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Biden’s labor secretary says gig workers should be considered employees

That could mean big trouble for companies like Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash.

Mayor of Boston Marty Walsh gestures to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Democratic National Convention in 2016.
Mayor of Boston Marty Walsh gestures to the crowd after delivering a speech on the first day of the Democratic National Convention in 2016.
Labor Secretary Marty Walsh is looking at you, Uber and Lyft.
Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images
Rani Molla
Rani Molla was a senior correspondent at Vox and has been focusing her reporting on the future of work. She has covered business and technology for more than a decade — often in charts — including at Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal.

US Labor Secretary Marty Walsh told Reuters on Thursday that gig workers should be treated as employees. Having President Joe Biden’s top labor official say so is a welcome development for this class of workers — including drivers for Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash — which has long sought this distinction but has so far been unsuccessful.

“We are looking at it but in a lot of cases gig workers should be classified as employees ... in some cases they are treated respectfully and in some cases they are not and I think it has to be consistent across the board,” Walsh told Reuters.

“These companies are making profits and revenue and I’m not (going to) begrudge anyone for that because that’s what we are about in America ... but we also want to make sure that success trickles down to the worker,” he said.

A national decision on who is and isn’t an employee could have broad implications for the US workforce, of which approximately a quarter to a third, depending on the estimate, could be considered a contract or gig worker. Being considered an employee guarantees workers a number of benefits, like guaranteed minimum wage and overtime, that contract workers don’t have.

Gig workers have long complained about unfair working conditions, from making less than minimum wage to lack of health care, and straight-up exploitation. After a long battle by labor activists, New York City passed the first minimum wage legislation for Uber and Lyft drivers in 2018. During the pandemic, gig economy workers have been especially hard hit.

The labor fight to make gig economy workers into employees suffered a huge blow last fall in California, where many of the gig economy companies are based, with the passage of Proposition 22. The ballot initiative, which was written by Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash, among others, effectively declared ride-hailing drivers independent contractors, but did provide them with minor protections. Prop 22 overturned previous state legislation, Assembly Bill 5, which had ordered gig companies to prove workers’ jobs were outside of their core business, in order to consider them contractors. Ride-hailing service Uber famously said its drivers were not part of its “usual course” because it was a tech platform for “digital marketplaces” and not primarily an employer of drivers.

Gig companies spent $200 million lobbying for the passage of Prop 22, a sum that makes sense when you consider that analysts estimated making drivers employees would cost Uber an additional $500 million and Lyft $200 million each year. Employees can cost employers 20 to 30 percent more than contract workers, according to estimates from the Economic Policy Institute.

Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash stock dropped substantially after Reuters published Sec. Walsh’s comments.

The labor secretary helps set guidelines for how workers are treated. It’s unclear if the Department of Labor will institute new policies about how to classify workers, but at the very least, the secretary’s statement signals that the Biden administration is thinking about the issue.

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