FINAL BILL REPORT

 

                           SJM 8027

 

                     AS PASSED LEGISLATURE

 

 

Brief Description:  Requesting that Congress help states with employment security system funding.

 

SPONSORS: Senators Vognild, Newhouse, Moore, Amondson, Prentice, Sutherland, McAuliffe and Fraser

 

SENATE COMMITTEE ON LABOR & COMMERCE

 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE & LABOR

 

 

BACKGROUND:

 

The 1993 Legislature established the Joint Task Force on Unemployment Insurance to undertake an in-depth review of Washington's Unemployment Insurance Program.  The task force is composed of four members of the House of Representatives, four senators and four representatives of labor and business, respectively.

 

A key area of deliberation for the task force was the funding of the state's unemployment insurance (UI) program.  Currently the state's UI program has two main funding sources: 

 

1.The state's UI employer tax.  These taxes are paid by all covered employers on each employee.  The tax ranges from .4 percent to 5.4 percent of taxable payroll ($19.9 K-1994) and is based on an employer's experience rating and the level of the UI trust fund.  Currently the trust fund is at an historically high level of approximately $1.7 billion resulting in a reduced tax schedule.

 

2.Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA).  These taxes are levied on employers through the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.  The tax is .8 percent of the first $7,000 paid to each employee.  These funds are also deposited in a FUTA fund controlled by the Department of Labor for the following purposes:  (a) administration account for the administration of all employment security departments nationwide; (b) extended benefits account for the payment of the federal share (50 percent) of extended benefits and 100 percent of some federal benefit programs like emergency unemployment compensation; (c) loan fund account available to states who have depleted their UI trust fund. 

 

The task force made the following finding regarding federal retention of FUTA funds:  "It is generally held by the majority of employment security departments throughout the United States that the distribution of FUTA funds to the states by the federal Department of Labor has undergone a dramatic policy change in the last decade.  The levels of funding provided to the states have gradually declined in real terms and the rate of payment between 1985 and 1993 for certain nonmonetary determinations has been reduced.  This reduction in funding is considered to be a direct result of the federal Budget Reconciliation Act whereby FUTA funds are kept in the federal funds to help balance the federal budget."

 

In order to address this issue, the task force recommended a memorial be sent to Congress requesting the release of funds in the FUTA administrative account in order to fully fund the cost of administering the state's UI program.

 

SUMMARY:

 

The Legislature requests Congress:  (1) remove the dedicated FUTA trust fund money from the federal unified budget; (2) exclude from the calculation of the federal budget deficit balances the unemployment insurance trust fund; (3) make decisions concerning spending for extended unemployment benefits and general program administration based on their merits and not the level of the federal deficit; and (4) provide states with the flexibility to meet the needs of unemployed Americans.

 

VOTES ON FINAL PASSAGE:

 

Senate    45   0

House     96   0