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Labor News & Commentary April 30 SEIU seeks union rights for rideshare drivers in California & more
https://onlabor.org/april-30-2025/
By Henry Green
Henry Green is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary, SEIU seeks union rights for rideshare drivers in California, New Jersey proposes applying the ABC Test, and Board officials push back on calls for layoffs.
In California, Politico reports that an SEIU-backed bill that would allow rideshare drivers to join unions has passed out of committee, clear[ing] its first hurdle. The bills current text is available here; it appears to propose a similar model to a ballot initiative that passed in Massachusetts last fall. The new proposal is the latest battle over gig-workers employment law status in California. To recap, Californias Assembly Bill 5 and the state Supreme Courts Dynamex (2018) decision applied the ABC Test (which says a worker is an employee unless the employer can prove (a) that the worker was not under its control, (b) that the workers activity was not in the companys usual course of business, and (c) that the worker was engaged in a customarily independent trade) to determine whether workers were employees or independent contractors. In response, ride share and delivery companies backed a successful effort to pass Proposition 22, which said the workers were independent contractors. SEIU brought a lawsuit challenging Proposition 22, but lost at the state Supreme Court this summer; Justice Goodwin Liu wrote in the ruling that the legislature could still enact workers compensation legislation of its own. The current proposal appears to focus on union rights instead of workers compensation or other employment law protections.
Meanwhile Bloomberg reports that the ABC Test remains in play for rideshare drivers in New Jersey. The states Department of Labor has announced a proposed regulation that would codify the ABC Test for the purposes of state employment laws. New Jerseys Supreme Court embraced the ABC Test in East Bay Drywall (2022). The Department of Labor previously accused Uber and Lyft of misclassifying their drivers and reached a $100 million settlement with Uber in 2022; however, the settlement did not require Uber to change how it classifies drivers going forward. An attorney quoted in the article predicts that lobbyists will seek exemptions to the new regulation, noting that California has created dozens of exemptions to its ABC Test.
Bloomberg reports disagreement between the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and Trump-appointed NLRB officials over layoffs at the Board. According to the article, when the White House directed agencies to carry out reductions in force in February, the NLRB responded with plans to maintain a hiring freeze, offer voluntary retirements, and identify opportunities to right-size but said layoffs werent currently necessary or appropriate. Board officials noted that the NLRBs headcount is nearly 30% smaller than it was 15 years ago while its workload has grown. Per the article, OMB marked much of the NLRBs plan Does Not Meet Expectations, and urged the Board to consider other strategies to reduce staff. In an all-staff email responding to Bloombergs reporting, NLRB leadership wrote: The NLRB is committed to the presidents goal of achieving efficiencies and cost-savings in the federal government The chairman and acting general counsel believe and they have communicated this to OMB and OPM that the agencys people are its most valuable resource and are essential to carrying out the NLRBs important statutory mission.