Home makers and chore workers perform domestic services in the private homes of welfare
            recipients under programs financed by grants under the Social Security Act. A state
            or local welfare agency may hire and pay these workers and the services are essentially
            of a domestic nature. There are several published Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rulings
            stating the position of IRS and SSA that workers performing household tasks in private
            homes are generally employees under the common-law control test.
         
         The usual common-law rules apply for questions regarding the identity of the employer.
            We usually find the welfare recipient to be the employer, but there have been a few
            instances when we found a state or county welfare department to be the employer.
         
         We are working to resolve the issue of how to report wages for these workers. Some
            states agreed to act as agent of the welfare recipients and therefore, the employer
            of the worker, and report the wages. Other states advised the workers to report wages
            as self-employment.
         
         Because of the varying conditions, the Seattle and Philadelphia regions issued instructions for developing this type of employment. In the absence
            of any such instruction, develop an allegation involving this kind of work in the
            usual manner. If the worker reported earnings as self-employment income, accept the
            reporting, unless we require development for a reason other than whether the person
            engaged in a trade or business under RS 01804.044.