Association promotes bill favorable to contractor status

user-gravatar Headshot
Updated Apr 27, 2012

Managing Partner Greg Feary of the Indianapolis-based Scopelitis Garvin Light Hanson & Feary law practice said a bill favorable to independent contractor status for leased owner-operators in trucking is being advocated in Ohio by the Messenger Courier Association of America.

Feary was speaking April 26 on the owner-operator independent contractor model in trucking as part of his firm’s webinar series.

The Ohio efforts, Feary said, are pushing legislation that includes a “very favorable test” for determining independent contractor status.

The legislation would be similar, he added, to law recently enacted by Maine relative to workers compensation and the independent contractor-employer relationship. Known familiarly as NCOIL since the National Conference of Insurance Legislators adopted it as model legislation for determining valid independent contractors in the trucking and courier industries, it specifies a six-factor statutory test.

The American Trucking Associations has “in effect endorsed this as a reasonably good factor test,” Feary said. NCOIL model legislation is based on the test codified in 2009 in Minnesota, today viewed as a state favorable toward the independent contractor classification in trucking.

Find more on related issues via scopelitis.com. Or see related stories in Overdrive listed below.

Some L.A. port truckers voting for union representation
Federal, state governments review owner-operator status
Heads-up on new partnership that could change the leasing game
Independent thinking
Class-action suit ruling favors FedEx Ground

Showcase your workhorse
Add a photo of your rig to our Reader Rigs collection to share it with your peers and the world. Tell us the story behind the truck and your business to help build its story.
Submit Your Rig
Reader Rig Submission