December 2009
By: Nancy E. Joerg, Esq.
When an Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) auditor
audits a company that uses independent contractors, the IDES auditor
almost always gives the company a questionnaire to fill out. The IDES
has been using the same basic multi-page questionnaire called the Worker
Relationship Questionnaire for several decades.
The purpose of the Worker Relationship Questionnaire is to obtain
detailed information from the company about the alleged independent
contractor relationship. The Questionnaire is designed so that it can be
filled out by the company or by the auditor. (This is at the auditor's
discretion.) At the end of the Questionnaire, there is a space for the
individual who filled out the questionnaire to sign that they indeed
filled out the questionnaire and provided the responses.
If a company has several kinds of independent contractors, then
the auditor will usually ask the company to fill out several Worker
Relationship Questionnaires. For example, many years ago a client
company of our law firm was an architectural business that used
independent contractor architects, engineers, interior designers,
draftsmen, et al. The company, therefore, filled out many different
Worker Relationship Questionnaires - each one representing that kind of
specialized independent contractor. (It is of course a matter of
strategy for a company to decide how many Worker Relationship
Questionnaires they will fill out and which independent contractors will
be in which grouping. This is a decision for a company and its attorney
to carefully evaluate.)
The Worker Relationship Questionnaire is divided into three main
sections. Each section represents one part of the strict three-part test
[Section 212(A), (B), and (C)] that the Illinois Department of
Employment Security uses to decide who is an independent contractor and
who is an employee.
Possibly the trickiest part of filling out the Worker Relationship Questionnaire is deciding how to
describe the type of business the company is in, and the
type of business the independent contractor is in, and
whether the company and the independent contractor are in the same course or kind of business. Course or type of business is a crucial part of Section 212(A), (B), and (C).
Remember that if a company fails any one part of the three part
test, then the worker at issue will be found to be an employee for IDES
purposes.
Clients sometimes ask me what will happen if they refuse to fill
out the Worker Relationship Questionnaire. Failure to cooperate with an
auditor and provide the auditor with requested information only ends up
hurting the company.
This is because the legal burden of proof rests on the company during an audit. The legal responsibility to prove that a worker is an independent contractor rests upon the company and not upon the auditor.
Simply stated, there is a legal presumption that the worker is an
employee-unless the company can prove the worker is an independent
contractor. From a practical standpoint, this means a company must
provide proof, evidence, information and documents to the auditor to
convince the auditor that the worker is an independent contractor. In
the absence of such proof, the auditor is free to find that the worker
is an employee and therefore the auditor will assess back unemployment
insurance contributions onto the company being audited. (There is also
24% per year interest added to that assessment.)
Be very careful in filling out the Worker Relationship
Questionnaire. Even one wrong answer can create legal barriers to
proving independent contractor status. Seek the assistance of an
attorney experienced with IDES audits.
Questions? Please contact WS Shareholder and Senior Attorney Nancy E. Joerg in our St. Charles, IL office at (630) 377-1554, or
najoerg@wesselssherman.com.
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