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5 years agoon
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AP NewsSACRAMENTO — Bowing to intense criticism, the author of a sweeping new California labor law now wants to amend the statute to eliminate any cap on the number of assignments freelance journalists can take.
Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, said she will seek to remove a 35-submission limit on the number of articles, photos and other assignments freelance media workers can produce for an employer.
Two freelancer groups suing over the law on free speech grounds will continue their legal case in federal court in Los Angeles, where they are asking for immediate relief from the law’s restrictions.
If the measure passes the Assembly and Senate, it wouldn’t take effect until next January. “At that point there’ll be far more people out of work than anybody would like,” said Mickey Osterreicher, general counsel at the National Press Photographers Association, which jointly filed a lawsuit against the law known as AB5 last December with the American Society of Journalists and Authors.
The law has affected freelance writers and bloggers who often go beyond the 35-assignment limit. Before the law even took effect on Jan. 1, digital sports website SB Nation, owned by Vox Media, said it would end its use of 200 California freelancers.
The groups suing also want a ban on freelancers shooting video for employers to be lifted. Gonzalez’s office did not say whether the office would consider an exemption for video.
Minutes before Gonzalez’s proposal was unveiled, Republican Assembly members failed in a long-shot bid to suspend the law through forcing an unusual floor vote on a repeal bill stuck in committee.
Republican Assemblyman Kevin Kiley’s motion, which required two-thirds approval to suspend the Assembly’s rules, was voted down 55-15. The motion drew no support from Democrats and was a sign of desperation among critics of AB5, which has disrupted the business model of gig-economy giants and affected a slew of independent workers like writers and musicians.
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In this Aug. 28, 2019, photo, supporters of a measure to limit when companies can label workers as independent contractors drive their cars past the Capitol during a rally in Sacramento, Calif. California lawmakers are debating a bill that would make companies like Uber and Lyft label their workers as employees, entitling them to minimum wage and benefits. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)
The AB5 law makes it harder for companies to classify workers as independent contractors instead of employees, who are entitled to minimum wage and benefits such as worker’s compensation. It established the nation’s strictest test, but also exempted certain industries from the law, like graphic designers and marketing writers, said Jim Manley, an attorney with Pacific Legal Foundation, which is representing the two freelancer groups suing.
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