By Corey J. Goerdt
The U.S. Department of Labor has taken the next step in its nearly-six-year-old “fissured industries” initiative by releasing Administrator Interpretation No. 2016-1, dealing with concepts of “joint employment” under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act and the federal Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act.
Companies and other organizations that are engaged in multi-participant arrangements such as outside-party management, joint ventures, staffing services, employee leasing, temporary help, subcontracting, certain kinds of “job sharing,” dedicated vendors/suppliers, and so on take heed: The Labor Department seeks to put as many of you as possible on the hook for any alleged FLSA or MSPA violations affecting the workers performing services in these arrangements.
“Joint employment” is not a new concept, of course, but the Department of Labor’s new guidance portends both an expansive interpretation of those principles and an aggressive agency enforcement posture.
Under the FLSA and MSPA, a worker can be employed by two or more employers simultaneously.
In this situation, each joint-employer shares the same compliance responsibility as every other one vis-a-vis the jointly-employed worker. The Labor Department “interpretation” focuses upon two joint-employment scenarios: “Horizontal” and “vertical.”
The U.S. Department of Labor says that the “horizontal” variety exists when two or more employers separately employ a worker, but the employers share a sufficiently close association or relationship with respect to the employee’s work.
It suggests that this might be the case where, for instance, two restaurants owned by different legal entities operate under the same brand, share a common majority owner, coordinate the employee’s schedule, share supervision over her, and pay her through the same payroll processor.
The Interpretation provides some relevant considerations, including (among others):
“Vertical” joint-employment might exist, the Labor Department says, when one company contracts for workers who are directly employed by what the agency calls the “intermediary” company supplying their labor.
Illustrations the Department of Labor gives include:
The Labor Department “interpretation” embraces an “economic realities” analysis to determine whether there is a vertical joint-employment. It says that the ultimate question is whether the worker is “economically dependent on the potential joint employer who, via an arrangement with the intermediary employer, is benefitting from the work.”
The Department of Labor identifies seven relevant factors tending to favor economic dependency:
As these factors suggest, the determination will depend heavily upon the facts in each situation.
Is this really so important? Certainly those employers who have had to pay hundreds of thousands or millions in joint-employment-based FLSA liability think so.
The U.S. Department of Labor clearly sees this as a high-priority matter. Moreover, the release of this Interpretation is likely to spark interest among plaintiffs’ attorneys across the nation.
Employers should immediately conduct a careful review to see whether this renewed attention to joint-employment presents a potential threat to their bottom-lines.
This originally appeared on the Fisher & Phillips Wage & Hour Laws blog.