Posted on 03/26/2013 10:48:52 PM PDT by JSDude1
Edited on 03/27/2013 4:56:55 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...
Sam Jr. is an idiot. I’d like to think the father would have had more sense.
The closest walmart to where I live has hired a security company which cruises the parking lot day and night.
Contract cleaning crews could be hired too.
As far as taking someone who is an employee and trying to turn them into contract labor, that would be difficult to establish.
Worker's Comp is a State requirement (and reasonable for the risk class), and each company (contractor or subcontractor) is required to carry professional liability insurance. As such, each vendor is responsible for their own tax compliance, and that is understood up front. Those with their own LLC (sole proprietors) file their own estimated taxes, including self-employment taxes which take care of the FICA, SSI, etc.
“As far as taking someone who is an employee and trying to turn them into contract labor, that would be difficult to establish.”
A company I used to work for tried that and the foremen took their contacts and went to other compaines who paid them a lot more for the new business they brought along.
Thanks for that, I have gone to great pains to comply with the laws involved--simply because it is simpler and (in the long run) cheaper to do it that way. I'll watch my terminology in the future (8^D).
What I was cautioning against was those business who try to classify or re-classify employees, especially obviously hourly non-exempt employees as independent contractors either out of ignorance of the law or purposely as a way to avoid paying employment and unemployment taxes and pay overtime under FLSA.
In a tougher economy, it is a good thing to warn people. The temptation might be there, but the downside exceeds the upside. Re-classifying existing employees appears to be especially difficult, especially if that is employer instigated.
It might be different if the employee walked in one day and said "I'm giving my notice, and I'm starting my own business. Please consider using our services--we can save you money." Even that situation might be brought into question, and the former employee to be would likely have to have their company up and running on the side and have other clients as well before they established credibility as a contractor in the eyes of the IRS if they did work for their former employer.
Where the unscrupulous might hide is behind the ignorance of those they tell they have 'covered', when in reality they do not. If it sounds shaky, it probably is.
That is not true. My son has worked for them for nearly 4 years now. Everyone he works with works 40+ hours a week, without coaching. In fact, one of his coworkers was getting coaching for not getting 40 hours a week.
Yep Obammycare and Wallyworld’s decision to shift store management and staff to immigrants so they could pay them less. You get what you pay for. They also ditched the founder’s conservative philosphy.
Their downfall was inevitable.
Well, they’ve changed their policy then. I was an unloader at a Knoxville store in the late 1990s, and if we ever went over the 30 hour mark without explicit authorization, then we were “coached.” Made it very tough to get our work done during the holiday season, especially when the night managers pulled us off the unloading docks to do other stuff in the store.
Management issues have not resolved, will give you that!
Earned money is usually more conservative than inherited money, which is often very left wing.
Fuhgeddaboudit ; ), A big part of my job now days is in compliance issues so I can be a stickler on terminology sometimes, but I get what you were saying.
In a tougher economy, it is a good thing to warn people. The temptation might be there, but the downside exceeds the upside. Re-classifying existing employees appears to be especially difficult, especially if that is employer instigated.
It might be different if the employee walked in one day and said "I'm giving my notice, and I'm starting my own business. Please consider using our services--we can save you money." Even that situation might be brought into question, and the former employee to be would likely have to have their company up and running on the side and have other clients as well before they established credibility as a contractor in the eyes of the IRS if they did work for their former employer.
I can be done but the same company issuing a W-2 and a 1099 to the same person can raise some red flags with the IRS and down the road with the DOL. In the last year we had a process/materials engineer give her notice because her husband had found a job out of state and they were moving. But her position was not an easy one to fill and the type of work she performed could be performed mostly remotely and quite independently and was the type of work that we could easily outsource. We didnt want to create a business presence in the state she was moving to, open new payroll withholding, unemployment tax accounts and register an office in that state so we passed it by our outside counsel; a firm specializing in employment law and they determined that we could hire her as a consultant under an independent contractor contract as long as we specified the work she was to perform, noted how it was outside the normal scope of her previous employment and put a time limit on it in the contract.
But then she was a professional engineer with a Ph.D. and was setting herself up as a private consultant in her new state and not formerly a non¬exempt hourly employee with us. Converting a non-professional formerly hourly employee to an independent contractor, especially if they are doing the exactly the same sort of non-professional and closely supervised and direct work they had performed as an employee is asking for big trouble.
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