phamENG
Structural
- Feb 6, 2015
- 7,500
Background up front: small structural engineering firm providing design and consultation services to the public.
I'm in the market for an engineer to help out with my firm, and I've found one (yay!). His needs match mine pretty closely, and I know he'll be a good fit as we've known each other for several years. Interestingly, he has requested to be classified as an independent contractor (he has experience doing this as he has freelanced in the construction industry before). So, I started looking over employment classification rules to make sure everything is above board, and I found this interesting conundrum:
Is it just me, or does the IRS definition of independent contractor (or, more accurately, the definition of what it is not) preclude the use of an "independent contractor" as an engineer? Because if I don't like the way he's performing an analysis or arriving at a conclusion, I have the right (and responsibility as EOR) to make him change it. It's not just the end result I'm looking for, it's consistency and accuracy in the process as well. What are other's thoughts and experiences?
I'm in the market for an engineer to help out with my firm, and I've found one (yay!). His needs match mine pretty closely, and I know he'll be a good fit as we've known each other for several years. Interestingly, he has requested to be classified as an independent contractor (he has experience doing this as he has freelanced in the construction industry before). So, I started looking over employment classification rules to make sure everything is above board, and I found this interesting conundrum:
Code of Virginia said:"Responsible charge" means the direct control and supervision of the practice of architecture, professional engineering, landscape architecture, or land surveying.
irs.gov; Independent Contractor Defined said:You are not an independent contractor if you perform services that can be controlled by an employer (what will be done and how it will be done). This applies even if you are given freedom of action. What matters is that the employer has the legal right to control the details of how the services are performed.
Is it just me, or does the IRS definition of independent contractor (or, more accurately, the definition of what it is not) preclude the use of an "independent contractor" as an engineer? Because if I don't like the way he's performing an analysis or arriving at a conclusion, I have the right (and responsibility as EOR) to make him change it. It's not just the end result I'm looking for, it's consistency and accuracy in the process as well. What are other's thoughts and experiences?