PA Worker Misclassification Task Force Releases Annual Report with 15 Unanimous Recommendations for General Assembly

The Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry (L&I) task force on Misclassification of Employees sumitted its annual report with recommendations including adopting the ABC test for classifying workers. 

Harrisburg, PA – Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry (L&I) Secretary Jennifer Berrier today announced that the Joint Task Force on Misclassification of Employees, a bipartisan-nominated group of volunteers representing business, labor, and government perspectives, has submitted its annual report to the General Assembly with 15 unanimous recommendations.

The Joint Task Force was created by Act 85 of 2020 to study the worker misclassification issue and its impact on the commonwealth. Misclassification of employees occurs when a business wrongfully classifies a worker as an independent contractor when the nature, type, and oversight of their work determines that they should be considered an employee under the law.

“Worker misclassification is an issue that demands reform because it harms every aspect of our economy – from individuals wrongly denied protections like workers’ compensation insurance to law-abiding employers competing on an uneven playing field to Pennsylvania taxpayers forced to cover the cost of lost revenue in the commonwealth’s General Fund and Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund,” Secretary Berrier said. “I want to thank the members of the task force for their diligent work to develop these recommendations, and I urge the General Assembly to strongly consider them.”

The Joint Task Force has held monthly meetings since January 2021 to study misclassification and will continue to meet through December 2022, when its authority under Act 85 expires. In addition to members appointed by the four caucuses in the General Assembly, the representatives from the Office of the Attorney General and the Departments of Revenue and Labor & Industry also serve on the seven-member task force.

The Joint Task Force annual report estimates:

  • 49,266 employers in Pennsylvania currently misclassify at least one employee;
  • 389,000 Pennsylvania workers are misclassified annually;
  • 11,670 misclassified Pennsylvania workers suffered injury or illness at work in 2020 and were wrongfully denied Workers’ Compensation – a collective loss of more than $176 million in medical coverage and income replacement to those workers;
  • $131 million in annual lost revenue to the UC Trust Fund due to misclassification;
  • Between $6.4 million and $124.5 million in lost revenue in 2019 to the General Fund due to misclassification.

The Joint Task Force unanimously recommends the General Assembly do the following:

  • Extend Act 72, the Construction Workplace Misclassification Act, beyond the construction trades to cover other industries in the commonwealth.
  • Adopt the ABC test as a baseline standard for the commonwealth to clearly delineate the difference between “employee” and “independent contractor.”
  • Expand the statewide clearance programs to require all state agencies to pull current licenses or not renew current licenses if a business is determined to have knowingly misclassified workers and has not paid the fines and fees associated with that violation or previous violations.
  • Require appropriate state agencies to share FEIN and employment information under proper confidential safeguards on all state agency business applications so that compliance crossmatches can be done efficiently.
  • Enhance the penalties associated with worker misclassification violations under Act 72.
  • Provide L&I with resources to hire additional investigative and support staff and subpoena authority to acquire records of employers as part of investigations into misclassification.
  • Provide L&I with authority to issue administrative stop work orders against entities and/or individuals that have been found to have employed misclassified workers.
  • Provide L&I with statutory authority to debar companies or individuals for knowing violations or for multiple violations of Act 72.
  • Authorize that liability shall be imposed by law on general contractors any time their subcontractors are found to have misclassified workers on a project only if the general contractor had clear evidence of a knowing misclassification violation.
  • Require labor brokers doing business in the commonwealth to be registered and bonded, including but not limited to reporting requirements for workers’ compensation, unemployment compensation, and federal and state taxes, to safeguard workers from being misclassified as independent contractors.
  • Create an interagency working group to meet quarterly to coordinate enforcement strategies involving state agencies, along with the Attorney General’s Office and County District Attorneys’ Offices.
  • Allocate funds and expand posting requirements for a statewide effort of education and public outreach to educate the public, workers, and business owners about the worker misclassification issue and the obligations under the law.
  • Authorize the Department of Revenue, the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, and the Bureau of Labor Law Compliance to share data, in addition to existing authority to share data with the Office of Unemployment Compensation Tax Services, for the purposes of investigating employee misclassification.
  • Authorize L&I to recover investigative costs and attorneys’ fees from violators, and authorize courts to assess investigative costs and attorneys’ fees incurred by the Office of Attorney General and District Attorneys’ Offices against criminal violators who are found guilty, or plead guilty or nolo contendere for knowing violations.
  • Authorize a private right of action for misclassified employees and impose a penalty to be paid directly to plaintiffs that successfully establish a claim of misclassification to be modeled after existing processes in the PA Wage Payment and Collection Law and New Jersey statute.

Act 85 of 2020 requires the Joint Task Force to submit a final report of its findings by December 2022.

MEDIA CONTACT: Alex Peterson, dlipress@pa.gov

Source: Worker Misclassification Task Force Releases Annual Report with 15 Unanimous Recommendations for General Assembly

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.