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Small Businesses Being Attacked Under
Another Name
Small businesses are the backbone of California's economy. They are
praised in speeches by elected officials and correctly regarded as the
engine that will pull us out of the recession.
On the other hand, the term "independent contractor" sounds
technical and can conjure up images of a faceless business that has no
loyalty, threatens government jobs and is a ripe target for new taxes
or regulations. Politicians don't tout their support for "independent
contractors" when running for office.
The truth is that most independent contractors are small businesses.
They are painters, plumbers, real estate agents, auto mechanics, computer
programmers, photographers, sound engineers, doctors, accountants — and
many other types of small businesses.
In Sacramento, some legislators are seeking to implement an "independent
contractor withholding" proposal, which would require businesses
to withhold 3 percent of their payments to independent contractors to
provide an interest-free loan to the state.
The 3 percent withholding hits small businesses at a time when they need
every dollar of revenue to keep their doors open and maintain their current
employees.
The irony is that this proposal won't generate additional or new tax
revenue for Sacramento. Instead, it accelerates income tax payments for
small businesses — and provides an interest-free loan to the state
until tax returns are filed. This may help California's short-term cash
flow, but it does nothing for the state's bottom line and hurts small
businesses in the process.
In Los Angeles, some members of the L.A. City Council are also taking
advantage of the "name" ruse. During last month's debate over
the city's unsustainable budget, Councilmember Janice Hahn told a packed
room that "It's time for us to lay off private contractors and keep
our city workers!" Councilmember Paul Koretz, also wants the city's
independent contractors to take a 10 percent across-the-board cut before
any layoffs of city workers.
That call to action may generate a brief standing ovation from city employees
in Council Chambers, but it sends a message to hundreds of small businesses
and their employees throughout Los Angeles that they are second-class
citizens. Those independent contractors employ tens of thousands of Angelenos
and are part of the private sector workplace in Los Angeles County that
has already been forced to lay off nearly one-half million workers since
the great recession started.
If "small business" had been substituted for "independent
contractor," these proposals would likely go nowhere and the rhetorical
flourishes would have fallen flat. At the end of the day, this is about
small businesses and jobs in Los Angeles and throughout the state.
So, when you hear elected officials piling onto "independent contractors" remind
them that they are really talking about small businesses - perhaps even
yours.
Source: The Business Perspective
Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce
March 23, 2010
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