Skip to content
Home
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • People
  • Business Services
  • Personal Services
  • The Latest

About Shulman Rogers

About Shulman Rogers
Diversity
Community
Careers

Our People

View All Attorneys
Attorneys
Paralegals
Key Administrative Staff
Women in Law
Careers

Business Services and Industries

View All Business Services & Industries
  • Business and Financial Services
  • Cannabis Law
  • Commercial Lending
  • Employment and Labor Law
  • Entertainment Law
  • Government Contracts
  • Hospitality Law
  • Intellectual Property
  • Litigation
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Startups and Emerging Growth Companies
  • Real Estate
  • Tax

Personal Services

View All Personal Services
  • Civil Litigation
  • Criminal Defense
  • Divorce and Family Law
  • Guardianship
  • Medical Malpractice
  • Personal Injury
  • Dental Medical Malpractice
  • Real Estate
  • Wills, Trusts, Estates and Probate
View Services A-Z
  • Home
  • About
    • About Shulman Rogers
    • Diversity
    • Community
    • Careers
  • People
    • Attorneys
    • Paralegals
    • Key Administrative Staff
    • Women in Law
    • Careers
  • Business Services
  • Personal Services
  • The Latest
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

The Latest

Employment Law Alert – DOL Publishes Proposed New Rule for Independent Contractor Classification

September 30, 2020


Business owners are often compelled to meet staffing needs with independent contractors in lieu of employees in order to save money on taxes, benefits and sometimes pay (minimum wage and overtime). In doing so, they risk increasing federal (DOL, IRS, EEOC), state (Wage & Hour, Unemployment, HR) and even local/county scrutiny, as well as potentially serious legal and monetary ramifications. But for years, there has been a lack of clarity as to who qualifies as independent contractor versus an employee.

Currently, six non-exclusive, equally-weighted factors guide the analysis to help business owners determine whether a worker should be classified as an employee or as a contractor. These factors include: (1) the individual’s versus the employer’s degree of control over the work, (2) the individual’s (risk) opportunity for profit or loss, (3) the individual’s investment in facilities and equipment, (4) the permanency of the relationship between the parties, (5) the skill or expertise required by the individual, and (6) whether the work is “part of an integrated unit of production.” To date, these have fueled as much debate as they have resolved disputes, with different courts reaching different conclusions on how to classify the same workers, performing the same jobs.

To simplify this for business owners, the Department of Labor published a new proposed rule, intended to offer additional guidance by prioritizing its key determining factors. This proposed rule:

  • Still uses the “economic realities” in relationships between workers and employers when determining proper classifications. As a matter of economic reality, if workers depend upon someone else’s business for the opportunity to render service, then they are most likely employees, while if they are in business for themselves, they are most likely contractors.
  • Now seeks to elevate the importance of two “core factors” — the nature and degree of the worker’s control over the work and the worker’s opportunity for profit or loss based on initiative and/or investment — as the most probative of a worker’s status as either a contractor or employee. This collapses the second and third factors previously into a single, key factor.
  • Maintains the remaining three factors (the amount of skill required for the work; the degree of permanence of the working relationship; and whether the work is part of a business’s integrated unit of production), but they would be downgraded to “guides” rather than core factors.

As a reminder, even if this new rule would go into effect later this year, it would not affect various state laws (incl. the “ABC” tests) governing worker classifications (for example, California makes notable distinctions). Also, any new DOL Rule would not impact current worker classification analysis conducted by other federal agencies pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code, the National Labor Relations Act, or other federal laws.

Please contact Shulman Rogers Employment and Labor Law attorneys if you have questions regarding this Alert or would like to discuss this topic further.


 

MORE INFORMATION

The contents of this Alert are for informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. If you have any questions about this Alert, please contact the Shulman Rogers attorney with whom you regularly work or a member of the Shulman Rogers Employment and Labor Law Group.

Stay up to date with all the latest news and events.

Receive Our Newsletter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
Receive our Newsletter
12505 Park Potomac Avenue
Potomac, MD 20854
PH: 301-230-5200
8200 Greensboro Drive
Suite 701
McLean, VA 22102
PH: 703-684-5200
1100 New York Avenue NW
West Tower, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20005
PH: 202-872-0400
277 South Washington Street
Suite 310
Alexandria, VA 22314
PH: 703-682-8267
The Banner Building at McHenry Row
1215 East Fort Avenue, Suite 301
Baltimore, MD 21230
PH: 410-520-1340
  • © 2025 Shulman Rogers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Careers
  • Contact Us