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To: bananawind who wrote (29994)5/13/1999 4:21:00 PM
From: w molloy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Microsoft may have to pay temps millions

news.com

By Dan Goodin
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
May 13, 1999, 11:10 a.m. PT

In a ruling with broad consequences for U.S. businesses, a federal
appeals court ruled that Microsoft must offer stock plan participation
to thousands of temporary employees, a lawyer for the workers said.

If upheld, the decision could redirect millions of dollars to Microsoft temps
hired through outside agencies.

The ruling, issued by a panel from the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Court of
Appeals, overturned lower court decisions that had drastically limited the
number of employees eligible to qualify for benefits.

Yesterday's ruling holds that contract employees who perform the same
tasks as regular workers are entitled to participate in Microsoft's discount
stock purchase plan, said Stephen Strong, an attorney for the plaintiffs in the
case.

The ruling could cost Microsoft between $15 million and $20 million,
estimated Rob Enderle, an analyst at Giga Information Group, as the
decision means contract employees who have worked at Microsoft since
1986 are eligible to be compensated.

Microsoft's reliance on contract employees has fluctuated throughout the
years, but a lawyer for the plaintiffs in the case estimated that the company
now employs about 6,000 temporary workers.

"We're very pleased with the court's decision," said Strong, the plaintiffs
attorney at Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong. "Microsoft has as of today several
thousand long-term employees that it pretends are employees of agencies.
Microsoft can't pretend they're employees of the agency simply by filling out
pieces of paper."

Microsoft spokesman Dan Leach said the company's attorneys were still
reviewing the opinion. He added, however, that
the use of contract employees was important to
the computer industry.

"Microsoft and many other companies in the
industry continue to believe that it's important to
have the flexibility that contingent employment
provides," he said, adding that temporary
employees frequently receive greater flexibility
and higher wages.

The ruling may extend to any business that
uses contract employees, Giga Information's
Enderle said.

"This is a ruling about how you treat temporary classes of employees across
the nation," said Enderle. "Once you have a ruling like this it applies to all
temporary employees."

Temporary workers first sued Microsoft in 1992, alleging that its refusal to
pay them the same benefits as regular employees violated the law. Contract
employees filed a second class-action lawsuit last year. An earlier court
ruling required Microsoft to allow contract employees to participate in a
program that sells stock at a 15-percent discount. A separate opinion had
limited the number of employees to about 500.

In January, Microsoft dropped contract language requiring barring employees
from benefiting from the suits, after the federal judge hearing the case sharply
rebuked Microsoft in court.