HOUSE BILL REPORT
SSB 6359



         As Reported by House Committee On:       
Commerce & Labor

Title: An act relating to ensuring employers do not evade their contribution rate.

Brief Description: Ensuring employers do not evade their contribution rate.

Sponsors: Senate Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research & Development (originally sponsored by Senators Kohl-Welles, Parlette and Kline; by request of Employment Security Department).

Brief History:

Commerce & Labor: 2/15/06, 2/23/06 [DP].

Brief Summary of Substitute Bill
  • Modifies the requirements for determining successor employer unemployment contribution rates when a significant purpose of the transfer was to obtain a reduced rate by basing the rate on the higher of the involved employers' rates or, if the successor employer was not an employer at the time of the transfer, prohibiting transfer of experience from the predecessor employer and assigning the new employer rate.
  • Increases the penalties applicable to employers and other persons who intend to knowingly evade the successorship provisions.
  • Applies beginning on January 1, 2006.


HOUSE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE & LABOR

Majority Report: Do pass. Signed by 8 members: Representatives Conway, Chair; Wood, Vice Chair; Condotta, Ranking Minority Member; Chandler, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Crouse, Hudgins, Kenney and McCoy.

Staff: Chris Cordes (786-7103).

Background:

Federal Requirements for States' Unemployment Insurance Laws

General Requirements. The unemployment insurance system is a federal/state program under which employers pay contributions to fund unemployment compensation for unemployed workers. These payments are made under state unemployment tax acts (SUTA) and the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA). The FUTA allows the states' employers to receive a tax credit against their federal unemployment tax, and the state receives a share of the FUTA revenues for administration of its unemployment insurance system, but only if the state maintains an unemployment insurance system in conformity with federal law. Washington's program is administered by the Employment Security Department (ESD).

The SUTA Dumping Act. In August 2004, the federal "SUTA Dumping Prevention Act of 2004" (SUTA Dumping Act) was enacted. According to the United States Department of Labor, this law is intended to: (1) address a concern that some employers and financial advisors were finding ways to manipulate state experience rating systems so that these employers could pay lower SUTA taxes than their unemployment experience would otherwise allow; and (2) prohibit the following two methods of SUTA dumping:

Under the SUTA Dumping Act, the states' unemployment insurance laws must be certified as in conformity with the SUTA dumping requirements by a certain date. For Washington, this requirement applies beginning with the 2006 tax rate year. Among other things, the federal SUTA Dumping Act requires the states' unemployment insurance laws to adopt certain successor employer provisions, including:



Washington Unemployment Insurance Contribution Rates


General Requirements. Most employment in the state is covered for unemployment insurance. Each covered employer is required to pay contributions on a percentage of his or her taxable payroll, except for certain employers who reimburse the ESD for benefits the agency pays to these employers' former workers. For most covered taxable employers, unemployment insurance contribution rates are determined by the combined rate assigned to the employer based on layoff experience, social costs, and solvency surcharge, if any. The highest contribution rate varies but may not exceed 6.5 percent plus a solvency surcharge, if any.

Requirements for Unqualified Employers. Some covered taxable employers are not qualified to be assigned a combined rate. These unqualified employers include employers who are new employers and certain successor employers who were not employers at the time of acquiring a business. Until a new employer becomes a qualified employer, the rate is the average industry rate, plus 15 percent of that amount, with a 1 percent minimum rate. For a successor employer who was not an employer at the time of the business transfer, the rate is the rate assigned to the predecessor employer for that rate year, with combined experience determining the rate thereafter, or the new employer rate in that industry until the employer qualifies for its own rate.

Legislation adopted in 2003 changed the rate determination for certain successor employers engaging in a business transfer on or after January 1, 2005. If a new successor employer has substantial continuity of ownership or management of the predecessor's business, the successor is not permitted to use the new employer rate. Instead, these employers must pay at the rate assigned to the predecessor employer, and will have the experience of the predecessor employer transferred to the successor as part of its rate beginning in January following the transfer.

Penalties

Unemployment insurance tax penalties were revised in 2003 to add a penalty for an employer that is delinquent in paying unemployment taxes because of an intent to evade the successorship requirements and for any business that promotes such evasion. This penalty was modified in 2004 to require assigning these employers, or other persons violating this requirement, the highest contribution rate, plus 2 percent, for that calendar year in which the Commissioner makes the penalty determination.

It is a gross misdemeanor, with a fine of up to $5,000 and/or up to one year in prison, if a person who is required to collect and pay unemployment contributions willfully fails to pay the contributions or willfully attempts to evade payment.


Summary of Bill:

Successor Employers

Generally, a successor employer's contribution rate beginning on January 1 following the transfer of a business is based on a combination of the successor's and the predecessor's relevant layoff experience. However, for transfers on or after January 1, 2005, if the successor employer is not an employer at the time of the business transfer and only a part of the business was transferred, the experience will be assigned to the successor only if this makes the successor employer a qualified employer. If the successor is not qualified, then the new employer rate will apply until the successor qualifies for a different rate, including the transferred experience.

The prohibition that a new successor employer may not use the new employer rate when there is substantial continuity of ownership or management of the predecessor's business is extended to cover situations in which there is substantial continuity of control.

If a significant purpose of a business transfer was to obtain a reduced rate, then:

"Transfer of a business" includes the transfer or acquisition of substantially all or a portion of the operating assets, which may include the employer's work force.

References to determining the applicable new employer rate are changed from the Standard Industrial Classification Code to the North American Industry Classification System.

Penalties

A civil penalty assessment rate is assigned to an employer whose delinquent assessment is due at least in part to an intent to knowingly evade the successorship provisions or to a business found to be knowingly promoting evasion of the successorship provisions. The Commissioner must assign a total rate, which is the sum of the recalculated array calculation factor rate that should have applied and a civil assessment penalty that when added to the recalculated array calculation factor rate increases the total rate to the maximum array calculation factor rate plus 2 percent. The civil penalty assessment rate is not limited by any statutory maximum rate and is assigned for that rate year and the three following rate years. In addition, the employer must pay the ESD's reasonable audit and collection expenses and may be prosecuted for a gross misdemeanor.

A person who is not an employer and who is knowingly evading or knowingly attempting to evade the successorship provisions, or knowingly promoting the evasion, is subject to a civil penalty of $5,000 and to the gross misdemeanor penalty as if the person were an employer. The person is also required to pay the ESD's reasonable audit and collection expenses.

"Knowingly" is defined to mean having actual knowledge of or acting with deliberate ignorance or reckless disregard for the prohibition involved, including intent to evade, misrepresentation, or willful nondisclosure.

Penalties and interest collected for evasion of the successorship provisions are to be expended solely for prevention, detection, and collection activities related to evasion of the successorship provisions.

The Commissioner of the ESD must establish procedures to enforce, and may adopt such other rules as are necessary to implement the successorship provisions.

Application

These provisions are stated to be remedial and apply retroactively to January 1, 2006.


Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.

Testimony For: The agency supports the bill, which is required for conformity with the federal SUTA Dumping Act.

Testimony Against: None.

Persons Testifying: Karen Lee, Commissioner, Employment Security Department.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying: None.