Month: February 2020
AB5 and Court Reporters
California’s disastrous anti-freelancing bill, AB5, went into effect January 1, 2020 and is already having a detrimental effect on the state’s freelance court reporters and agencies. One such agency, Diamond Court Reporting, has filed suit against the state.
In a nutshell, AB5 creates a presumption that any person providing their labor or services to a company for remuneration is an employee.
Asm. Lorena Gonzalez, the bill’s author, claims that the law was intended to codify the Dynamex decision, referring to a California Supreme Court case regarding truck drivers who had been employees but were then transitioned to independent contractor status. Two of the affected drivers decided they’d rather go back to employee status and filed a misclassification suit against the company. In ruling against Dynamex, the California Supreme Court set out an “A, B, C” standard to determine if a worker is an independent contractor or should be an employee. To qualify for independent contractor status, all of the following parts must be met:
A. the worker is free from the control and direction of the hiring company “in connection with the performance of the work, both under the contract for the performance of the work and in fact”;
B. the worker performs work that is outside the usual course of the hiring company’s business”; and
C. the worker is “customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, or business of the same nature” as the work performed for the hiring entity.
AB5 goes a bit further, though. Prior to AB5, any tests to determine whether someone was an independent contractor or an employee did not apply to people whose positions or professions were not controlled by “wage orders.” Court reporters, as professionals licensed by a state board, were not controlled by wage orders. Under AB5 anyone earning even one dollar in the state and whose line of work isn’t specifically exempted must be able to pass the A, B, C test. Lawyers are exempted, but court reporters, translators, and interpreters – who frequently work on-demand – are not.
That is a pretty big problem for Diamond Court Reporting.
Multiple industry groups have filed suit against the state on behalf of the professions they represent, but the case of Diamond Court Reporting is a little different in that the court reporting firm holds eight contracts with various state and federal government departments to provide on-demand court reporting services. Many of their contracts require them to provide statewide coverage, and in a state as large as California, they argue, there is no way they can provide that service in the manner needed by the government agencies without maintaining a list of independent contractor court reporters they can engage on a job-by-job basis.Should their client be in the position of prosecuting or fining them for not complying with an impossible-to-comply-with law?
In their Complaint for Declaratory Relief, they describe the irreconcilable conflict:
“[N]o express exemption is provided for a court‐reporting business such as Plaintiff’s to retain licensed professional California Court Reporters (CSRs) on an individual, on-demand, single matter basis, and therefore Plaintiff is presently and immediately threatened with prosecution in a civil action against Plaintiff as the putative employer by said Defendants for purported misclassification of Plaintiff’s independently contracted CSRs as an independent contractor.”
The Complaint states that compliance with the law as presently constituted prevents Plaintiff from being able to perform the contracted services, effectively causing them to breach the contract. So, they’re forced to choose between a breach of contract suit or being sued by the state for misclassification. That’s quite a conflict.
Additionally, since many other state board licensed professionals are exempted, Diamond Court Reporting claims that court reporters as a class of professionals are treated disparately and with no rational basis for that treatment.
Finally, the Plaintiff argues that the new law burdens them with new obligations that other similar professions don’t face, and that such treatment is “arbitrary, irrational, and capricious,” thereby violating the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.
As of this writing, there is no legal challenge to the law on behalf of court reporters as a whole.
Videoconferenced Depositions via Zoom
The practice of taking depositions via videoconference has been steadily growing for years for economic reasons, but we’ve recently seen a big upswing in attorneys choosing to almost exclusively use videoconferencing to take depositions because air travel can be so unpredictable and is ever-more time consuming. At Legal Media Experts, we’ve been providing videoconferencing services for depositions for more than a decade, so we’ve learned a thing or two about what makes for a great videoconference deposition.
We currently use Zoom to provide videoconferencing services nationwide, and we’ve come up with some “best practices” and some helpful hints for your next Zoom videoconference deposition:
• Plan to be at your desk at least 15 minutes before the scheduled start time. At that time go ahead and join the Zoom meeting even if other participants aren’t there yet. That way, if there are technical difficulties they can be resolved without causing the deposition to start late.
• Consider investing in an external USB microphone and headphones. They’re inexpensive (as low as $20 on Amazon) and will serve to minimize “room noises” that could make it difficult for other participants – and the court reporter – to clearly hear each word that’s said.
• Location, location, location! Ideally, you will join the Zoom meeting from a room in which you have a hardwired high speed internet connection. Also, avoid sitting near a bright window or in an area where loud noises can repeatedly interrupt you.
• Keep your mic on if you plan to speak – but don’t multitask. If you are typing away at your keyboard or having a snack, everyone will hear you. Sometimes one or more participants will have to mute when they’re not speaking because of audio interference. If that happens, just be sure you un-mute when you need to make an objection or comment.
• Ensure that only one person speaks at a time. That’s an evergreen best practice but it’s especially important in a videoconference deposition. Inevitably the court reporter will have to interrupt and have each person re-state what they said, which is frustrating for everyone and causes the deposition to last longer.
• Have your exhibits open on your computer, in PDF format, to easily and quickly present them to the witness. Through Zoom you can share your screen, or only selected windows, with other participants. If you have your exhibit folder already open on your desktop, with just a few clicks you can refer to a particular exhibit and never have to wonder if the witness is looking at the right document. (These exhibits should also be emailed to us at least two days prior to the deposition to ensure that the court reporter has a hard copy of them on site.)
• Even if it’s not a videotaped deposition, you could be recorded, so behave accordingly! One benefit of Zoom depositions is the ability to record the meeting right there in the app. This can be very helpful for trial prep.
Legal Media Experts’ court reporters and videographers participate in Zoom videoconference depositions nationwide on a daily basis, and our office staff is ready to help with any of your Zoom-related technical needs. Schedule your Zoom videoconference deposition today by using our online scheduling tool or calling 800-446-1387.