
I am entertained by poorly translated things. I have no idea what this shirt means or what the designer thought it would mean. I saw this one in Italy.
I can’t help but wonder what the reaction would be if I wore this shirt in the U.S. Would people say anything to me? I was tempted to ask the wearer about it or to try to buy it from her, but I chickened out.
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court kind of chickened out too.
A petition had been filed with the Court, asking it to invalidate California’s AB5, its stringent independent contractor law. The petition argued that the law singles out certain businesses and therefore violates the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
As you may recall, AB5 is the California law that makes it much harder to maintain independent contractor status. The law presumes that most workers are employees and requires a hiring party to satisfy a three-part ABC Test to classify someone as a contractor.
The law, however, does not apply the same standards to everyone. The law exempts loads of industries and types of workers from the ABC Test, and — if we’re being honest here — the law was really targeted toward rideshare and delivery companies.
And that’s exactly what the rideshare and delivery companies argued.
In June 2024, the Ninth Circuit voted to preserve the law, and the case (called Olson v. State of California) was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, however, can decide which cases to hear and does not have to give a reason for declining to hear a case.
Last week, the Supreme Court declined the petition, opting not to hear the case. The Court provided no reason.
A year earlier, in July 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a different petition asking it to review AB5. The earlier petition, in Mobilize the Message LLC v Bonta, argued that the law’s restrictions on freelance work violated the first Amendment.
For some companies, the Supreme Court’s decision last week not to hear the Olson case will have limited effect. The passage of Prop 22 in late 2020 exempted certain rideshare and delivery app companies from having to comply with AB5. (Prop 22 was also challenged in court and survived.) But AB5 and its ABC Test, later recodified in AB2257, remain in effect for many industries and businesses.
This most recent petition to the Supreme Court alleged that AB5 violated the Equal Protection Clause by unfairly singling out certain industries. I think the evidence is plain that this is what motivated the law, but whether that motivation rises to the level of an Equal Protection violation is another matter.
But no matter. The Supreme Court can decline to hear the appeal, and that’s exactly what it did.
AB5 remains on the books, and I can now start thinking about how I could turn all of this into a poorly translated t-shirt.
© 2024 Todd Lebowitz, posted on WhoIsMyEmployee.com, Exploring Issues of Independent Contractor Misclassification and Joint Employment. All rights reserved.
