January 30, 2020
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NYC Commission on Human Rights Clarifies Work Protections for Independent Contractors and Freelancers

The labor rights of freelancers and independent contractors have been much in the news recently. In California for example, a law passed in 2019, which came into effect January 1, codified a California Supreme Court ruling in the case Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court about the status of gig economy workers. The gist of AB5 was to place the burden of proving workers are independent contractors onto employers, which aimed to put pressure on Uber, Lyft and other "gig-economy" companies who have been exploiting their workers' statuses as independent contractors to avoid employers' legal obligations to their workers.

Concern over the welfare and employment rights has not been confined to the country's most populous state, however. New York City's Commission On Human Rights has published new information for freelancers and contractors working in the city. The Commission's goal is to elaborate and clarify who qualifies as a freelancer under the law, and to inform them of their rights and protections. These were expanded by amendments to a city law passed by the City Council in the fall of 2019.

This guidance is also designed for employers to understand who qualifies for protections and what their obligations to contractors are. Companies with 15 or more employees that employ contractors who work 80 or more hours in a year and at least 90 days are required by law to provide employment and sexual harassment training to contractors, for example.

The expanded law also provides contractors with protection against various types of discrimination, including the prohibition of the use of credit checks or inquiries into previous salary rates during the hiring process, making employers liable for discriminatory practices, and the provision of reasonable accommodations for contractors and other employees, such as making lactation rooms available for nursing mothers.

Cuomo’s Textbook Violations of His Own Sexual Harassment Law

March 29, 2021
Sexual Harassment
Governor Cuomo, who boasted that “we are sending a strong message that time is up on sexual harassment in the workplace” doesn’t appear to have thought his own message applied to him. Read all about it in Senior Associate Alex Berke’s piece “Cuomo’s Textbook Violations of His Own Sexual Harassment Law” in the Daily Beast.

Berke-Weiss Law PLLC Releases Training Video Focused on Family and Medical Leave

March 22, 2021
Paid Family Leave
If you need to brush up on FMLA and other questions pertaining to leave, including how FMLA works with New York State Paid Family Leave, we have a new training video from an event with Park Slope Parents that provides answers to many issues about family and medical leave and what you need to know.

Is the Third Stimulus the Beginning of a Guaranteed Family Income?

March 11, 2021
Gender Discrimination
Tucked into 2021’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package is a provision that could have life-changing effects for families with children: an expansion and reworking of the child tax credit. Championed solo for nearly two decades by Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, the idea to expand the child tax credit has gained a new lease on life and more admirers as the pandemic and lockdowns have had a deleterious impact on families and children.

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