Current:Home > FinanceWisconsin Supreme Court lets ruling stand that declared Amazon drivers to be employees -Secure Horizon Growth
Wisconsin Supreme Court lets ruling stand that declared Amazon drivers to be employees
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 12:39:07
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Supreme Court dismissed a lawsuit Tuesday brought by online retailer Amazon’s logistics subsidiary, which had sought to overturn a lower court’s ruling that it had misclassified delivery drivers as independent contractors instead of employees.
The court, in a unanimous decision, said the appeal was “improvidently granted,” meaning the Supreme Court should not have reviewed the case. That decision, issued after the court heard oral arguments, leaves a 2023 Wisconsin appeals court ruling against Amazon in place.
That ruling found that drivers in the Amazon Flex program are a part of the state’s unemployment insurance system and entitled to jobless pay if they are laid off. The decision means the subsidiary, Amazon Logistics, will likely be hit with a tax bill of more than $200,000.
Justice Ann Walsh Bradley, in a concurring decision, said the reason the court dismissed the case was that further review “would not serve any meaningful purpose” or any “further development of the law.” Justice Rebecca Bradley, in a separate writing, faulted Bradley for trying to explain the court’s decision, saying it “will only sow additional confusion.”
The case was closely watched for what effect a ruling would have on workers in the “gig economy.”
Labor unions, along with the state Department of Workforce Development, pushed for the Wisconsin Supreme Court to recognize the Amazon Flex workers as employees.
Attorneys for Wisconsin and Amazon did not immediately return messages Tuesday.
Courts across the country have been grappling with similar questions as states struggle with how to treat workers who are hired for a particular job, often at the push of a button through a smartphone app, to deliver food, groceries, packages or perform a variety of tasks.
“The gig economy is clogging up the court with all of this stuff, all the time,” said Samantha Prince, assistant professor of law at Penn State Dickinson College of Law and an expert on worker misclassification and the gig economy. “It’s just nuts. We really need this stuff to be resolved and stay resolved and stop with all the uncertainty for everybody.”
Prince said even though the court declined to issue a ruling in this case, allowing the appeals court ruling to stand that found the Amazon Flex drivers were employees is “one of the many dominoes that are starting to fall.”
“And even though this case only applies to Amazon Flex drivers, it will likely resonate through the other gig company court cases,” she said. “The more cases that find that gig company drivers are employees, the more companies are going to have to pay their rightful share.”
Every state has its own laws determining whether workers are employees or independent contractors, Prince said. Those laws set the rules for what wages and overtime the workers must be paid and, in this case, whether they are subject to unemployment benefits that the employer must contribute toward.
Employees who got approved for the Amazon Flex program could download an app for their personal phones showing blocks when they could deliver packages for the company. Workers would scan packages at the Amazon warehouse in Milwaukee and use their personal vehicles to deliver them, using a route suggested by Amazon.
After one Amazon Flex worker was fired, he filed for unemployment insurance. The Department of Workforce Development conducted an audit of more than 1,000 Amazon Logistics drivers between 2016 and 2018 and concluded the vast majority of drivers were employees, not independent contractors, and therefore eligible for unemployment insurance payments. The state told Amazon in 2018 that it owed more than $205,000 in unemployment insurance premiums.
The Wisconsin Labor and Industry Review Commission upheld the state DWD determination that the drivers were employees. Amazon Logistics sued and a Waukesha County circuit court judge ruled the drivers were independent contractors. Last year, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals overturned that ruling, agreeing with the state that the drivers were employees. That set up the appeal to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Mother of Israeli hostage Mia Shem on Hamas video: I see the pain
- Texas installing concertina wire along New Mexico border
- Golfer breaks world record for most 18-hole courses played in one year
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Stock market today: Asian shares follow Wall Street lower, and Japan reports September exports rose
- Italy suspends open border with Slovenia, citing increased terror threat as Mideast violence spikes
- Rapper Jeezy, Jeannie Mai's estranged husband, reveals 8-year battle with depression
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- A sweeping gun bill aimed at tightening firearm laws passes in the Massachusetts House
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Jussie Smollett Gets Rehab Treatment Amid Appeal in Fake Hate Crime Case
- 'I blacked out': Travis Kelce dishes on 'SNL' appearance, two-sport Philly fun on podcast
- Donald Trump told to keep volume down after getting animated at New York civil fraud trial
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Jets trading Mecole Hardman back to the Chiefs in a deal that includes draft picks, AP source says
- 'I blacked out': Travis Kelce dishes on 'SNL' appearance, two-sport Philly fun on podcast
- Stock market today: Asian shares follow Wall Street lower, and Japan reports September exports rose
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Europol says Islamist terrorism remains the biggest terror threat to Western Europe
Execution of Idaho’s longest-serving death row inmate delayed for sentence review hearing
Donald Trump told to keep volume down after getting animated at New York civil fraud trial
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Workers noticed beam hanging off railcar days before fatal accident but didn’t tell the railroad
Dolly Parton Reveals Why She’s Been Sleeping in Her Makeup Since the 80s
San Francisco police to give update on fatal shooting of driver who crashed into Chinese Consulate