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Proposition 22 was a ballot initiative in California that became law after the November 2020 state election, passing with 59% of the vote and granting app-based transportation and delivery companies an exception to Assembly Bill 5 by classifying their drivers as "independent contractors", rather than "employees".
California voters Tuesday embraced a first of its kind ballot measure that allows app-based transportation and delivery drivers to remain classified as independent contractors, despite state law ...
Uber, Lyft and other similar gig companies were in favor of the measure and spent more than $200 million on pro-Prop 22 efforts. “Uber and Lyft spent $200 million to avoid having to treat their ...
As part of the US election ballot, voters in California also decided the fate of the state’s Uber and Lyft drivers by deciding to have them classified as independent contractors. Reports say ...
The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance [3] of the California Supreme Court's May 2008 appeal ruling, In re Marriage Cases, which found the ban in 2000 on same-sex marriage (Proposition 22) unconstitutional. Proposition 8 was ultimately ruled unconstitutional in 2010 by a federal court on different grounds ...
22 is the gig-based apps' response to a new California worker classification law that went into effect in January 2020, Assembly Bill 5 (known as AB 5). Future of Uber, Lyft on the line in fight ...
Superior Court, that Prop 22 also included within the initiative's ambit marriages licensed within the state: The plain language of Proposition 22 and its initiative statute, section 308.5, reaffirms the definition of marriage in section 300, by stating that only marriage between a man and a woman shall be valid and recognized in California.
The measure, Proposition 22, will determine if gig workers like Uber drivers are employees of the companies they work for or independent contractors. When asked about the messages that greeted ...