Slashdot Mirror


HP Contract Workers Sue For Recognition

manganese4 writes "The Idaho Statesman is carrying the story of 33 local Boise HP contract workers suing HP. They claim that they were expected to perform at the same level of expectations as HP workers and thus should be given the rights and privileges of HP workers. HP claims the suit is without merit." From the article: "The suit seeks to represent 3,000 workers in Boise and elsewhere in the company and could involve as much as $300 million, according to the complaint."

17 of 603 comments (clear)

  1. They're right, this has no merit... by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Jennifer Miller of Nampa is one of the plaintiffs. Miller said she was employed by HP in Boise from 1989 to 1995, when she took a severance package and left the company. She returned later in 1995 as a contract worker and worked at HP until March 9. Part of the time she was a contract employee through Veritest and Manpower Professional. Her jobs included testing software for HP printers.

    Umm, I have never heard of anything like this before. Temp agencies hire employees, charge the companies their employees work at, and then pay (and give benefits if applicable) to their employees from that.

    Since when are you owed money/benefits from a company you really don't directly work for?

    1. Re:They're right, this has no merit... by Mr.+McGibby · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You need to learn actually read some tax law since you obviously don't know what you're talking about. The IRS doesn't allow companies to get around actually hiring people by calling them contractors. If someone looks, acts, and is managed like an employee then they MUST become such. That is the LAW. Read it sometime.

      --
      Mad Software: Rantings on Developing So
  2. That ain't how contracts work by mlmurray · · Score: 4, Insightful
    They claim that they were expected to perform at the same level of expectations as HP workers and thus should be given the rights and privileges of HP workers.
    No. They should be given the rights and privileges that were spelled out in the contract.
  3. This is dumb by Holi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am sorry but I have done contract work for over 10 years and this pisses me off. They may work at HP but they work for either their contract agency or for themselves. I didn't sue Pixar when I worked there because they decided not to put contractors in the credits. I don't expect the company I am working at to provide me with health benefits and stock options, I should get those through the agency who pays me.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  4. Is it any surprise? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Companies tend to have the nasty habit of using what they call contractors to get out of paying taxes and benifits that they really should be"

    Is this any surprise? If the government makes you pay a higher tax for full-time employees, then this discourages hiring full-time employees. The same with imposition of benefits for such employees: it is the government providing a disincentive for hiring the kind of employees that would get these benefits.

    Is it any surprise that the companies are responding to economic pressure from the government NOT to hire regular full-time workers?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  5. Re:I never understood.. by velo_mike · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I never understood how these things work: Do some lawyers wake up in the morning and decide, "Hey! I need a new pool. Hmmmm, I think I sue HP today. Now, let's find a reason.".

    Yes, actually there are some who do that. It's the same at the local level, where some lawyers pay interns to stand at the local police station photocopying accident forms.

    not that HP doesn't deserve, but that's not my point.

    So this person voluntarily entered into a contract with HP (well, with a subcontractor of HP), with the understanding that she would be paid X dollars in exchange for Y hours work, with no additional compensation expected on either side. Fast forward a couple years and now we're supposed to let her renegotiate the contract BACKDATED TO THE START because she's changed her mind? Screw that, it's called a learning experience, next time take a FT job, not a contract.

    --

    At the bottom of the endless pile of paper work which characterizes all regulation lies a gun.
    Alan Greenspan

  6. Where the slime is by fm6 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    A lot of lawsuits actually do start that way. But any contractor will tell you these people have a legitimate beef.

    There are legitimate reasons to use contractors. Like when you temporarily need a few extra people at crunch time. Or there's a specialized task that it makes sense to outsource.

    But a lot of contractors are doing jobs that are really part of the permanent organizational structure, often working side by side with permanent employees who do the same work. Technically, they're temporary people who work for themselves or for a "job shop". But their contracts are often extended for years, and the person who supervises them and decides they ongoing future works for the company, not the job shop.

    I've never quite understood why companies "hire" so many non-employees. My best guess is that inept managers can't figure out how to justify the head count they need to get the job done, but somehow manage to get "temporary" funding for contractors.

    Being that kind of long-term contractor can be maddening. There may be campus facilities, like a gym, that you're not allowed to use. There will certainly be bennies -- matched 401Ks, stock options, tuition reimbursements -- that you won't be eligible for. And then there are the intangibles...

    I once worked for a year as a contractor helping clean up a doc set. (The guy who replaced me in this "temporary" job is still there -- 6 years later!) My work helped earn my writing team an award for "improved documentation." Some of the improvements cited were done at my initiative. But because I was a contractor, I wasn't even invited to the ceremony.

    A lawyer who helps defend people against this kind of abuse is not "slimy". He's simply helping people defend their rights.

  7. Re:About freaking time! by qwijibo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are up sides to being a contractor that are often ignored in these situations as well. If contracting isn't right for you, don't do it.

    I turned down a pretty respectable full time job where I'm working because I'm making substantially more as a contractor. I've been a contractor for over 2 years at the same place. I don't get any benefits through my employer. However, when I was expected to work 60-80 hours a week for well over a year, I got paid for all of those hours. Many companies hire full time employees to make them work 50-80 hours a week after negotiating a 40 hour/week salary. Now I work 40 hours a week and can take days off to even out the long days just to ensure the budget isn't blown like last year.

    Contractor vs full time is a choice you have to make for yourself. They both have their good and bad sides, you just have to know what's important to you and play the system.

  8. Who's suing whom? by 3gm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First, let me say that I have been an HP supporter for many years, but my support has waned through the Carly years.

    I subscribe to the point of view that HP likely has violated the law and is simply using these contractors as a way to avoid having regular employees on the rolls. It may or may not be less expensive to have contractors rather than employees doing the work. It most certainly is more flexible since contractors can be let go for no reason at all and with little recourse or potential fallout. It does keep headcount low which is a favorite with financial types.

    I suspect many of these contractors took the contract many months or years ago with little expectation that it would continue this long. They've likley received no pay raises in that time and are feeling a bit mistreated. I'm an independent contractor and I understand their feelings. Where else in Boise does an IT contractor find work?

    My main concern here is why isn't the DOJ or DOL prosecuting this suit? Seems to me questions of employee vs. contractor are settled via federal law and the feds ought to be pursuing alleged abuses, not the individual contractors.

  9. Crybabies my ass by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the one hand, the Big Business In Bed With Government mentality that runs this country wants to avoid any type of national health care. They insist that is a job for the private sector. They shut down Medicaid, medicare, any chance at national health plans. "See," they say, "your employer should provide that. It is not a proper job for government."

    So I tell you what ... have you ever shopped for an individual health plan? Good god almighty that is expensive! You know how much less it costs when a company buys it for their employees? I swear it stinks. It's as if individuals are subsidizing businesses. It really stinks.

    So people try to organize labor unions, like at Wal-Mart, or they try to get full time jobs, like at H-P, in order to get that health care. And guess what? Wal-Mart closes stores rather than deal with unions. H-P hires contractors to do the same work so they can avoid having to pay for health care.

    You know, life sucks, but it doesn't have to suck that bad. That's why I applaud lawsuits like this, and consider those lawyers top grade on the morals scale, or at least they have better morals than the politicians and their corporate rulers who don't miss a chance to stick it to people who work for a living.

  10. Re:I never understood.. by Qzukk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So this person voluntarily entered into a contract with HP (well, with a subcontractor of HP), with the understanding that she would be paid X dollars in exchange for Y hours work, with no additional compensation expected on either side. Fast forward a couple years and now we're supposed to let her renegotiate the contract BACKDATED TO THE START because she's changed her mind? Screw that, it's called a learning experience, next time take a FT job, not a contract.

    So you've seen the contract and it says that Loser X will work N hours for $P pay? And Loser X worked N hours for $P pay? If thats true, then the suit really is baseless. But take a look at the behavior of the electronics industry with respect to its contractors recently: We have EA, for example, who worked people for 60-80+ hours a week, which was by contract (expected overtime), then at the end of the project said, "Yeah, I know we usually let you comp all that overtime after a project is done, but I think we'll just take our overtime back this time and not give you any time off or any extra pay, and assign you to new projects". Hardly "fair" "legal" or "by the contract" by any stretch of the imagination.

    So the way I see it, there MIGHT be merit to the case. They could be working these contract workers overtime with no overtime pay or comp time, they could be assigning them jobs above and beyond their contractual role, if they're hourly they could be forcing them to "touch up" their time sheets, or any number of other abusive things. They may have been told the positions were contract-to-hire. Work for us 3 months and we'll hire you as soon as possible (4 years ago). The subcontractor may have misrepresented themselves as HP, rather than as a subcontractor. They may have gone for years unwilling to rock the boat thanks to the shitty economy.

    Or it might just be a bunch of whiny brats who decided they wanted to be FTE's after all. They got themselves a fancy lawyer and figured that what they couldn't get from the HR department they'd take from the company's hide.

    Either way, we'll see the truth when it comes out in the courts.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  11. Re:I never understood.. by Macadamizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You hit the nail on the head -- it doesn't matter if a company calls someone a contractor or not -- they are a contractor if they meet certain criteria, otherwise they are employees.

    You can look here for some information on how Idaho figures out if someone is an employee or a contractor.

    Company's also like to classify people as "exempt" to avoid paying overtime -- but again, it doesn't matter whether the employer calls someone exempt or not -- it all depends on whether or not someone can meet the criteria of being exempt.

    If these people really meet the definition of contractors, and are just now complaining, then the hell with them. But if they are really employees, well, that's why we have labor and employment laws.

    I'm pretty much a free-market type of guy, but unfortunately you just can't put an employer and an employee on equal footing as far as bargaining power is concerned -- the employee almost always needs a job more than an employer needs to hire that particular individual -- so we have labor and employment laws to keep the employers from completely screwing their employees...

    --

    "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
  12. The level of ignorance here is astounding. by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How many posters have said "They signed a contract! They're contractors! Screw 'em!"? Those posters are idiots. With the notable exception of just a couple of posters, the ignorance here amazes me.

    For those of you who want some idea what's real and what's hot air being blown by a bunch of no-nothing nerds who think their world-view should inform every business relationship in the country, listen up. IT DOES NOT MATTER IF YOU'VE SIGNED A CONTRACT. IT DOES NOT MATTER (much) WHAT THE CONTRACT SAYS.

    You can sign a contract to work for a big corp wherein you swear a thousand times that you're not an employee and you'll never seek employee benefits and you're not entitled to them and you'll never sue. You and your new bosses can sing from the mountaintops for a month that you are not an employee. And none of that matters.

    Employees are defined by law, not by some silly piece of paper drawn up by the legal department at MegaCorp. If you meet certain criteria, you are an employee. It doesn't matter if you and your bosses agree differently. It doesn't matter what the contract says. If you meet the criteria, you ARE an employee. Period. And if you ARE an employee and your employer is treating you different from other employees (by, for example, referring to you as a contractor and not giving you benefits), then you've got a reason to sue.

    Those criteria are found on this form. Read it and learn something and quit spouting off about stuff when (most of) you obviously have no idea what you're talking about.

    PS - What really amazes me is how many of you guys are posting "I'm a contractor and..." stories. Reading your posts makes it crystal clear that you often haven't a clue what the definition of "independent contractor" is. And you're making your living as one?!? The mind boggles. It really does.

  13. 4 words by serutan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apply for a job.

    A lot of people are afraid to be contractors, because of a mythical notion called "job security." They think that if the economy suddenly collapses their company will protect them while contractors starve. These people don't get out enough.

    If you do a little arithmetic you will find that the amount you get paid over an FTE employee far exceeds the dollar value of the gym, paid vacation, insurance etc. If that's not the case you are with the wrong agency. Forget the award ceremony and take yourself out to dinner every time you deposit a paycheck. By being a contractor you are beating the system. Don't let the system convince you otherwise.

  14. Re:More reasons for Outsourcing by bodrell · · Score: 4, Insightful
    In my opinion, contract employees should only receive the benefits offered to them by their employer, not the company or agency they may actually work at. If you don't like the benefits you have, then switch jobs.
    Well, that was my opinion until I read the following:

    The Internal Revenue Services uses a list of 20 criteria to help determine a worker's status, but Kaupins said those criteria come down to three main points: Does the employer have control over where you work, what time you work and what you work with?

    These employees had requirements that should not have been imposed on contractors. They had all the restrictions of salaried employees, but none of the associated benefits. And that's wrong, especially because HP pays less in taxes for each contract employee.

    --
    Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
  15. Re:More reasons for Outsourcing by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Personally, I think it started when companies started showing less and less loyalty to their employees so that they could squeeze every last drop of profit for the shareholders. Granted companies exist to make a profit, but you can hardly blame individuals from trying to squeeze every last drop of profit from companies, when the companies are doing the same to them. It's a two way street... why are people getting indignant over people trying to screw the company for more money for a change? Yeah yeah, I know, the company provides a living for them. But without the employee, the company cannot operate either. It's supposed to be symbiosis... that is until one side decides the other is a disposible commodity. At that point, it should not be a surprise when things get ugly.

    The reason we put up with what companies dictate (in terms of pay and benefits) is generally because we don't have the muscle to push companies while they can push us (this is the original reason unions came into existance). But let's face it, we need each other (companies need people to work for them, and people need to work for companies). But when one side seeks to change the relationship to maximize their profit, why are we all surprised when the other side tries to push back. Some of you think the position of the contractors in this case is unethical. But can you tell me that corporations are always ethical when money is involved? If you say yes, I call bullshit. Everyone, people and corporations alike are all as ethical as they have to be when money is involved (or not as ethical as they can get away with).

    Anyway, I say let them get as much as they can out of HP. Same goes for anyone else in that position. At least until some long term loyalty to employees is shown again.

    --
    -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
  16. Re:20-year contractor speaks, so LISTEN, DAMMIT! by teq_man · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is great for you but most of the contractors that I know are not in that situation. They are working for lower pay, little vacation time, have performance reviews without raises to follow them up. And are not contractors by chioce... They have families, homes, and long technical backgrounds. They are forced into accepting the lower wages in order to try to take care of there families. They have no benifits and insurance options that cost them half of thier wages, which are usually 10 to 20% below tha national average. We are not production workers we are engineers, techs, and managers that have watched long term employees be layed of and then come back the next day as a contractors for half the pay because there are no technical jobs out there. We take jobs with contracting agencies because they are are only option next to working for minimum wage and losing everything we own. We are struggling to survive. Most of us have spent several years in the industry and it is all we know. Most of us love the job and we are not looking for a quick buck. We are frustrated with seeing contractors being taken advatage of because of a bad economy.