Description
HRCI & SHRM Approved Webinar | CEUs = 1.0 Credit Hours
Overview:
HR leaders cannot confidently classify workers as employees or independent contractors because the federal standard keeps changing — and misclassification carries severe financial and legal consequences.
Employers lack a stable, defensible framework for classifying independent contractors in a rapidly shifting regulatory environment — creating financial risk, litigation exposure, and operational uncertainty.
US Department of Labor proposes rule clarifying employee, independent contractor status under federal wage and hour laws. The DOL proposes to rescind the 2024 rule and reinstate a weighted ‘core factors’ test — a shift that could significantly alter classification risk.
What will You Learn:
- Understand how regulatory whiplash has created classification instability — and how to respond.
- Clearly explain what is changing — and what is not — in the proposed DOL contractor rule.
- Understand how the proposed rule formally aligns FMLA classification with the FLSA’s economic reality framework — and what that means for leave eligibility risk.
- Understand how the weighted “core factors” test alters classification risk compared to the 2024 rule.
- What exactly is the economic reality test under the DOL
- What classifications of workers are permitted under IRS Rules
- What is the common law rule, and how is it used to determine worker status
- What are the three factors the IRS uses to determine worker status, and how to apply them correctly
- Assess their current independent contractor arrangements under the proposed framework.
- Identify where their greatest misclassification exposure exists.
- Take concrete steps to create a defensible, documented classification process before the rule is finalized.
- Understand how to submit meaningful comments that may shape the final rule.
- Evaluate whether this proposed rule benefits your business
- You will leave knowing exactly how to evaluate your 1099 workforce under the proposed rule — and what to fix before it becomes final.
Who Should Attend:
This webinar is essential for anyone responsible for worker classification, workforce flexibility, or compliance strategy:
- Business owners and executives — If your company relies on independent contractors, gig workers, or consultants and you need to understand how the proposed rule could affect your business model and risk exposure.
- HR professionals and HR business partners — If you are responsible for classifying workers, drafting contractor agreements, conducting audits, or advising leadership on compliance risk.
- General counsel and compliance leaders — If you need to evaluate litigation exposure and understand how the proposed “core factors” test differs from the 2024 rule.
- Payroll and workforce administration professionals — If worker classification impacts overtime eligibility, recordkeeping, tax reporting, or FMLA determinations.
- Staffing, franchise, and contractor-heavy employers — If your organization depends on flexible workforce structures and you need clarity on what the DOL’s proposed rule means for your operations.
- Managers and operational leaders who engage contractors directly — If you supervise or work alongside independent contractors and need to understand how control, profit opportunity, and actual practice affect classification status.











