Small Employers Could Be On the Hook For Health Care, Family Leave

Every business that has contractors or temps supplied by another company needs to be alert for the likelihood the U.S. Department of Labor will find a joint employer relationship exists.

This is as true for small employers as it is for the largest.

A lengthyAdministrator’s Interpretationissued last month by the Labor Department’sWage and Hour Divisionmakes clear the government is intent on expanding the instances where joint employment exists.

“The growing variety and number of business models and labor arrangements have made joint employment more common,” declares Administrator David Weil at the outset of the Interpretation. Though it doesn’t push the boundaries of when a joint employer relationship exists, it does broaden its application.

More far reaching for smaller employers

TLNT posted a detailed analysisby Fisher & Phillips’ attorney Corey J. Goerdt of the Administrative Interpretation and its implications for employers in applying theFair Labor Standards Actand theMigrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act(MPSA).

For smaller employers, however, the consequences of the expansion of joint employment may be even more far reaching. Employers with fewer than 50 workers aren’t subject to the provisions of the FLSA or of theFamily and Medical Leave Actand theAffordable Care Act.

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In the months leading up to the implementation of theAffordable Care Act, staffing firms pitched their services as a way for smaller employers to bring on the workers they needed without having to provide health care. The same has been true of compliance with the FMLA.

Now, among the consequences of the joint employer broadening is to make it possible for the Labor Department to hold small employers and their intermediary worker suppliers liable jointly AND individually for any failures to comply with the rules.

还有待考察,但是管理ive Interpretation does aggregate the annual revenues of joint employers to meet the $500,000 threshold to apply the FLSA and MSPA. Similarly, the Department of Labor will aggregate all the work hours of employees who are jointly employed to calculate overtime.

Employment attorney Brian Nugent notes:

Smaller employers with less than 50 employees may think they are free of any FMLA obligations, only to find that they meet the coverage threshold if they are deemed to be a joint employer with another entity, such as a staffing agency that provides them with additional workers. Similarly, joint employer status could affect compliance under the Affordable Care Act.”

John Zappeis the former editor of TLNT.com and contributing editor of ERE.net. John was a newspaper reporter and editor before transitioning to digital media. In 1994, he launched one of the first newspaper sites. Before joining ERE Media , John was a senior consultant and analyst with Advanced Interactive Media and previously was Vice President of Digital Media for the Los Angeles Newspaper Group where he developed and managed a team of developers, content producers and digital advertising and marketing specialists.

Today, John is a contract writer producing whitepapers, blog posts, thought leadership articles and marketing content and managing social media programs. He also works with organizations and businesses to assist with audience development and marketing.His website isJohnZappe.com.

In his spare time he can be found hiking in the California mountains or competing incanine agilityand obedience competitions.

You can contact himhere.

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