Are you an employee or a contractor?
When Kristyn Hansen first worked at Stews Barber Shop, she cut hair nine hours a day, three days a week. She earned no overtime pay, had no mandated breaks, and her Ladera Ranch bosses didnt cover Social Security taxes, unemployment or disability insurance.
Thats because Hansen, 32, was classified as an independent contractor. I loved it, she said. The schedule allowed her to take five classes at a local college. The pay 60 percent of an $18 haircut made for a comfortable living serving about 30 customers a day. Health insurance was covered by her husbands employer.
But in October, the shop switched its seven barbers to employee status. To offset the expense of payroll taxes, sick leave, vacation and other benefits for the barbers, pay dropped to $15 an hour, with just a 15 percent share of the haircut price.
Now Hansen works four nine-hour days, taking home about $300 less weekly than when she worked just three days. For some people, there are advantages to being an employee, she said. But not for me. Im stressed for sure.
A California Supreme Court decision last April is upending large and small workplaces across California, making it harder to classify workers as independent contractors. A wide variety of industries are affected not just app-based companies like Uber and Lyft.
Independent contractors are found among construction workers, truckers and warehouse workers, music teachers, software coders, salespeople, farm laborers, janitors, dog walkers, hairdressers, home-care workers, security guards, doctors, insurance agents, journalists and strippers.
https://www.heraldnet.com/business/are-you-an-employee-or-a-contractor-california-carpenters-strippers-and-dog-walkers-face-that-question/?utm_source=DAILY+HERALD&utm_campaign=1852ba5109-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d81d073bb4-1852ba5109-228635337