Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Links to Articles to Amend the Independent Contractors Law



With the testimony given at yesterday's Creative Caucus action at the MA State House and with the Boston Globe Op-Ed now calling for an amendment to the Independent Contractors Law, I have provided a series of links to help explain the issue more clearly for those that have not had a chance to review it.

Here is background information on a problem not only happening in MA but one that now has national implications:

http://www.artistsunderthedome.org/MAindependent_contractor.html

http://www.mbbp.com/resources/employment/independent_contractor.html

Short white paper:

http://www.artistsunderthedome.org/IC_2010_paper.pdf

Press:

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2010/07/17/amend_law_to_aid_freelancers/


http://www.wbur.org/2010/06/30/independent-contractor-law


http://www.wgbh.org/programs/programDetail.cfm?programid=11&featureid=16797&rssid=1


Also of note:

The Journal of Biocommunication has posted on their website an unprecedented issue devoted to just one topic "artist's rights". This issue focuses on aspects of artists’ rights, and broadly covers subjects of illustrators’ rights during the late 1800s. They have also included several articles from prominent individuals in the field like Brad Holland, Cynthia Turner, Bruce Lehman, Terrence Brown and Chris Castle, that discuss more recent issues surrounding existing copyright law, copyright registration, artists’ rights, and the current U.S. Orphan Works legislation. To understand what is going on in our industry it is important to know where we have been. These five articles best outline in great detail the issues artists are facing and should be read by everyone so please forward it to anyone in the business.

You can download the article by going directly to their website http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/index.html

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Text for the Creative Council to Amend Independent Contractor Law

I am speaking to you on behalf of the illustration community and as a member of the Illustrator’s Partnership of America. I am a freelance illustrator, furniture maker and independent contractor living in Marshfield MA.

Over the past ten years the artist’s community, comprised of photographers, illustrators, artists, musicians and other similar fields have seen their intellectual property become the commerce for corporations who wish to seize control of this property and profit without compensation to the creators of the work. This attempted corporate takeover of our industry has resulted in a loss of revenue to artists as well as a loss of taxable revenue to states such as our own.

The Massachusetts Independent Contractors Law reclassifies freelance creators who produce intellectual property as employees. This creates two dramatically illegal effects to freelance creators. Both result in the illegal confiscation of a creator's property and copyright licensing revenue.

1) It wrongly imposes an USC 17, §106(a) Work-for-Hire copyright status upon freelance creators - who are also known as "authors". Copyright is the law of authorship. It is quite simply a creator’s exclusive right to make copies of his or her work, authorize others to make copies, and stop those who make unauthorized copies. Copyright automatically protects an original work of authorship the moment the creator fixes an idea in a tangible medium of expression. Copyright ownership automatically vests with the author; an author's right is based upon the act of creation itself. The copyright grants a specific set of exclusive rights to the author, and to others authorized by author, to reproduce the work, prepare derivatives based on the work, distribute the work under the creator's terms, perform the work, or display the work publicly.

The USC 17, §106(a) Work-for-Hire Doctrine is an exception to the vesting of exclusive rights with the creator, which strictly applies to the employer/employee relationship. It vests copyright with the employer of staff artists, writers and musicians by default because the employer provides the overhead, tools of the trade, training, retirement, health care, insurance, facilities and assumes all the risks and uncertainties normally borne by a freelance creator. Since the employer is taking all the risks and providing risk-free conditions for creators to create, the employer is granted the copyrights the employees create and the renewable wealth from the licensing of those copyrights.

2) It imposes an illegal employee status upon freelance creators - also known as independent contractors.
This violates Title 29, Chapter 7, Subchapter II of the United States Code the Wagner Act or the National Labor Relations Act. Freelance creators, who are independent contractors, are strictly prohibited from unionizing or collective bargaining. Independent contractors are also protected from unwanted unionization by the National Labor Relations Act. It is illegal for unions to interfere with the business affairs of self-employed independent contractors yet this law allows that interference to exist.

In 2004, the Conyers bill (c) was a national attempt by one union (the UAW/GAG Local 3030) to forcibly legislate an unwanted freelance artists union by re-classifying freelance artists as employees for the purpose of collective bargaining. It was defeated when IPA exposed its irreconcilable legal conflicts with U.S. Copyright Law and the National Labor Relations Act.

There have been other recent federal and state attempts to weaken creators' exclusive rights in order to gain a financial stake in their copyrights. The Orphan Works Bill is one example of corporations trying to gain control of our domestic royalties. Artists have already seen their earned foreign royalties diverted to non-profit organizations that have claimed to represent independent contractors' copyrights. These losses not only deprive artists from their earned income, but deprive states and the US Treasury from revenue by diverting taxable royalties to nonprofits.

I ask that this group take heed of the concerns of our industry to prevent any further erosion of our rights and listen more closely to the artist community. I believe an amendment to the Independent Contractors Law to those who produce intellectual property is needed immediately. I feel that by working jointly with the artist community, our state could use this industry to help create new markets and much needed revenue to a depleted economy.

Thank you

(a) Title 17 of the United States Code, also known as U.S. Copyright Law.

(b) USC 17, §106a is the Work-for-Hire Doctrine. It is an exception to the vesting of exclusive rights with the creator. §106a Work-For-Hire strictly applies to the employer/employee relationship.

(c) H.R.4643 Freelance Writers and Artists Protection Act of 2002

Friday, July 23, 2010

Journal of Biocommunication Artist's Rights Issue

The Journal of Biocommunication has posted on their website an unprecedented issue devoted to just one topic "artist's rights". This issue focuses on aspects of artists’ rights, and broadly covers subjects of illustrators’ rights during the late 1800s. They have also included several articles from prominent individuals in the field like Brad Holland, Cynthia Turner, Bruce Lehman, Terrence Brown and Chris Castle, that discuss more recent issues surrounding existing copyright law, copyright registration, artists’ rights, and the recent attempts to pass U.S. Orphan Works legislation.

To understand what is going on in our industry it is important to know where we have been. These five articles best outline in greta detail the issues artists are facing and should be read by everyone.
You can download the article by going directly to their website
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/index.html
or you can download each individual article separately with the following links:

• Trojan Horse: Orphan Works and the War on Authors by Brad Holland
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/feature4.html

• Historic Rights Issues in American Illustration by Terrence Brown
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/feature2.html

• Orphan Works Legislation—A Bad Deal for Artists by Bruce Lehman, Esq.
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/feature3.html

• Artists’ Rights are Human Rights by Chris Castle
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/feature1.html
• Perfect and Strengthen Your Copyrights by Cynthia Turner
http://www.jbiocommunication.org/free_issues/36-1/feature5.html

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Boston Globe in support of amendment to MA Freelancers Law

The Boston Globe ran an editorial today calling for the amendment to the Freelancers Law in MA.