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Uber Fined $649 Million for Saying Drivers Aren't Employees

New Jersey has demanded that Uber pay $649 million for years of unpaid employment taxes for its drivers, arguing that the ride-hailing company has misclassified the workers as independent contractors and not as employees.

Uber Fined $649 Million for Saying Drivers Aren't Employees

The state’s Department of Labor and Workforce Development issued the request this week to Uber and a subsidiary, Raiser, after an audit uncovered $530 million in back taxes that had not been paid for unemployment and disability insurance from 2014 to 2018.

Because of the nonpayment, the state is seeking another $119 million in interest.

The case represents a major escalation in how states nationwide view the employment practices at the core of many app-based companies, and the first time that a local government has sought back payroll taxes from Uber, which has hundreds of thousands of drivers in the United States.

A spokeswoman at Uber said the company disputed the state’s findings. “We are challenging this preliminary but incorrect determination, because drivers are independent contractors in New Jersey and elsewhere,” the spokeswoman, Alix Anfang, said.

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Across the country, states and cities have moved aggressively to rein in gig-economy companies that depend on inexpensive and independent labor, potentially reshaping their business models. Such companies have so far been able to successfully beat back attempts to alter the decadeslong trend of outsourcing and franchising work.

In California, a new law will require that workers be designated as employees, allowing them to gain access to basic protections like minimum wage and unemployment insurance. Pushed by labor groups, similar legislation has taken root in New York, Oregon and Washington state. In New York City, drivers for ride-hailing apps now receive a minimum wage, though they are not classified as employees.

The labor costs of companies like Uber and Lyft could rise by 20% to 30% if they were required by regulators or courts to treat drivers as employees, according to industry estimates.

“The New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development is cracking down on employee misclassification because it stifles our workforce and inflicts a huge financial toll on our economy,” Robert Asaro-Angelo, the department’s commissioner, said in a statement.

A department spokeswoman declined to discuss the specifics of the case, which was reported by Bloomberg Law.

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Labor groups praised the action taken by New Jersey.

“It’s a stinging rebuke of the architects of the gig economy, and we hope it permeates across other sectors.” Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, said in a statement. “New Jersey is sending a message that the state’s labor laws aren’t dictated by corporations.”

Some Uber drivers have sued the company in New Jersey, claiming they are employees and have not been paid adequately or compensated for the costs they incur.

“It’s a double whammy,” said Roosevelt N. Nesmith, a lawyer in Montclair, New Jersey, who filed a class-action suit on behalf of several drivers.

Uber controls when and how much the drivers can work but does not pay them overtime, Nesmith said. In some weeks, the drivers’ pay, after subtracting the costs of operating their cars, doesn’t amount to minimum wage, he added.

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“Uber has sufficient controls over the work of the drivers such that they should be deemed employees,” Nesmith said.

Uber has responded to the suit Nesmith filed by invoking a requirement in its employment contracts that drivers must take disputes to arbitration. But Nesmith sees his clients as a possible exception.

They take passengers to and from airports and train stations and therefore engage in interstate commerce, which is one type of work that courts have exempted from mandatory arbitration.

In September, the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals found that a federal judge in New Jersey had erred in deciding, in a separate case, that Uber drivers automatically failed to qualify for the interstate-commerce exemption. That case, Singh v. Uber Technologies, was filed on behalf of Jaswinder Singh and other Uber drivers who argued that they should be paid overtime.

Justin Swidler, a lawyer in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, who represents Singh, said many Uber drivers liked the flexibility of the job but did not consider themselves independent contractors.

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“A lot of drivers like the freedom in scheduling and that it can be a part-time job,” Swidler said. “But that’s not the test in New Jersey. You can have those things and be an employee.”

Conversely, if you ask the drivers, “Do you think you’re running an independent business that isn’t dependent on Uber?” he said, “you’ll universally get a no.”

This article originally appeared in

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