Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-07-25 23:07:35| Engadget

Ride-share companies scored a victory in the California Supreme Court, allowing them to continue classifying gig workers as independent contractors rather than employees. Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and other gig-economy companies invested around $200 million in the passage of Proposition 22, which voters approved in 2020. The states highest court rejected a legal challenge from a drivers group and a labor union, ending their quest to bring full employee benefits to the states gig workers. The California Supreme Court ruling affirms the states definition of drivers and other gig workers as independent contractors. Proposition 22, which received the support of 59 percent of voters in 2020, gives gig workers limited benefits like a baseline income and health insurance for those working at least 15 hours a week. However, it also allows the companies to avoid providing the broad swath of benefits full employees receive. The Service Employees International Union and a drivers group sued to challenge the law after it went into effect in early 2021. Their lawsuit got an early boost from lower courts: An Alameda County Superior Court Justice ruled that year that Proposition 22 was unconstitutional and unenforceable, as the LA Times reported. The lower-court judge determined that the law diminished the state Legislatures power to regulate injury compensation for workers. However, in 2023, a state appeals court ruled the opposite, that Proposition 22 didnt impede on the Legislatures authority. Thursdays decision upholds that ruling, ending the long saga and leaving the states gig workers with fewer benefits than theyd otherwise have. Proposition 22 remained in effect during the legal challenges, so nothing will change in how theyre treated. Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and other gig-economy companies fought tooth and nail to pass and uphold the law. Four years ago, they invested upwards of $200 million in campaigning for it. They even threatened to pull their businesses from the state if they were forced to classify drivers as employees. The LA Times reports the decision could influence other states laws. Uber has lobbied for similar legislation in other parts of the US. A law in Washington state closely parallels it, and the companies recently settled with the Massachusetts attorney general to provide similar (minimal) benefits to gig workers in that state. Uber framed the ruling as a victory for upholding the will of the people (well, apart from the gig workers who wanted more benefits and protections). The company described the Supreme Courts decision as affirming the will of the nearly 10 million Californians who voted to deliver historic benefits and protections to drivers, while protecting their independence.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/california-supreme-court-upholds-classification-of-gig-workers-as-independent-contractors-210735586.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

20.02Xbox head Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft
20.02Tunic publisher claims TikTok ran 'racist, sexist' AI ads for one of its games without its knowledge
20.02OpenAI will reportedly release an AI-powered smart speaker in 2027
20.0213-hour AWS outage reportedly caused by Amazon's own AI tools
20.02NASA targets March 6 for Artemis 2 launch to take astronauts around the Moon
20.02Ubisoft lays off 40 staff working on Splinter Cell remake, says game remains in development
20.02AI Update, February 20, 2026: AI News and Views From the Past Week
20.02Engadget Podcast: Instagram on trial and the RAMaggedon rages on
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

21.02Sweeping tariffs gone but Trump's 10% global tariffs on. What to expect from markets on Monday?
21.02Top 5 flexicap funds with highest risk-adjusted returns. Check details
21.02Bitcoin trades around $68,000, shows resilience despite new US tariff developments
21.02Powering the AI revolution: A Rs 200 lakh crore opportunity for capital markets
21.02US Markets | Peter Lynchs stock playbook decoded for todays volatile markets
21.02Bought and sold gold or silver ETFs on same day amid sharp price swings? Know the tax impact
21.02US-Iran conflict may spike Indias crude prices and fuel inflation
21.02F&O Talk | What the current long-short ratio tells about FII positioning? Sudeep Shah on Ola, Newgen, 4 more top weekly movers
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .