WAC 162-16-220
Jurisdiction -- Counting the number of
persons employed. (1) Purpose and scope. RCW 49.60.040
defines "employer" for purposes of the law against
discrimination in part as "any person. . . who employs eight
or more persons." This section establishes standards for
determining who is counted as employed when deciding whether a
person is an employer. The standards in this section do not
define who is entitled to the protection of the law against
discrimination.
(2) Time of calculation. A person will be considered to
have employed eight if the person either:
(a) Had an employment relationship with eight or more
persons for any part of the day on which the unfair practice
is alleged to have occurred, or did occur; or
(b) Had an employment relationship with an average of
eight or more persons over a representative period of time
including the time when the unfair practice is alleged to have
occurred.
An employment relationship is most readily demonstrated
by a person's appearance on the employer's payroll. The
representative period of time for (b) of this subsection will
ordinarily be the twenty weeks prior to and including the date
on which the unfair practice is alleged to have occurred.
However, where this period will not accurately reflect the
overall employment level, as in a seasonal industry, we will
use the month during which the unfair practice is alleged to
have occurred plus the preceding eleven months.
(3) Part-time employees. A person working part time will
be counted the same as a person working full-time. Persons
subject to call to work (such as volunteer fire fighters) will
be considered to be employed at all times when they are
subject to call.
(4) Area of calculation. A person who employs eight or
more persons is an "employer" for purposes of the law against
discrimination even though less than eight of the employees
are located in the state of Washington.
(5) Multiple places of employment. The count will include
all persons employed by the same legal entity, whether or not
the persons work in the same place of business or line of
business.
(6) Connected corporations. Corporations and other
artificial persons that are in common ownership or are in a
parent-subsidiary relationship will be treated as separate
employers unless the entities are managed in common in the
area of employment policy and personnel management. In
determining whether there is management in common we will
consider whether the same individual or individuals do the
managing, whether employees are transferred from one entity to
another, whether hiring is done centrally for all
corporations, and similar evidence of common or separate
management.
(7) Persons on layoff. Persons on layoff will not be
counted.
(8) Persons on leave. Persons on paid leave will be
counted. Persons on unpaid leave will not be counted.
(9) Employee or independent contractor. Independent
contractors will not be counted. In determining whether a
person is employed or is an independent contractor for the
jurisdictional count we will use the same standards that we
use for the purpose of determining whether a person comes
within the protection of the law against discrimination.
These standards are set out in WAC 162-16-230.
(10) Pay. Anyone who is paid for work and who otherwise
meets the standards in this section will be counted. This
includes paid interns and work study program participants.
Pay includes compensation for work by the hour, by commission,
by piecework, or by any other measure. For the treatment of
unpaid persons, see subsection (11) of this section.
(11) Unpaid persons. An unpaid person will be counted if
he or she is generally treated in the manner that employers
treat employees. That is, if management selects the person
(particularly if selected in competition with other persons),
assigns work hours, disciplines the unpaid person like an
employee, or provides employment benefits such as industrial
insurance, then the person will be counted as an employee.
The typical volunteer fire fighter would be counted. A person
who comes into the food bank when he or she pleases, is put to
work if there is anything to do, who leaves when he or she
pleases, who has no expectation of paid employment, and who
receives no employment benefits, would not be counted.
(12) Family members. Because of the definition of
"employee" in RCW 49.60.040, we will not count "any individual
employed by his or her parents, spouse, or child." Other
family members will be counted.
(13) Domestic help. Because of the definition of
"employee" in RCW 49.60.040, we will not count a person in the
domestic service of the employing person.
(14) Directors. Directors of corporations, and similar
officers of other private or public artificial legal entities,
will not be counted simply because they serve in that
capacity.
(15) Officers. Officers of corporations, and officers of
other private or public artificial legal entities, will be
counted unless:
(a) They receive no pay from the corporation or other
entity; and
(b) They do not participate in the management of the
corporation or other entity beyond participation in formal
meetings of the officers.
(16) Partners. Partners will not be counted as employed
by the partnership or by each other.
(17) Members of a professional service corporation. All
persons who render professional services for a professional
service corporation will be counted as employees of the
corporation.
(18) Temporary employee placement services. Persons
placed with an on-site employer by a temporary employee
placement service:
(a) Will be counted as employees of the temporary
placement service; and
(b) Will also be counted as employees of the on-site
employer if the on-site employer generally treated them in the
manner that employers treat employees (please see the factors
listed in WAC 162-16-230).
[Statutory Authority: RCW 49.60.120(3). 99-15-025, §
162-16-220, filed 7/12/99, effective 8/12/99.]