General Questions

No. Workers are not fired by the client business and rehired by the PEO. Instead, a worker becomes an employee of two employers in a co-employment relationship. The PEO assumes employer responsibilities and liabilities for the human resource and personnel obligations of the worksite employees. This responsibility includes the employees wages and employment taxes, workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance, and employee benefits. The small business retains employer responsibilities and supervision for the production of the products or the delivery of services.

April 7, 2009

Is this just a "fired and rehired" scheme?

No. Workers are not fired by the client business and rehired by the PEO. Instead, a worker becomes an employee of two employers in a co-employment […]
April 7, 2009

Is this a scheme to avoid providing health or retirement saving benefits to rank and file workers?

No. The reverse is generally true. Frequently, a PEO arrangement is the only opportunity for a worker of many small businesses to receive Fortune 500 quality […]
April 7, 2009

Who is responsible for the employee's wages and employment taxes?

PEOs assume responsibility and liability for payment of wages and compliance with all rules and regulations governing the reporting and payment of federal and state taxes […]
April 7, 2009

Who is responsible for state unemployment taxes?

As the employer for employment tax and employee benefits, PEOs assume responsibility and liability for payment of state unemployment taxes, and Nevada recognizes the PEO as […]
April 7, 2009

Who is responsible for employment laws and regulations?

Both the client and the PEO have compliance obligations. However, PEOs provide worksite employees with coverage under the entire spectrum of employment laws and regulations as […]