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Antiwork

Work From Home Policies Are Held Back By State Laws

Right now, one of the major obstacles to work from home is the multiplicity of state laws that labor leeches have to obey. If you have fifty employees, each in a different state, then you have to deal with payroll taxes and labor laws in all fifty states. It doesn't matter if your corporation is based out of California, or Hawaii – you follow the laws where your employees are located. A unified federal “work from home” law could solve a lot of these issues, and make it easier to employ people from anywhere in the United States that has a reliable internet connection. Right now, all of the labor laws assume that workers are on-site. That used to be true, but those laws were mostly written before the widespread adoption of dial-up internet service.


Right now, one of the major obstacles to work from home is the multiplicity of state laws that labor leeches have to obey. If you have fifty employees, each in a different state, then you have to deal with payroll taxes and labor laws in all fifty states. It doesn't matter if your corporation is based out of California, or Hawaii – you follow the laws where your employees are located.

A unified federal “work from home” law could solve a lot of these issues, and make it easier to employ people from anywhere in the United States that has a reliable internet connection.

Right now, all of the labor laws assume that workers are on-site. That used to be true, but those laws were mostly written before the widespread adoption of dial-up internet service.

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