|
Too often, the people directing work are not the same as the ones legally responsible for workers’ rights. This gap allows basic protections—wages, benefits, safety—to fall through the cracks.
If we believe labour laws should actually protect people, then our policies must catch up with today’s layered hiring structures. Lawmakers and regulators need to make sure responsibility follows real control, not just the name on a pay stub. It’s time to close these loopholes so that no matter how work is arranged, those doing the job are treated fairly. |
| I agree — it raises an interesting question: should “responsibility” be tied strictly to legal employment, or to whoever actually directs the work day to day? How would regulators practically enforce that without creating a maze of liability? |
Isn't that what it is though, a liability maze. |