‘Sec. 1. 1 MRSA §1012, sub-§9, as amended by PL 1991, c. 885, Pt. E, §1 and affected by §47, is further amended to read:
Sec. 2. 5 MRSA §19, sub-§1, ¶J, as amended by PL 1991, c. 885, Pt. E, §6 and affected by §47, is further amended to read:
Sec. 3. 26 MRSA §591, sub-§2, as amended by PL 1985, c. 112, §1, is further amended to read:
Sec. 4. 26 MRSA §591, sub-§3 is enacted to read:
Sec. 5. 26 MRSA §591-A is enacted to read:
§ 591-A. Employee misclassification
An employer that intentionally or knowingly misclassifies an employee as an independent contractor commits a civil violation for which a fine of not less than $2,000 and not more than $10,000 per violation may be adjudged.
A determination of misclassification of a worker as an independent contractor may result in the assessment of penalties under section 1051, 1082 or 1225 or Title 39-A, section 105-A or 324.
Sec. 6. 26 MRSA §1043, sub-§11, ¶E, as amended by PL 2011, c. 292, §1, is repealed and the following enacted in its place:
(1) The following criteria must be met:
(a) The individual has the essential right to control the means and progress of the work except as to final results;
(b) The individual is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession or business;
(c) The individual has the opportunity for profit and loss as a result of the services being performed for the other individual or entity;
(d) The individual hires and pays the individual's assistants, if any, and, to the extent such assistants are employees, supervises the details of the assistants' work; and
(e) The individual makes the individual's services available to some client or customer community even if the individual's right to do so is voluntarily not exercised or is temporarily restricted; and
(2) At least 3 of the following criteria must be met:
(a) The individual has a substantive investment in the facilities, tools, instruments, materials and knowledge used by the individual to complete the work;
(b) The individual is not required to work exclusively for the other individual or entity;
(c) The individual is responsible for satisfactory completion of the work and may be held contractually responsible for failure to complete the work;
(d) The parties have a contract that defines the relationship and gives contractual rights in the event the contract is terminated by the other individual or entity prior to completion of the work;
(e) Payment to the individual is based on factors directly related to the work performed and not solely on the amount of time expended by the individual;
(f) The work is outside the usual course of business for which the service is performed; or
(g) The individual has been determined to be an independent contractor by the federal Internal Revenue Service.
Sec. 7. 39-A MRSA §102, sub-§13, as amended by PL 2009, c. 452, §4, is repealed.
Sec. 8. 39-A MRSA §102, sub-§13-A is enacted to read:
(1) The person has the essential right to control the means and progress of the work except as to final results;
(2) The person is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession or business;
(3) The person has the opportunity for profit and loss as a result of the services being performed for the other individual or entity;
(4) The person hires and pays the person's assistants, if any, and, to the extent such assistants are employees, supervises the details of the assistants' work; and
(5) The person makes the person's services available to some client or customer community even if the person's right to do so is voluntarily not exercised or is temporarily restricted; and
(1) The person has a substantive investment in the facilities, tools, instruments, materials and knowledge used by the person to complete the work;
(2) The person is not required to work exclusively for the other individual or entity;
(3) The person is responsible for satisfactory completion of the work and may be held contractually responsible for failure to complete the work;
(4) The parties have a contract that defines the relationship and gives contractual rights in the event the contract is terminated by the other individual or entity prior to completion of the work;
(5) Payment to the person is based on factors directly related to the work performed and not solely on the amount of time expended by the person;
(6) The work is outside the usual course of business for which the service is performed; or
(7) The person has been determined to be an independent contractor by the federal Internal Revenue Service.
Sec. 9. 39-A MRSA §105-A, sub-§1, ¶B, as enacted by PL 2009, c. 452, §5, is repealed and the following enacted in its place:
Sec. 10. 39-A MRSA §114, as enacted by PL 2011, c. 176, §1, is repealed.
Sec. 11. 39-A MRSA §401, sub-§4, as amended by PL 1999, c. 364, §6, is further amended to read:
A landowner is not liable for compensation if at the time the landowner enters into the contract with the contractor, the landowner applies for and receives a predetermination of the independent status of the contractor as set forth in section 105, the landowner requests and receives a certificate of independent status, issued by the board on an annual basis to a contractor, certifying that the contractor harvests forest products in a manner that would not make the contractor an employee of the landowner or the landowner requests and receives a certificate of insurance, issued by the contractor's insurance carrier, certifying that the contractor has obtained the required coverage and indicating the effective dates of the policy, and if the landowner requests and receives at least annually similar certificates indicating continuing coverage during the performance of the work. A landowner who receives a predetermination of the contractor's status as independent contractor or a certificate of independent status is only relieved of liability under this paragraph if the contract for wood harvesting expressly states that the independent contractor will not hire any employees to assist in the wood harvesting without first providing the required certificate of insurance to the landowner.
Notwithstanding section 105, subsection 1, paragraph A, a predetermination under section 105 related only to a person engaged in harvesting forest products is a conclusive presumption that the determination is correct and section 105, subsection 2 does not apply to that determination. Each party involved in or affected by the predetermination must be provided information on the workers' compensation laws and the effect of independent contractor status in relation to those laws. A predetermination under section 105 related to a person engaged in harvesting forest products is effective for one calendar year or the duration of the contract, whichever is shorter.
A landowner required to pay compensation under this section is entitled to be indemnified by the contractor and may recover the amount paid in an action against that contractor. A landowner may demand that the contractor enter into a written agreement to reimburse the landowner for any loss incurred under this section due to a claim filed for compensation and other benefits. The employee is not entitled to recover at common law against the landowner for any damages arising from such injury if the employee takes compensation from that landowner.
Landowners willfully acting to circumvent the provisions of this section by using coercion, intimidation, deceit or other means to encourage persons who would otherwise be considered employees within the meaning of this Act to pose as contractors for the purpose of evading this section are liable subject to the provisions of section 324, subsection 3. Nothing in this section may be construed to prohibit an employee from becoming a contractor subject to the provisions of section 102, subsection 13 13-A.
Sec. 12. Reports. The Commissioner of Labor or the commissioner's designee in cooperation with the Executive Director of the Workers' Compensation Board or the executive director's designee shall submit 2 interim reports and one comprehensive final report to the joint standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over labor matters. The first interim report is due February 1, 2013 and must include a review of the implementation of the independent contractor criteria under this Act. This report must include a break down of information by industry and include agency audit finding data for 2011 and 2012; the number of workers misclassified as independent contractors; and, specifically for unemployment insurance, the overreporting and underreporting of wages and unemployment contributions credited or due. The 2nd report is due June 2, 2014 and must include agency audit finding data for 2013, the effects of the criteria on misclassification and an update of the information required in the initial report.
The comprehensive final report must break information down by industry and is due to the joint standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over labor matters by February 1, 2015. This report must include the following:
1. An analysis of the new criteria in comparison with previous criteria for both workers' compensation and unemployment insurance;
2. The identification of any issues with the interpretation or the understanding of the new criteria language by agency staff, businesses and workers;
3. The identification of any issues in the application of the criteria across different industries and occupations;
4. Data, to the extent possible, on the potential effect of identified misclassification on the affected workers with regard to loss of fringe benefits or other workplace benefits; and
5. Data on the effects of the use of the new misclassification penalty.
Sec. 13. Effective date. This Act takes effect December 31, 2012.’