CA Freelancers May Get A Break After Tough AB 5 Limits
The California legislator behind the state’s new gig worker law now says she plans to eliminate the bill’s controversial submissions cap for freelance writers and photographers.
Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez authored AB 5, a law passed last year that codified a 2018 California Supreme Court ruling making it harder for companies to classify their workers as independent contractors, rather than employees.
Under one of the law's provisions, freelance writers and photographers can only deliver 35 submissions each year to any media outlet before that outlet has to hire them as an employee.
Freelancers in California have lost work as a result, and they’ve been lobbying Gonzalez to change the law.
On Thursday, Gonzalez said on Twitter that she plans to introduce a number of legislative changes to AB 5 in coming weeks, including a replacement for the freelancer submission cap.
Based on dozens of meetings with freelance journalists & photographers, we have submitted language to legislative counsel that we hope to have available next week to put into AB1850 which will cut out the 35 submission cap & instead more clearly define freelancer journalism 2/
— Lorena Gonzalez (@LorenaSGonzalez) February 6, 2020
San Diego-based freelancer Randy Dotinga, a board member with the American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA), said, “We’re glad to hear that Gonzalez is willing to revise the bill to protect freelance journalists from the devastation we’ve suffered this year. We look forward to seeing the exact bill language.”
The ASJA has filed a lawsuit against the state over AB 5, arguing it violates freelancers’ constitutional right to freedom of the press. A federal court hearing is scheduled for March 9.
GO DEEPER:
-
The action by authorities began about nine hours after the initial order to disperse was issued around 6:15 p.m. Wednesday. Shortly after 5 a.m. the area was cleared, with just a small amount of protesters remaining.
-
The project will rename most of the terminals and all of the gates with the goal of world-class signage that leans into psychology.
-
On campus, many students found USC's reversal to be puzzling.
-
The highly anticipated airport service likely won’t open until October 2025.
-
In her first public statements since controversy erupted over millions of unaccounted for tax dollars, Rhiannon Do says she’s no longer with the O.C. nonprofit Viet America Society. She also says she never had a leadership role. Public documents show otherwise.
-
After San Gabriel's city council rejected the proposal as "too narrow", one city councilmember argued the entire DEI commission, created in the aftermath of George Floyd's murder, had "run its course."