delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this workers’ compensation case, we consider whether the phrase “recreational or social activities” as used in the Workers’ Compensation Act encompasses activities that, although recreational or social in nature, are compelled by the employer.
While in the employ of a mason contractor, petitioner sustained an injury when he attempted to drive a go-cart on the property of his employer’s customer. Petitioner alleges that he drove the go-cart only after his employer ordered him to do so. The Division of Workers’ Compensation denied petitioner’s claim for benefits, based on the recreational nature of go-cart driving and petitioner’s failure to satisfy the two-part statutory test applicable to recreational and social activities. The Appellate Division affirmed.
*518 We hold that when an employer compels an employee’s participation in an activity generally viewed as recreational or social in nature, the employer thereby renders that activity work-related as a matter of law. We also hold that to recover under a theory of compulsion, the injured employee must establish that he or she engaged in the activity based on an objectively reasonable belief that participation was required. On the facts in this record, we cannot determine whether petitioner’s claim that his employer commanded him to drive the go-cart is objectively reasonable. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
At the time of his accident, respondent Frank DeLuca Construction (respondent or employer), a mason contractor, employed petitioner Porfirio Lozano as a general laborer. Lozano normally worked six days per week, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., at a rate of $10.00 per hour. Because of the nature of respondent’s work as an independent contractor, Lozano did not have a fixed place of employment, but worked wherever his employer assigned him on any given day. Lozano, who did not have a driver’s license and did not know how to drive, relied on Frank DeLuca, 1 the company’s owner and Lozano’s supervisor, for transportation between Lozano’s home and the various work sites.
On the day of the accident, DeLuca picked up Lozano and another employee at their respective homes, at approximately 8:00 a.m. and took the two employees to the job site, a private home belonging to Peter Borbas. Under DeLuca’s supervision, Lozano and his fellow employee constructed a stone wall on Borbas’s *519 property. By approximately 5:00 p.m., the two employees had completed their task and were ready to return home.
Borbas had three go-carts parked on a paved, circular track that was separate from his driveway. As the two employees waited for DeLuea to take them home, Borbas and DeLuea each got into a go-cart and began driving around Borbas’s track. When DeLuea finished, he directed Lozano to “get in” the go-cart. Not knowing how to drive, Lozano refused and explained that “[he] could not [drive] because [he] didn’t know anything about it.” DeLuea then told Lozano again to “get in,” reassuring the employee that “it was easy.” According to Lozano, he understood his supervisor’s persistence to be a command and, therefore, got into the go-cart. On his first lap around the track, Lozano crashed into a parked truck and sustained severe injuries that required his hospitalization and the insertion of a plate and screws in his left ankle.
Lozano filed a claim with the New Jersey Division of Workers’ Compensation, asserting that he sustained injuries from an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. Respondent thereafter filed an answer disputing the work-relatedness of Lozano’s accident. At trial, the рarties agreed to bifurcate the proceeding and address solely the issue of respondent’s liability.
As the only witness at the workers’ compensation hearing, Lozano testified to the circumstances surrounding the accident. When asked on direct examination whether he interpreted DeLuca’s directive to “get in” the go-cart as a command, Lozano stated that “[DeLuea] was my boss. I had to obey the order.” Lozano’s testimony was generally uncontested, although there was some initial uncertainty with respect to what time he had finished work on the day of the accident. Early in the trial, Lozano testified that he worked from 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. When later asked for the specific hour that he completed work on the day of the accident, Lozano stated that it was 5:00 p.m. That answer еlicited a question from the judge about whether Lozano completed work at 4:00 or 5:00 p.m. In response, Lozano explained that he usually worked until 4:00 p.m., but that day he did not finish his *520 assignment until 5:00 p.m. He further testified that the accident occurred within minutes of his completion of the construction project.
At the conclusion of Lozano’s direct examination, respondent moved for dismissal. Respondent argued that Lozano had failed to establish the requisite causal relationship between his employment and the accident. To support its motion, respondent cited to Lozano’s testimony that the accident happened after Lozano had completed his work. Respondent maintained that this “would be a eleai’ horseplay case” or, in the alternative, a recrеational activity after work had ended. Under either category, respondent asserted that Lozano had not met Kis burden of showing a causal link between his employment and his injury.
Opposing the motion, Lozano focused on his presence at the work site at the time of the accident. Lozano stressed that he “was required to be there until his employer took him home.” Thus, he maintained that he was still “in the course of employment” when DeLuea allegedly commanded him to “do this” in reference to driving the go-cart. Citing those circumstances, Lozano argued that relevant case law entitled him to compensation.
After hearing the parties’ arguments, the Judge of Compensation granted respondent’s motion to dismiss. In an oral opinion, the judge concluded that at the time of the accident, Lozano was engaged in a “recreational activity” that was outside the scope of his employment. Despite Lozano’s presence on the job site, the judge found that Lozano was “off the clock” when the accident occurred. Stating that Lozano must have “had a lot of fun,” the judge held that Lozano’s injuries resulted from a recreational activity that did not satisfy the two-prong test set forth in N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.
In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed the dismissal of Lozano’s claim for the reasons expressed by the Judge of Compensation in her oral opinion. We granted certifica
*521
tion, 177
N.J.
490,
II.
As amended in 1979, the Workers’ Compensation Act provides in pertinent part that employers shall compensate employees for accidental injuries arising out of аnd in the course of employment except when “recreational or social activities ... are the natural and proximate cause of the injury!.]” N.J.S.A. 34:15-7. To that general rule of no-recovery for recreational or social activities, the act carves out an exception when “such recreational or social activities are a regular incident of employment and produce a benefit to the employer beyond improvement in employee health and morale!.]” Hid. Simply stated, an employee injured during a recreational or social activity must satisfy a two-prong test to qualify for compensation under the act — the activity (1) must be a “regular incident of employment,” and (2) must “produce a benefit to the employer beyond imprоvement in employee health and morale.”
In disputing the compensability of Lozano’s injuries, the parties rely on contrary interpretations of the phrase “recreational or social activities.” Respondent argues that the plain language of N.J.S.A. 34:15-7 reflects a clear legislative intent to limit recovery for injuries suffered during all “recreational or social activities.” In other words, respondent contends that the Legislature did not intend to distinguish between activities that an employer compels and those that an employee undertakes voluntarily. Relying on that construction of N.J.S.A. 34:15-7, respondent submits that the Judge of Compensation properly concluded that Lozano must satisfy the two-part statutory test before recovery can be permitted on the facts рresented.
In contrast, Lozano asserts that the phrase “recreational or social activities” is ambiguous. According to Lozano, whether an activity is recreational or work depends on the underlying circumstances and the state of mind of the employee. Thus, an activity *522 traditionally viewed as recreational becomes work when it occurs on the work site and at the employer’s direction. Under that approach, this case does not implicate the two-part statutory test because Lozano was not engaged in a “recreational or social activity” when the accident occurred.
Because resolution of the issue before us depends on the meaning given to the statutory phrase “recreational or social activitiеs,” we turn to familiar principles of statutory construction for guidance. Interpretation of a statute begins with “the plain meaning of the provision at issue.”
Burns v. Belafsky,
166
N.J.
466, 473,
No specific provision of the act defines the phrase “recreational or social activities.” An employer-sponsored company picnic held off-premises and after work hours that employees voluntarily attend for their own persоnal pleasure certainly falls within the definition of “recreational or social activities.” But, there is a question whether employees would describe a company event as “recreational or social” and consider it noncompensable if the employer required attendance. That is, from the perspective of an employee, the meaning of the phrase “recreational or social activities” is not self-evident. The act’s silence on the meaning of the disputed phrase requires our inquiry to extend beyond the plain language of N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.
III.
In ascertaining legislative intent, we look to the legislative history behind the 1979 package of amendments that added to *523 N.J.S.A. 34:15-7 the provision dealing with recreational and social activities. However, as discussed further below, that history is relatively scant. Thus, it is essential to consider the 1979 amendments in the context of the relevant case law both before and after their enactment.
A.
As originally drafted in 1911, the Workers’ Compensation Act simply provided that compensation would be awarded for injuries or death from accidents “arising out of and in the course of employment.”
L.
1911, c. 95, § 7. The original statute contained no specific reference to recreational and social activities.
Ibid.
Due to “the sweeping generality of the statutory terms,” the task of enunciating principles to differentiate compensable from noncompensable accidents rested with the courts.
Hornyak v. The Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co.,
63
N.J.
99, 102,
When drawing the line between compensable and noncompensable recreational and social activities, courts considered
(a) the customary nature of the activity; (b) the employer’s encouragement or subsidization of the activity; (c) the extent to which the employer managed or directed the recreational enterprise; (d) the presence of substantial influence or actual compulsion exerted upon the employee to attend and participate; and (e) the fact that the employer expects or receives a benefit from the employee’s participation in the activity.
[Harrison v. Stanton, 26 N.J.Super. 194, 199,97 A.2d 687 (App.Div.1953), aff'd o.b., 14 N.J. 172,101 A.2d 554 (1954).]
The absence or presence of a particular factor was not dispositive.
Ricciardi v. Damar Prods. Co.,
45
N.J.
54, 59-60,
*524
Although employer compulsion was a relevant factor, few cases dealt with injuries suffered during mandatory recreational and social activities. Instead, cases typically involved the more complicated scenario of voluntary recreational activities that the employer either sponsored, permitted, or encouraged.
See, e.g., ibid.
(employer-sponsored picnic);
Complitano v. Steel & Alloy Tank Co.,
34
N.J.
300,
Early cases denied compensation for injuries sustained during employer-sponsored recreational and social activities at which attendance was not required and from which the employer did not receive a clear business benefit.
E.g., Stevens, supra,
136
N.J.L.
at 658-59,
In a series of eases beginning with
Toed,
however, we departed from that approach and expanded the scope of coverage for voluntary recreational and social activities.
Toed
involved an employee who was injured while engaging in a customary lunchtime softball game played on the company’s property during the employee’s lunch hour. 28
N.J.
at 584-86,
The majority found that the employer’s financial contribution, coupled with the time, place, and customary nature of the games, rendered the activity a regular incident and condition of employment.
Id.
at 593-94,
The two dissenting justices argued that recovery should be denied in the absence of employer compulsion and employer benefit.
Id.
at 597,
A divided Court further expanded the scope of compensable recreational and social activities in
Complitano.
As indicated above, early courts denied coverage when the employer’s only involvement in the recreational activity entailed financial support with no evident commercial motive.
E.g., Stevens, supra,
136
N.J.L.
at 658,
A review of the pre-amendment case law reveals only one published opinion dealing with a compelled social activity. In
Harrison v. Stanton, supra,
an employee sought coverage under the act for an injury suffered while driving his child’s babysitter home. 26
N.J.Super.
at 198,
In the years before the 1979 amendments, courts also employed the basic philosophy underpinning
Harrison
to compensate employees who were injured while engaging in a mandated activity that, although non-social in nature, was nevertheless unrelated to the employee’s day-to-day job duties. For example, in
Ferragino v. McCue’s Dairy,
128
N.J.L.
525, 526,
From that summary of pre-amendment decisions, we discern two categories of cases dealing with activities ostensibly unrelated to work. The first category encompasses cases involving employеr-sponsored recreational and social activities in which the employee voluntarily engaged. For injuries falling within that category, Tocci and Complitano offered alternative theories for recovery. An employee could establish an adequate link between the recreational activity and work by demonstrating either that the time, place, and customary nature of the activity rendered it “a regular incident and condition of employment,” or that the degree of employer support indicated either an indirect or direct benefit to the employer. The second category of cases involved employer-compelled activities. As Harrison and Ferragino demonstrate, courts in those circumstances deemed that a mandated activity fell within the scope of employment rеgardless of the activity’s departure from the employee’s normal job duties.
B.
Against that backdrop of decisional law, the Legislature extensively amended the Workers’ Compensation Act in 1979. Those amendments were designed to “put significantly more money into the hands of the more seriously injured workers while providing genuine reform and meaningful cost containment for New Jersey employers from unjustified workers’ compensation costs that are presently among the highest in the nation.” See Senate Labor, Industry, and Professions Committee, Joint Statement to Senate Committee Substitute for N.J. Senate No. 802 and Assembly Committee Substitute for N.J. Assembly No. 810, at 1 (Nov. 13, 1979) (Joint Statement).
*529
One means of effectuating that fiscal goal was the exclusion of “most injuries sustained during recreational or social activities.”
Poswiatowski v. Standard Chlorine Chem. Co.,
96
N.J.
321, 331 n. 2,
Although legislative intent to curb awards for recreational and social activities is evident from the legislative history of the 1979 amendments, the committee statements dо not reveal how the Legislature intended to achieve that goal.
See Sarzillo, supra,
101
N.J.
at 119-20,
However, of greater relevance to this case is the continued distinction made by post-1979 courts between compelled recreational and social activities, on one hand, and those that the employer merely permits or sponsors, on the other. See,
e.g., Sarzillo, supra,
101
N.J.
at 121,
The Appellate Division answered that precise question in
McCarthy v. Quest International Co.,
285
N.J.Super.
469,
*531
The panel observed, however, that compulsion “to participate did not alone justify a finding that [the employee’s] injury arose out of and in the course of employment.”
Id.
at 473,
rv.
A.
Although the court in
McCarthy
arrived at the correct result, we disagree with its interpretation of
N.J.S.A
34:15-7. In view of the case law in existence in 1979, we construe the phrase “recreational or social activities” as it appears in
N.J.S.A.
34:15-7 to , encompass only those activities in which participation is not compulsory. Accordingly, we hold that when an employer compels an employee to participate in an activity that ordinarily would be considered recreational or social in nature, the employer therеby renders that activity a work-related task as a matter of law. That factual context does not implicate the two-prong test set forth in
N.J.S.A.
34:15-7. Our holding recognizes that an employer always retains the power to expand the scope of employment by directing the employee to engage in tasks outside of the employee’s general job duties. 2 Arthur Larson,
Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law
§ 27.04[4], at 27-42 (2000);
see also Okla. Natural Gas Co. v. Williams,
Our reading of the legislative history persuades us that the 1979 amendments were not designed to overrule those earlier cases finding that compulsion, standing alone, brings an activity that is otherwise unrelated to work within the scope of employment. Specifically, the Joint Statement’s focus on curbing recovery for “injuries sustained during recreational or social activities
sponsored
by the employer” indicates that the 1979 amendments were aimed primarily at overturning those pre-amendment decisions in which we relied on the employer’s financial support to bring a recreational or social activity within the ambit of the act.
Joint Statement,
at 2 (emphasis added). We presume that the Legislature was thoroughly conversant with the basic principles underlying the pre-amendment case law dealing with employer-compelled activities.
Brewer v. Porch,
53
N.J.
167, 174,
A contrary reading of
N.J.S.A.
34:15-7 would impose on employees a classic Hobson’s choice: obey the employer’s order and jeopardize eligibility for workers’ compensation benefits, or refuse to engage in the required activity and risk loss of employment. We do not believe the Legislature intended such a result. That construction of the statute does violence to the long-standing recognition that the act “is humane social legislation designed to
*533
place the cost of work-connected injury on the employer who may readily provide for it as an operating expense.”
Hornyak, supra,
63
N.J.
at 101,
Therefore, when an employee establishes that his or her employer required participation in an activity of a recreational or social nature, courts should consider the activity as they would any other compensable work-related assignment. By contrast, recreational and social activities that the employer merely sponsors or encourages are precisely the type of activities that the Legislature intended to exclude from coverage. In those cases, the act requires the employee to establish that the activity is a regular incident of employment and provides some benefit to the employer beyond the improvement in employee health and morale.
B.
Having determined that an employer actively brings an otherwise recreational or social activity within the scope of employment *534 by compelling participation or attendance, we address the related and equally important question of the standard that courts should apply when assessing an employee’s allеgation of compulsion.
Compulsion can take a number of forms. Larson,
supra,
§ 22.04[2], at 22-20 to 22-21. When an employer directly commands an employee to engage in an activity, it is axiomatic that the employee has been compelled. However, considering the imbalance of power between the employer and employee, we cannot ignore the reality that indirect pressure on an employee can be as powerful as an explicit order.
See Lawrence v. Indus. Comm’n of Arizona,
When an employee alleges indirect or implicit compulsion, we hold that the employee must demonstrate an objectively reasonable basis in fact for believing that the employer had compelled participation in the activity. Whether the employee’s belief is objectively reasonable will depend largely on the employer’s conduct and must be assessed on a case-by-case basis. Relevant factors include, but are not limited to, whether the employer directly solicits the employee’s participation
in
the activity; whether the activity occurs on the employer’s premises, during work hours, and in the presence of supervisors, executives, clients, or the like; and whether the employee’s refusal to attend or participate exposes the employee to the risk of reduced wages or loss of employment. The absence of one factor is not fatal. As noted, that list is not exhaustive and other fact patterns may suggest compulsion. However, an employee’s mere subjective impression of compulsion standing alone will not bring an activity within the
*535
scope of employment.
Accord Crouch Funeral Home, Inc. v. Crouch,
262
Ark.
417,
V.
With those principles in mind, we consider whether the Judge of Compensation erred in dеtermining that Lozano’s injury arose out of a “recreational activity” outside of the scope of employment. In categorizing Lozano’s use of the go-cart as a recreational activity, the Judge of Compensation, unguided by our holding, did not address explicitly whether Lozano had an objectively reasonable belief that DeLuca had required him to drive the go-cart. The judge noted only that “[a]t first [Lozano] didn’t want to get into the go-cart. He must have had a lot of fun; he ran off the track and into the truck, and he was dazed.” From those observations, we cannot determine whether the judge found Lozano’s claim of compulsion to be objectively reasonable. The fact that Lozano might have received some gratification from the ride does not preclude а fact-finder from concluding that Lozano reasonably believed that his supervisor had ordered him to drive the go-cart. Without stating an opinion on that issue, we note only that enjoyment and compulsion are not mutually exclusive.
Lozano urges us to determine, based on his uncontested testimony, that driving the go-cart was a compensable work activity. However, because neither the parties nor the compensation judge had the benefit of our interpretation of the statute, we remand the matter to the Division of Workers’ Compensation for a new trial. We offer the following comments for guidance on remand.
We note that at the new trial Lozano might prevail in demonstrating that his operation of the go-cart was expressly compelled *536 and, therefore, a work activity as opposed to a recreational one. Supporting that contention is Lozano’s undisputed testimony that he understood De Luca’s insistence to “get in” the go-cart as an order that he “had to obey.”
Alternatively, the judge might view Lozano’s allegation as a claim of indirect or implicit compulsion. A number of facts, many of which were not adequately developed at trial, are relevant to determining whether Lozano’s assessment of the situation was objectively reasonable. For example, the record indicates that Lozano was a general laborer, but does not reveal whether Lozano’s assignments, prior to this incident, ever included tasks unrelated to respondent’s work as a mason. In addition, the incident occurred in the presence of Borbas, respondent’s customer for whom Lozano had been performing services. It remains for the fact finder to assess whether Lozano might have been more reluctant to question DeLuca because of the customer’s presence. Further consideration also should be given to the fact that, although he had completed his assignment of constructing a stone wall, Lozano had no means of returning home because he relied on DeLuca for transportation to and from the workplace. Evidence that Lozano remained under DeLuea’s direction while at the work site should be considered in tandem with the unresolved question of whether Lozano was paid for the time in which the incident occurred. Non-payment for the activity may be relevant but it is not dispositive.
Because respondent did not offer any testimony or otherwise challenge Lozano’s allegation of compulsion, we do not know and will not speculate about what respondent might offer in rebuttal. Therefore, in the interest of fairness, we remand to the Division of Workers’ Compensation to afford both parties the opportunity to develop the record in light of our interpretation of N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand the matter to the Division of *537 Workers’ Compensation for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
For reversal and remandment• — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices LONG, VERNIERO, LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, ALBIN and WALLACE — 7.
Opposed — None.
Notes
We distinguish between Frank DeLuca Construction, the company that employed petitioner, and Frank DeLuca, the individual who owned the company and supervised Lozano on the day of the accident. We, therefore, refer to Frank DeLuca Construction as “respondent” or “employer” and to Frank DeLuca by name.
