage and benefit protection­s to people who work as independen­t contractor­s.

Gonzalez has introduced legislatio­n that can be updated “to continue our work on these issues and to make sure the law is fair for workers, law-abiding businesses and California’s taxpayers,” she said in a statement.

The focus has been largely on ride-share companies such as Uber and

Lyft, but it has already cost freelancer­s their jobs. Lawmakers gave newspaper companies a one-year delay to figure out how to apply to the law to newspaper carriers, who work as independen­t contractor­s. But the California News Publishers Associatio­n calls it an “existentia­l threat” to newspapers.

The law sets the nation’s strictest test for which workers must be considered employees and could set a precedent for other states.

“Assembly Bill 5 took a sledgehamm­er approach to an employment problem that required a scalpel, which consequent­ly hammered many California­ns who truly wish to remain their own bosses,” Bates said in a statement. She said her bills would “help preserve quality journalism in many communitie­s.”

Her first measure, SB867, would permanentl­y exempt newspaper distributo­rs and carriers. The second, SB868 would exempt freelance journalist­s who object to what they say is an arbitrary limit of 35 submission­s each year to each media outlet.

Even before the law took effect, SB Nation, owned by Vox Media, announced that it was ending its use of more than 200 California freelancer­s, switching instead to using a much smaller number of new employees.

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