ennifer Miller was about as permanent a temp as you can be.
For 10 years, the Boise, Idaho, resident worked continuously at
computer maker Hewlett-Packard but got her paycheck from a different employer. She
was laid off from staffing firm Manpower in March, and is now the lead plaintiff in a
class-action lawsuit accusing HP of unfairly excluding workers like her from benefits
including vacation and holidays. The suit seeks more than $300 million in damages.
"They would treat us as employees," Miller says, "but not give
us the same benefits."
An HP spokeswoman says Miller’s suit and a related suit by an
alleged whistle-blower "have no merit."
The HP suits are among the latest examples of what’s been
dubbed "permatemp" litigation. It’s a topic made famous by software giant Microsoft,
which agreed to pay $97 million five years ago to settle the claims of workers given
labels such as "temporary" employees, "freelancers" and "independent contractors."
Whether companies are shortchanging staffing-firm temps and
contractors through long-term gigs remains controversial. And workers recently have
brought a slew of lawsuits against a division of package delivery giant FedEx.
Overall, though, it seems employers are steering clear of legal troubles related to
permatemps. When it comes to staying within the letter of the law, some observers
say, employers have wised up about how to set up their benefit plans and use
contingent workers.
The number of permatemp suits seems to have decreased over the
past several years, says Johnny Taylor, chairman of the Society for Human Resource
Management and senior vice president of human resources for financial services firm
LendingTree.com. In the 1990s, some companies lowered their headcount, taxes and
benefit expenses by calling workers independent contractors in what amounted to a
"sham," Taylor says.
But companies these days are taking steps to define workers
properly and set clear rules, such as no longer giving phone lines to contractors.
"In 2000, most companies did a gut check to make sure they were compliant" with the
law, Taylor says.
Practice widespread
The term "permatemp" refers to people working for extended
periods in a range of situations, such as through a staffing firm or as an
independent contractor. The Center for a Changing Workforce estimates that there are
at least 3 million permatemps in the workforce. Critics charge that these workers
often are paid lower wages and receive fewer benefits while performing the same jobs
as regular employees.
Ed Lenz, general counsel for the American Staffing Association,
argues that problems associated with permatemps have been blown out of proportion. He
cites a study from the Employment Policy Foundation think tank several years ago that
found that most temp workers who had been in their current assignments for two or
more years preferred their status.
It is against federal law, Lenz says, to shift workers to a
staffing firm payroll simply to avoid having to pay them retirement benefits that
vest over time. But most employers do not turn to staffing firms to save a buck, he
says. "They’re used primarily for labor force flexibility," he says.
Perhaps, but a number of permatemps have sued, claiming they’ve
been misclassified and deprived of benefits.
Jennifer Miller’s case against HP has an intriguing twist. A
separate suit filed earlier this year by a longtime HP employee alleges that company
managers were directed to shred their notes after a meeting in which it became
apparent that HP was violating employment law.
The purpose of the October 2003 meeting, according to the suit,
was to learn from an HP attorney how to legally classify workers as contractors
rather than employees. But as the attorney reviewed Microsoft’s permatemp case, "it
was apparent to those assembled that HP was violating the law in a manner that was
virtually identical to the Microsoft case," the suit says.
HP representative Brigida Bergkamp says the company’s legal
team abides by the profession’s rules of responsibility and HP’s standards of
business conduct.
Microsoft’s famed permatemp case hinged on the fact that the
software giant didn’t explicitly bar its staffing-agency and casual workers—temps
employed by Microsoft—from its employee stock-purchase plan, says one attorney whose
firm has represented Microsoft. That allowed longtime temps to make the case that as
"common law" employees, they were entitled to the same benefit, he says.
Whether a worker is a common-law employee may not be easy to
assess. An Internal Revenue Service publication related to employment taxes tries to
put the matter succinctly: "Under common-law rules, anyone who performs services for
you is your employee if you have the right to control what will be done and how it
will be done."
Yet the same publication indicates there is no simple test for
figuring out whether someone is an independent contractor or an employee: "In any
employee-independent contractor determination, all information that provides evidence
of the degree of control and the degree of independence must be considered."
On the other hand, companies may have found an unambiguous
solution to the problem of permatemps and benefit plans. In the wake of the Microsoft
settlement, employment attorneys say, companies have rewritten benefit plans
explicitly to include only regular employees.
A solution for Verizon
Such a plan seems to have made a difference for Verizon
Communications in a court battle with staffing-firm employees who claimed that the
phone giant wrongly denied them benefits. In August, a federal appeals court upheld a
ruling against the employees, noting that the benefit plans in question specifically
exclude employees not "paid directly" by the company.
In defending itself against Jennifer Miller’s lawsuit, HP may
be able to rely on a similar argument. HP’s U.S. benefits policy "is that benefits
are provided only to eligible active HP employees in the U.S. who are on the HP
payroll and who are regularly scheduled to work 20 or more hours a week," Bergkamp
says.
Attorney Judith Bendich of Bendich, Stobaugh and Strong, the
Seattle-based law firm that led the suit against Microsoft, wishes that the federal
Employee Retirement Income and Security Act were much tougher on employers when it
comes to requiring equal distribution of benefits to common-law employees. Federal
legislation sponsored by Democrats to revise ERISA along these lines has stalled in
recent years. Permatemp cases against government bodies, like a suit Bendich’s firm
is leading against the city of Seattle, are more promising because public agencies
aren’t governed by ERISA but may be subject to other rules, she argues.
A factor that may be limiting new permatemp lawsuits is their
long duration. The Microsoft case took almost 10 years before it reached a
settlement, and only in September did the court approve distribution of most of the
money. "There are very few attorneys that have the resources to go after cases like
this," says David West, executive director of the Center for a Changing Workforce.
Drivers cry foul
One employment lawsuit in which plaintiffs’ attorneys recently
prevailed is a class action against a unit of FedEx. A group of drivers for FedEx
Ground, the company’s division focused on overland shipping, claimed they were
employees rather than independent contractors and should be reimbursed for business
expenses such as the trucks they furnished and FedEx uniforms they wore. Last year, a
California trial court judge ruled that drivers who operate a single route for FedEx
Ground were in fact employees. FedEx Ground "not only has the right to control, but
has close to absolute actual control over" the drivers, the judge wrote in his
opinion.
The damages phase of the case is not complete, but the initial
ruling seems to have triggered a host of related suits against FedEx. In the past
year, roughly 30 suits have been filed by drivers around the country, says FedEx
Ground spokesman David Westrick.
Westrick says the company intends to appeal the California
judge’s decision, and that FedEx Ground’s treatment of drivers as independent
contractors has survived the review of various state and federal agencies, including
the IRS. "We are protecting the business model and the livelihoods of 14,000 contract
drivers around the country," he says.
FedEx isn’t the only company in the shipping field to face
worker-status litigation. In September, a group of drivers sued freight transport
company EGL, alleging that it misclassified them as independent contractors. The
suit, filed in a California Superior Court, seeks damages including business expenses
and, for a subclass of the drivers, unpaid overtime. EGL’s legal department did not
return requests for comment.
Lorrie Grindstaff, an attorney representing plaintiffs in both
the initial FedEx Ground case and the EGL case, says she sees more companies
mislabeling employees as independent contractors, which ultimately strains government
coffers when workers get hurt or lose their jobs and turn to public agencies for
help. "Not only are employees subsidizing the employer, so is the taxpayer," she
says.
Ultimately, the issue isn’t about the employer of record but
how the U.S. promotes decent benefits for workers, suggests American Staffing
Association attorney Lenz. We are moving toward a "freelance nation" without
appropriate public policies, he says.
"The problem is with the whole model," Lenz says. "It’s not
just with temp workers; it’s with the traditional employer-based benefit system."