oint employment is a legal doctrine that applies when two businesses exert some
degree of control over the terms and conditions of an individual’s employment. Application
of this doctrine to the relationship between temporary staffing agencies or outsourcing
companies and their clients often results in a finding that both entities—the staffing
agency or outsourcing company and its client—are joint employers for purposes of
federal employment laws.
Outsourcing in this context refers to companies—often those
in IT services—that come onto the client’s premise and take over a certain function
or process. Although some of the work may be offshored, employees of the client
who had been involved in this function or process often become employees of the
outsourcing company, and continue to work on the client’s premises.
Joint employers are each subject to the laws governing the
employment relationship, including wage-payment laws, anti-discrimination laws,
industrial safety laws and the like. Generally, in the absence of contractual terms
that provide otherwise, joint employers may share liability for each other’s actions
toward their common employees. These common employees may be referred to as temporary
employees, contingent workers and contract employees.
Different laws set different standards to determine whether
two entities are joint employers and to what extent each may be liable for the actions
of the other. This article will describe those different laws and standards and
offer tips on how to minimize the risk of liability under this legal doctrine.
Who is the employee’s employer?
Government agencies and courts look at a number of factors to determine whether
two (or more) businesses are joint employers of an employee, with the right to control
being the most important factor. The staffing agency or outsourcing firm will nearly
always be the workers’ employer; the more control the agency’s clients exert over
the workers, the more likely the client will be considered a joint employer with
the staffing agency—and the more likely the client will be held liable for violation
of workplace laws.
In general, a worker is the employee of the company that exercises
control over his or her employment. In an agency/client relationship, the "employer"
is the entity that, on balance, performs some or all of the following functions:
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Determines job qualifications
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Schedules work hours and assigns work
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Supervises day-to-day activities
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Has authority to hire, fire and discipline
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Determines pay and benefits
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Promulgates work rules and conditions of employment
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Maintains employment records
No one factor is decisive and it is not necessary even to
satisfy a majority of factors. Rather, all the circumstances in the worker’s relationship
with each of the businesses are considered to determine if either or both should
be deemed the "employer."
Different laws, different standards
Various federal laws come to bear on the question of joint employment, each with
its own nuances and scope:
The Fair Labor Standards Act
The FLSA, the federal statute that governs overtime payments and minimum wage, broadly
defines joint employment. Specifically, under regulations implementing the FLSA
(29 CFR 791.2), a joint employment relationship may exist if employment by one employer
is not completely disassociated from employment by the other employer or where one
employer is acting directly or indirectly in the interest of the other employer
in relation to the employee. Joint employers are responsible, both individually
and jointly, for compliance with all of the applicable provisions of the FLSA.
With respect to temporary staffing and outsourcing companies,
the Department of Labor takes the position that employees of a temporary staffing
company are generally joint employees of the staffing company and the business for
which they perform services. Each individual company is jointly responsible with
the other for proper payment of overtime and minimum wages.
The Family and Medical Leave Act
The joint employment test is different, and broader, under the FMLA. Pursuant to
Labor Department regulations (29 CFR 825.106), two businesses that exercise some
control over the worker or working conditions may be joint employers for purposes
of the FMLA. Under these regulations, joint employment will ordinarily exist when
a temporary staffing agency or outsourcing company supplies employees to its business
client/employer.
Of the two businesses, however, only the "primary" employer—the
employer with the authority to hire and fire, assign, discipline and pay—is responsible
for giving FMLA notice, providing FMLA leave, maintaining health benefits and providing
job restoration. The staffing agency is typically the primary employer. The secondary
employer, typically the staffing agency’s client, is responsible for accepting the
employee returning from FMLA leave in place of the replacement employee if it continues
to utilize an employee from the staffing agency. Both the primary and secondary
employers must also refrain from interfering with or discriminating against an employee’s
rights under the FMLA. Employees who are jointly employed by two employers must
be counted by both employers, whether or not maintained on only one employer’s payroll,
in determining employer coverage and employee eligibility under the FMLA.
Federal anti-discrimination laws
Federal anti-discrimination laws protect individuals from employment discrimination
based on protected categories, such as race, sex, color, national origin, age, religion
and disability. Business entities with the requisite number of employees (20 for
age discrimination, 15 for other types of prohibited discrimination) are deemed
"employers" covered under these laws. The anti-discrimination statutes not only
prohibit an employer from discriminating against its own employees, but also prohibit
an employer from interfering with an individual’s employment opportunities with
another employer. Courts and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal
agency charged with enforcing federal anti-discrimination laws, incorporate and
apply joint employment liability when contingent workers bring discrimination claims.
EEOC guidance is clear that both staffing and outsourcing
firms and their clients share equal employment opportunity responsibilities toward
workers. If both the staffing firm and its client have the right to control the
worker, and if both are "employers" under the statutes, they are covered as "joint
employers." Even if the businesses are not "joint employers," as where the client
does not exert control over the staffing firm’s workers, the client may be held
liable for discriminating against an individual who is not its employee, if it is
found to have interfered with an individual’s employment opportunities with the
staffing firm.
In short, a staffing or outsourcing firm must hire and make
job assignments in a nondiscriminatory manner. The staffing firm’s client must treat
the staffing firm worker assigned to it in a nondiscriminatory manner. The staffing
firm must take immediate and appropriate corrective action if it learns that the
client has discriminated against one of its workers.
Where the combined discriminatory actions of a staffing firm
and its client result in harm to the worker, both entities are jointly and severally
liable for back pay, front pay and compensatory damages, meaning that damages can
be obtained from either one of the entities alone or from both combined. Punitive
and liquidated damages, if applicable, are individually assessed against and borne
by each entity in accordance with its respective degree of malicious or reckless
misconduct.
Occupational Safety and Health Act
Joint employer liability is more limited under OSHA, as staffing or outsourcing
agencies will generally be cited only if necessary to correct a violation, or if
the agency knew or should have known of the unsafe or hazardous condition and failed
to take remedial action. The party in direct control of the workplace and actions
of the employees is typically the sole entity responsible for record keeping and
for keeping the workplace safe.
Tips to minimize liability
Business entities that use temporary staffing employees or have outsourced certain
business functions to contract workers can—and should—take steps to minimize their
risk of liability. These steps are both contractual and functional.
The contract between the client and its temporary staffing
or outsourcing vendor should clearly articulate that the vendor is solely responsible
for:
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Managing all aspects of its employees’ employment, including:
recruiting, interviewing, hiring, training, assigning, disciplining and firing employees;
determining wages; evaluating performance; and handling employees’ complaints.
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Payment of wages, benefits and taxes.
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Legal compliance with all employment laws including, for example, laws pertaining
to immigration, wages, discrimination and safety.
The contract should also provide for indemnification, so that
the staffing or outsourcing agency is responsible for legal fees and costs that
may be incurred by the agency’s client in defense of cases stemming from the agency’s
noncompliance. Further, the contract should allow for periodic audits to verify
compliance.
In the end, however, what the contract says will not matter
if the actions taken are different from what’s on paper. Therefore, on a practical
note, the staffing firm client should not treat contract employees exactly as it
treats its own workers. For example, contract employees should not be provided with
business cards referencing the client’s business and should not be allowed to sign
letters or other documents on behalf of the client.
In sum, temporary staffing agencies and outsourcing firms
are an integral part of the modern workforce. However, the benefits of using staffing
and outsourcing firms may be outweighed by the increased risk of legal liabilities
if care is not taken to minimize and manage that risk.
Workforce Management Online, May 2008 -- Register Now!