Overview:
For
HR professionals, payroll leaders, managers, and business owners, worker
classification remains one of the most difficult and costly decisions to get
right. Treating someone as an independent contractor when the facts point to
employee status can create wage and hour exposure, tax and benefit issues, and
expensive disputes with agencies or workers. That risk is not theoretical. A
recent Fourth Circuit decision affirmed a $9.3 million judgment in a Department
of Labor case involving nurses who had been classified as independent
contractors, underscoring how serious misclassification liability can become
when the working relationship does not support the label being used.
This
issue is especially timely because the federal framework is again in flux. On
February 26, 2026, the U.S. Department of Labor published a proposed rule that
would rescind the 2024 independent contractor rule and replace it with a
revised economic reality analysis. For employers, that does not mean the answer
is suddenly simple. It means classification decisions deserve even closer
attention right now, particularly because the Department’s proposal continues
to focus on the real substance of the relationship rather than contract labels
alone, including factors such as control over the work and the worker’s
opportunity for profit or loss.
At
the same time, employer risk does not stop with the Department of Labor. The
IRS applies its own common law approach, and many states use separate tests
that may be stricter than the federal analysis, including ABC-style standards.
That means organizations using freelancers, consultants, gig workers,
project-based talent, or other nonemployee arrangements need to evaluate
classification decisions from multiple angles. A worker may appear properly
classified under one framework and still create exposure under another.
This
webinar will provide a practical roadmap for evaluating worker-classification
decisions in the current environment. It will examine the Department of Labor’s
current direction, the economic realities test, IRS common law rules, ABC-style
approaches, differences in financial obligations, the consequences of
misclassification, the role of independent contractor agreements, what is most
likely to create liability, and the action items employers should consider now.
For HR and payroll teams trying to support business flexibility without
increasing legal risk, this session is designed to help clarify where the
biggest mistakes occur and how to make better classification decisions before
those mistakes turn into audits, claims, or litigation.
Areas
covered in the session:
- Advantages
of Using Independent Contractors
- Current
DOL Position on Independent Contractors
- The
DOL Economic Reality Test
- The
Current Independent Contractor Rules
- IRS
Common Law Rules Regarding Independent Contractors
- ABC
Test for Independent Contractors
- Differences
in Financial Obligations
- Consequences
of Misclassifying Employees as Independent Contractors
- Independent
Contractor Agreements
- What
Can Get You in Trouble
- Action
Items
Exclusive
Handouts:
- Worker
Classification Scenario Workbook for 2026
- Independent
Contractor Classification Audit Checklist
- Independent
Contractor Agreement Red-Flag Guide
Why
should you attend?
Worker
classification remains one of the easiest areas for employers to get wrong and
one of the most expensive when they do. A decision to treat someone as an
independent contractor may seem practical from an operational standpoint, but
if the facts do not support that classification, the result can be wage and
hour liability, tax problems, benefit issues, and costly disputes that reach
far beyond a single worker.
This
webinar is especially valuable because employers are making these decisions in
a period of continued uncertainty. The standards used by the Department of
Labor, the IRS, and the states do not always line up neatly, and many
organizations rely too heavily on contract language without examining how the
relationship actually works in practice. This session will help bring clarity
to an area where many businesses are exposed without fully realizing it.
You
should attend if your organization uses freelancers, consultants, project-based
workers, or any other nonemployee talent and wants to reduce risk without
losing flexibility. Bob McKenzie will walk through the core tests, the
practical trouble spots, and the action items employers should focus on now,
giving attendees a more grounded framework for making worker-classification
decisions with greater confidence.
Who
will benefit?
This
webinar will benefit employer-side professionals who make, review, approve, or
support worker-classification decisions and need to understand where
misclassification risk is most likely to arise. Those include:
- HR
Directors/Human Resources Managers/HR Compliance Managers
- Employee
Relations Managers/Directors of People Operations
- Chief
Human Resources Officers/Chief People Officers
- Payroll
Managers/Payroll Directors
- Compensation
and Benefits Managers/Finance Managers
- Controllers/Chief
Financial Officers
- In-House
Employment Counsel/Labor and Employment Attorneys
- Corporate
Counsel/Compliance Officers
- Risk
Management Professionals/Internal Auditors
- Operations
Managers/Business Owners
- Presidents/Chief
Executive Officers
- Chief
Operating Officers/Staffing Firm Owners
- Staffing
Branch Managers/Workforce Management Leaders
- Procurement
Managers overseeing contractor engagements/Vendor Management Professionals
- Independent
Contractor Program Managers
Bob McKenzie, has over 40 years of human resources management experience. His background includes a wide range of hands-on experience in all areas of Human resources management in all types of industries within the public and private sectors.
Bob has been cited in a number of Human Resources trade publications. Among them are HR.com, HR Magazine, HR Florida Review, Vault.com, BNA and the Institute of Management and Administration and the Business Journal. He has been a speaker at a number of conferences as well as audio and web-based seminars.
Bob is a graduate of Rider University where he received a Bachelor of Science in Commerce Degree and double majored in Industrial Relations and Organizational Behavior.
Enrollment Options
Tags: Independent Contractor, Employee Classification, Worker Classification, Misclassification Risk, DOL Rule, IRS Rules, ABC Test, FLSA, HR Compliance, Payroll Compliance, Contractor Agreements, Employment Law, Bob Mckenzie, April 2026, Webinar

