California's Attack on Gig Work Predictably Drove Workers Out of Jobs
Self-employment in California fell by 10.5 percent and overall employment tumbled by 4.4 percent after A.B. 5's implementation.
Self-employment in California fell by 10.5 percent and overall employment tumbled by 4.4 percent after A.B. 5's implementation.
Biden undid Trump-era rules for independent contractors, but the new rule will likely last only until another Republican is elected president. This is no way to regulate an economy.
The administration's draft regulations expand and complicate who the federal government considers an "employee."
The state's trucking industry fears drivers will quit or work out of state.
Plus: Americans evenly split on immigration, bill moves to stop EPA raids of auto shops, and more...
What does this have to do with the pandemic? Nothing.
The lawmakers who passed A.B. 5 ignored the many benefits of contractor status.
State lawmakers want Uber and Lyft to classify their drivers as employees. A majority of drivers disagree.
Rideshare drivers and delivery people are still going to have to beg voters to let them work.
The push to reclassify independent contractors is harming many of the workers it's supposed to help.
The short-term rental service seeks 100,000 hosts to set space aside for those working to fight the pandemic.
A.B. 5 has caused chaos in the Golden State.
"Companies can simply blacklist California writers and work with writers in other states, and that's exactly what's happening."
Assembly Bill 5 forces many companies to reclassify contractors as employees.
Now those companies are asking state lawmakers to ban or cripple potential competition from car-sharing programs.
The internet has turned adult performers into media entrepreneurs.
It's crucial to get the constitutional text and history straight.
The new law seeks to reclassify contractors as employees.
Gig workers and companies are suing over a California law, AB 5, that criminalizes their continued employment.
Plus: Is there anything the upcoming spending bill doesn't contain? And more...
A state Supreme Court ruling sets a new, higher bar for determining when workers can count as independent contractors rather than employees. It might ruin some online firms' business models.
What happens when you reclassify independent contractors as employees?
A memo says the drivers are contractors, not employees.
It's a common sense but crucial indication of how federal regulators classify workers who earn money through online platforms like Uber and TaskRabbit.
The drivers argued they should be classified as employees, not contractors.
Online room-sharing services had no avenue to legally challenge demands for private info.
New Luddites have used the courts and the legislative process to throw that figurative wrench in the machine.
We should all be thankful for innovators and visionaries who aren't afraid to dream big.
On Wednesday, the city council will consider the mayor's proposal to make Airbnb rentals without city permission a misdemeanor.
Economist Michael C. Munger argues the sharing economy is the next great economic revolution—and it's already underway.
How to understand new data on independent contracting.
Rental-car companies are facing the same challenges as other established businesses in the internet age. One state lawmaker wants to protect them from change.
The newly released bill would clarify Uber drivers' and Airbnb hosts' status as independent contractors but would require tax withholding.
How much do Uber drivers make, and why does that matter?
On the cusp of ending a two-month budget impasse, Wisconsin lawmakers might stick it to Airbnb and other short-term rental platforms.
More people are working in the gig economy than ever before, but the current tax code punishes Uber drivers and Airbnb hosts. Here's how Congress can fix that.
Why does New York City hate puppies?
A win for ride-sharing and Alaskans
City tax collector wants to post home addresses of drivers online.
How big government and "big kennel" are conspiring against the sharing economy.
Documents show how the national trade group helped push anti-homesharing rules in several states and cities last year.
In Miami's war on Airbnb, speaking up can make you a target. City manager says residents who spoke at hearing are now "on notice."
The popular "homesharing" service made it affordable to book a beachfront property in Santa Monica. Then the city intervened.
Hawaii lawmakers want to make unlicensed short-term rentals a class C felony.
It's time for policymakers in Albany to bring ridesharing to all New Yorkers.
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