§ 34-7-6 - Professional employer organizations; rights, powers, and responsibilities
               	 		
O.C.G.A.    34-7-6   (2010)
   34-7-6.    Professional employer organizations; rights, powers, and responsibilities 
      (a)  As  used in this Code section, the term "professional employer  organization" means an employee leasing company as defined in Code  Section 34-8-32 that has established a coemployment relationship with  another employer, pays the wages of the employees of the coemployer,  reserves a right of direction and control over the employees of the  coemployer, and assumes responsibility for the withholding and payment  of payroll taxes of the coemployer.
(b)  A  professional employer organization may collect information to evaluate  costs; may obtain life, accident and sickness, disability income,  workers' compensation, and other types of insurance coverage; may  establish retirement plans; may have other types of employee benefits;  and may discuss such benefits with prospective coemployers and their  employees.
(c)  A coemployer of a  professional employer organization shall retain sufficient direction and  control over the employees involved in a coemployment relationship as  is necessary to conduct its business operations and fulfill its  obligations to such employees. Unless otherwise agreed in writing, such  coemployer shall be considered to be the sole employer of such employees  for licensing purposes, provided that nothing contained in this Code  section shall be deemed to prohibit a professional employer organization  and its coemployer from agreeing that the professional employer  organization shall be considered to be an employer for licensing  purposes. The professional employer organization shall give written  notice of such an agreement to the appropriate licensing agency and to  the employees involved.
(d)  It is the  intent of this Code section that professional employer organizations  shall be considered to be employers under this title and are required to  comply with the provisions of Code Sections 34-8-32, 34-8-34, and  34-8-172. Professional employer organizations and their coemployer  clients are entitled to exclusive remedy under Code Section 34-9-11.