• @deadbeef79000
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    1 year ago

    Essentially, the law defines the nature of that kind of work “employment”. I.e. you have a rostered shift, provided a uniform, prescriptive work duties, staff-discount benefits. Generally long term.

    Contrast to a specialist on a building site: provided their own tools, task/goal and deadline, but more or less autonomous (i.e. install the electrical wiring by Tuesday). Generally short or fixed term.

    There are a lot of “traits” that the law indicates are employee or contractor traits for a contract.

    Anecdotally, in my personal experience, the software industry is rife with abuse of this. Plenty of contractors bulking up a small team of employees for years.

    • @DaveMA
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      21 year ago

      Sorry, I meant after this change. As I understand it, you can just write in the contract they are a contractor and now they are and they can’t challenge it. No sick leave, no annual leave, you want a job? Take it or leave it.

      • @deadbeef79000
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        31 year ago

        Oh! Right.

        Yeah that’s exactly what would happen.

        Right now the law can “look through” a contractor’s contact and say " hang on this is actually an employee contact".

        After this legislation… nope, whatever shitty contact the “employer” has foisted takes primacy