beej67
Civil/Environmental
- May 13, 2009
- 1,976
Here's what I'm struggling with:
I'm starting up a single owner LLC to do engineering consulting, and I have several friends who want to do work for me on a 1099 Contractor basis. I'll carry the E&O, stamp the work, etc. I'm well on my way, should be 100% up and running by the end of the month, then I run into the IRS's "20 Common Law Factors" to decide whether someone is an employee or a contractor. My conceptual business model passes on most of these, but there are a three that really burn me:
"No Instructions. Independent contractors are not required to follow, nor are they furnished with, instructions to accomplish a job."
"No Training. Independent contractors typically do not receive training by the hiring firm. They use their own methods to accomplish the work. "
"No interim reports. Independent contractors are hired for the final result only. They should not be asked for progress or interim reports."
As I understand it, the engineer of record is bound by ethics and law to oversee anything they're stamping, and that oversight should be done by periodic checks of the work others are doing for him, telling them to fix stuff that's wrong, and explaining to them how to fix it if necessary.
It seems quite a bit like the IRS has rigged the rules to make 1099 subcontracting for engineering flat out illegal. Yet I hear of folks who do it all the time. So my question is this - how much of these "common law" rules for 1099 contract work must the engineering sector follow to be on the right side of the law?
I'm starting up a single owner LLC to do engineering consulting, and I have several friends who want to do work for me on a 1099 Contractor basis. I'll carry the E&O, stamp the work, etc. I'm well on my way, should be 100% up and running by the end of the month, then I run into the IRS's "20 Common Law Factors" to decide whether someone is an employee or a contractor. My conceptual business model passes on most of these, but there are a three that really burn me:
"No Instructions. Independent contractors are not required to follow, nor are they furnished with, instructions to accomplish a job."
"No Training. Independent contractors typically do not receive training by the hiring firm. They use their own methods to accomplish the work. "
"No interim reports. Independent contractors are hired for the final result only. They should not be asked for progress or interim reports."
As I understand it, the engineer of record is bound by ethics and law to oversee anything they're stamping, and that oversight should be done by periodic checks of the work others are doing for him, telling them to fix stuff that's wrong, and explaining to them how to fix it if necessary.
It seems quite a bit like the IRS has rigged the rules to make 1099 subcontracting for engineering flat out illegal. Yet I hear of folks who do it all the time. So my question is this - how much of these "common law" rules for 1099 contract work must the engineering sector follow to be on the right side of the law?