Tech’s push to “disrupt” workers is a legal & social timebomb

Startups that push the limits of labor law are getting socked by lawsuits, and risk paying out big to employees and the IRS. These episodes are not just a threat to the business model of many tech ventures.

The labor flare-ups are also a stubborn reminder of a growing, and possibly permanent, servant class who are powering the tech industry’s dreams of disruption.

The contractors who clean toilets

When two sisters sued maid-on-demand service Handy last month over alleged labor law violations, the lawsuit felt almost inevitable. Not only had Handy been filling Facebook feeds with ads to clean homes for the improbably low price of $29, the startup also adopted the bold legal stance that the workers who do the clearing are not employees but “independent contractors.”

This notion of a “contractor” wearing a uniform and scrubbing toilets for $29 may seem far-fetched. But it’s just one of the more striking examples of a phenomenon in which more and more companies are re-classifying their workers as contractors in order to save costs associated with having employees.

“When the market tanked in 2008-09, we started seeing more independent contractor situations. We first started seeing it in landscaping and construction, then it spread to different industries,” said Nicholas Woodfield, a general counsel at the law firm Employment Law Group.

The upshot is that the traditional notion of a contractor, which invokes images of a skilled tradesman with tools, has expanded to include laborers, maids and, well, anyone — especially in Silicon Valley.

As New York magazine reported in September, the Valley is now awash in so-called “1099 companies,” a reference to the IRS tax form filed by independent contractors. These startups include well known firms like Uber and TaskRabbit as well as a slew of smaller outfits like Handy, Homejoy and Washio. All of them take a category of services normally performed by employees — washing, cleaning, driving and so on — and repackage it as a web-driven platform powered by contractors.

And for many people, this has been a boon. For consumers, the slew of contractor-driven companies means prompt and easy access to an unprecedented array of services. Meanwhile, for workers, the 1099 business model offers an easy way make a few extra bucks without the constraints of a formal job.

The trouble, however, is that many in this new worker army look more like conscripts than contractors. And their teeming ranks pose legal and ethical challenges to one of Silicon Valley’s favorite philosophies.

Disruption and its discontents