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Full Discussion: Best rules as a contractor
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Best rules as a contractor Post 302753853 by taltamir on Wednesday 9th of January 2013 12:52:21 PM
Old 01-09-2013
If you are working as a full time employee for a company that classifies you as a contractor (as I am currently doing yourself) you are basically getting screwed by your boss. The government HATES you because you are not conforming, it will express this by punishing you.

Unemployement tax: for regular employees its 50% paid by you, 50% paid by boss... (well, 50-50 of the fees, the actual benefits are paid mostly by general taxes not collected fees in checks).

As a contractor you pay 100% of that very same fee yourself and are INELIGIBLE to receive ANY benefits at all.

Medicare/medicaid: Those also go from 50-50 split to 100% you, but at least you are eligible.

Healthcare: if you work over 30 hours a week obamacare classifies you as full time employee and boss has to provide healthcare plan drafted by the government or pay a fee/fine which is used to help fund it, they will pay the fee because it is cheaper.
If you are a contractor you have to buy it yourself or pay a fee, and buying it yourself is going to be much more expensive than for a company to negotiate a group deal... unless you are very young and healthy. (with 14 years experience I am thinking you are too old for that).

IIRC there are a few other ways in which you get the shaft too...
But, unfortunately a person has to eat and contractor job is better then no job at all.

Last edited by taltamir; 01-10-2013 at 01:06 PM..
 

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Moose::Cookbook::Roles::ApplicationToInstance(3)	User Contributed Perl Documentation	  Moose::Cookbook::Roles::ApplicationToInstance(3)

NAME
Moose::Cookbook::Roles::ApplicationToInstance - Applying a role to an object instance VERSION
version 2.0604 SYNOPSIS
package MyApp::Role::Job::Manager; use List::Util qw( first ); use Moose::Role; has 'employees' => ( is => 'rw', isa => 'ArrayRef[Employee]', ); sub assign_work { my $self = shift; my $work = shift; my $employee = first { !$_->has_work } @{ $self->employees }; die 'All my employees have work to do!' unless $employee; $employee->work($work); } package main; my $lisa = Employee->new( name => 'Lisa' ); MyApp::Role::Job::Manager->meta->apply($lisa); my $homer = Employee->new( name => 'Homer' ); my $bart = Employee->new( name => 'Bart' ); my $marge = Employee->new( name => 'Marge' ); $lisa->employees( [ $homer, $bart, $marge ] ); $lisa->assign_work('mow the lawn'); DESCRIPTION
In this recipe, we show how a role can be applied to an object. In this specific case, we are giving an employee managerial responsibilities. Applying a role to an object is simple. The Moose::Meta::Role object provides an "apply" method. This method will do the right thing when given an object instance. MyApp::Role::Job::Manager->meta->apply($lisa); We could also use the "apply_all_roles" function from Moose::Util. apply_all_roles( $person, MyApp::Role::Job::Manager->meta ); The main advantage of using "apply_all_roles" is that it can be used to apply more than one role at a time. We could also pass parameters to the role we're applying: MyApp::Role::Job::Manager->meta->apply( $lisa, -alias => { assign_work => 'get_off_your_lazy_behind' }, ); We saw examples of how method exclusion and alias working in Moose::Cookbook::Roles::Restartable_AdvancedComposition. CONCLUSION
Applying a role to an object instance is a useful tool for adding behavior to existing objects. In our example, it is effective used to model a promotion. It can also be useful as a sort of controlled monkey-patching for existing code, particularly non-Moose code. For example, you could create a debugging role and apply it to an object at runtime. AUTHOR
Moose is maintained by the Moose Cabal, along with the help of many contributors. See "CABAL" in Moose and "CONTRIBUTORS" in Moose for details. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.16.2 2012-09-19 Moose::Cookbook::Roles::ApplicationToInstance(3)
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