HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESSB 6885
As Reported by House Committee On:
Commerce & Labor
Title: An act relating to unemployment insurance.
Brief Description: Modifying unemployment insurance provisions.
Sponsors: Senate Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research & Development (originally sponsored by Senators Kohl-Welles, McAuliffe, Thibaudeau, Keiser and Fairley).
Brief History:
Commerce & Labor: 2/20/06, 2/22/06 [DP].
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE & LABOR
Majority Report: Do pass. Signed by 5 members: Representatives Conway, Chair; Wood, Vice Chair; Hudgins, Kenney and McCoy.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 4 members: Representatives Condotta, Ranking Minority Member; Chandler, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Crouse and Holmquist.
Staff: Jill Reinmuth (786-7134) and Chris Cordes (786-7103).
Background:
The unemployment compensation system is designed and intended to provide partial wage
replacement for workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own. Eligible
unemployed workers receive benefits based on their earnings in their base year. Most
covered employers pay contributions (payroll taxes) to finance benefits.
In 2003, and again in 2005, the Legislature enacted a number of changes to the
unemployment insurance system. The changes included revisions to unemployment benefits
and taxes.
I. Benefits
An individual is eligible to receive regular benefits if he or she: (1) worked at least 680 hours
in his or her base year; (2) was separated from employment through no fault of his or her own
or quit work for good cause; and (3) is able to work and is actively seeking employment.
Regular benefits are based on the individual's earnings in his or her base year; they are not
based on financial need.
(A) Weekly Benefit Amount
Prior to the 2003 legislation, a claimant's weekly benefit amount (WBA) was calculated using
4 percent of the claimant's average wages in the two quarters of the base year in which wages
were highest ("two quarter averaging").
The 2003 legislation modified the formula used to calculate the WBA as follows:
: The WBA was calculated
using 4 percent of the claimant's average wages in the three quarters of the base year in
which wages were highest ("three quarter averaging").
: The WBA was 1 percent of the claimant's total wages in the
base year ("four quarter averaging").
The 2005 legislation further modified the formula used to calculate the WBA as follows:
: The WBA is calculated using 3.85
percent of the claimant's average wages in the two quarters of the base year in which
wages were highest ("two quarter averaging").
(B) "Good Cause" Quits
Individuals are disqualified from receiving benefits if they leave work voluntarily without
good cause.
Prior to the 2003 legislation, there were a variety of reasons considered to be good cause for
leaving work voluntarily. One reason was to relocate for a spouse's employer-initiated
mandatory job transfer.
The 2003 legislation limited the reasons considered to be good cause for leaving work
voluntarily. One reason is to relocate for a spouse's mandatory military transfer, so long as
the relocation is to a state that similarly does not consider the individual to have left work
without good cause.
(C) Construction
Prior to the 2003 legislation, the Employment Security Act was to be liberally construed to
reduce involuntary unemployment to the minimum. The 2003 legislation repealed this
requirement. The 2005 legislation restored this requirement until June 30, 2007.
II. Contributions
Contributions are payroll taxes used to finance unemployment compensation benefits. Most
private employers are required to pay contributions. The amounts of the contributions are
based on the tax rate assigned to the employer and the taxable wage base.
(A) Tax Rates
The 2003 legislation specified that the tax rate for most covered employers is determined by
the combined array calculation factor rate and the social cost factor rate, subject to a
maximum rate, and a solvency surcharge, if any. These rates are determined as follows:
The 2005 legislation made adjustments to the social cost factor as follows:
(B) Taxable Wage Base
The taxable wage base is the amount of each employee's wages subject to tax for a given rate
year. This amount increases by 15 percent each year from the previous year's taxable wage
base, with a cap of 80 percent of the state "average annual wage for contribution purposes."
In 2006, the taxable wage base is $30,900.
(C) Experience Rating
Most benefits paid to claimants are charged to their base year employers' accounts. Some
benefits, however, are pooled costs within the system and are generally referred to as
socialized costs.
The 2005 legislation specified that certain benefits not be charged and that certain socialized
costs be paid with certain funds. Beginning in Fiscal Year 2006 and through Fiscal Year
2007, benefits paid that exceed the benefits that would have been paid if the weekly benefit
amount had been calculated as 1 percent of a claimant's annual wages are not charged. In
addition, funds are first requisitioned from the Reed Act funds in the amount of the benefits
that are not effectively charged because the social cost factor rate is reduced to zero for
certain industries and in the amount of benefits paid that exceed the benefits that would have
been paid if the weekly benefit amount had been calculated as 1 percent of a claimant's
annual wages.
Summary of Bill:
Further revisions to unemployment benefits and taxes are made.
I. Benefits
(A) Weekly Benefit Amount
The language expiring "two quarter averaging" is removed. The formula specifying that the
weekly benefit amount be calculated using 3.85 percent of the claimant's average wages in
the two quarters of the base year in which wages were highest is made permanent.
(B) "Good Cause" Quits
The language limiting good cause quits for mandatory military transfers is removed. One
reason considered to be good cause is to relocate for the spouse's mandatory military transfer,
regardless of where the individual relocates.
(C) Construction
The provision expiring the liberal construction requirement is repealed. The requirement that
the Employment Security Act be liberally construed to reduce involuntary unemployment to
the minimum is made permanent.
II. Taxes
(A) Tax Rates
Beginning in 2007, the maximum tax rate for specified industries, including agriculture and
fishing, is reduced from 6.0 percent to 5.7 percent.
The expiration date for the "zero" graduated social cost factor rate for specified industries,
including agriculture and fishing, is changed from June 30, 2007, to December 2007.
The method used to reduce the flat social cost factor rate (under which the rate is reduced
depending on the trust fund balance on September 1) is modified as follows:
The total social cost is calculated using four years of contribution and benefit data rather than
one year of data.
Various changes in the calculation of the social cost factor rate that applied only to rate year
2007 are deleted.
The solvency tax applies only if the trust fund balance has fewer than eight months of
benefits rather than six months of benefits.
(B) Taxable Wage Base
Beginning in 2007, the cap on the taxable wage base is reduced from 80 percent to 75 percent
of the state "average annual wage for contribution purposes."
(C) Experience Rating
The language specifying that, in Fiscal Year 2007, certain benefits are not charged and that
certain funds are first requisitioned from the Reed Act funds is removed.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.
Testimony For: This bill adopts all reasonable recommendations made by Dr. Wayne
Vroman to the task force. It balances interests in lowering unemployment insurance costs,
achieving benefit equity, and maintaining a healthy and solvent trust fund.
When you compare this bill and Second Engrossed Senate Bill 6097 (2ESB 6097) with
respect to costs and benefits, you will find that it brings us somewhere in the middle.
The bill leaves us in the mainstream concerning two quarter averaging. It follows Dr.
Vroman's highest recommendation, which was restoring two quarter averaging. The
Legislature can permanently restore two quarter averaging, and still achieve substantial
savings. The wage replacement rate for a majority of workers will be about 50 percent,
which is the national standard.
The bill leaves us without further discriminatory practices. It makes one small change to
ensure that military families are treated in the same manner, regardless of which state they are
transferred to. Quit to follow protection keeps families together.
The bill restores liberal construction, which is both a national standard and a bedrock
principle of the unemployment insurance system. When interpreting an unemployment
insurance law, it is a moral imperative to interpret the statute in a manner to reduce
involuntary unemployment and ease suffering.
The bill includes tax changes suggested by the Employment Security Department. It lowers
the taxable wage based to 75 percent of the average annual wage, which lowers the tax cap on
high wage employers. It smooths the social cost rate by using four years of costs instead of
one year. It provides for a variable flat social cost tax rate so that, when the trust fund is
high, the social tax goes down. It helps small employers who only pay social costs. It lowers
the maximum total tax rate for agriculture and fishing from 6 percent to 5.7 percent. It also
changes the trigger for the solvency surcharge from six months to eight months, which
ensures that the trust fund stays healthy. The cumulative cost savings will be $1.5 billion
between 2006 and 2014.
There are currently excess funds in the Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund. In past years,
we have had similar circumstances and have made changes, like adopting the AA tax
schedule, to drain funds out of the fund. Substitute Senate Bill 6885 does the same thing,
partly by increasing benefits and partly by decreasing taxes.
The data runs have been done and have been broken down by North American Industry
Classification System codes (NAICS codes). The runs show reductions in all of the rate
classes.
The construction industry is different. Construction workers are always working themselves
out of a job. When contractors get a bid, they inflate crews. As soon as the work is done,
they need to lay off the crews and get the workers off the payroll. Unlike workers in other
industries, workers in the construction industry do not exhaust available benefits. They draw
benefits for a shorter time. Under an experience-rated system, unemployment rates for
contractors go up. It is difficult for contractors to have workers available when they need
them and not pay unemployment insurance when workers are laid off.
When 2ESB 6097 was enacted, the savings were unknown. Now, the savings are known.
The savings includes $93 million from freezing the maximum benefit amount, $43 million
from freezing the number of weeks, $24 million from voluntary quit denials, and $25 million
from administrative changes. When Engrossed House Bill 2255 was enacted, there was still
a net savings of $47 million from reducing the multiplier and restoring two-quarter
averaging. Overall, that is more than $200 million in savings.
2ESB 6097 created a more experience-rated system and decreased socialized costs. It is
important to keep in mind that the majority of 2ESB 6097 stays in place. There are only two
other states with equal or better experience rating than Washington.
Washington has a long history of always having a higher unemployment rate than the rest of
the country. There should be a recognition that, because there will be higher unemployment
in Washington, there should be a more generous system. Everyone, not just unemployed
workers, rely on the system in bad times.
There should be a focus on people who are getting benefits that they are not entitled to and
employers who are not paying the taxes that they are supposed to. No one who is entitled to
benefits should be denied, and no one who is not entitled should get one red cent. It is better
to use a scalpel to cut out the employers or employees who are gaming the system rather than
saying we are too lazy to figure it out.
Labor made huge concessions in 2003. Workers lost their homes, had their power shut off,
and suffered in other ways. Labor compromised by going to a 3.85 percent multiplier even
though the unemployment insurance system could handle a 4.0 percent multiplier.
Policies that penalize repeat claimants who, through no fault of their own, are laid off year
after year should not be implemented. Such a policy would undermine the viability of
Washington's agricultural industry. Agricultural workers rely on unemployment insurance
when they do not have employment. Latino business owners also suffer from reductions in
benefits paid to agricultural workers.
Community colleges are repeat users of part-time faculty, and therefore, part-time faculty
members use unemployment insurance. It is the only way these faculty members can
continue teaching.
(Neutral) The Employment Security Department's highest priority is to protect the solvency
of the trust fund and to provide a system where unemployed workers are adequately
supported in tough times, businesses pay their fair share, and the system does not whipsaw
back and forth every year, creating confusion for workers and businesses.
The trust fund is doing unexpectedly and surprisingly well. If taxes and benefits are not
brought into balance, the trust fund will grow by billions in the next few years. The U.S.
Department of Labor recommends having 12 months of benefits in the trust fund. In 2005,
Washington had 15 months. In 2014, Washington will have 20 months or more. These
amounts are greater than necessary to keep the trust fund solvent.
The benefits and taxes in the system need to be brought back into alignment. The question
for the Legislature is how to allocate excess reserve funds to restore balance to system. The
fairest approach is to do a little of both. According to our analysis, the trust fund will
continue to be solvent even if benefits are increased and taxes are reduced.
It is imperative to pass something this year to avoid reprogramming computers twice in the
next 16 months. If changes are not made until 2007, the agency will have to work for six
months to make the changes for the sunset of the 2005 legislation, and then make additional
changes for the 2007 legislation. The agency would waste months of work and millions of
dollars.
Testimony Against: As written now, SSB 6885 lowers the balance in the trust fund more
and more each year. It slowly spends down the savings to fund increased benefits. In a
recession, it spends down the savings to six months of benefits, which business and labor
have agreed is too low. It disguises a draw down of the trust fund as a tax break. SSB 6855
talks about savings, but out in 2014, the system still does not balance. Benefits are still
greater than taxes, so the system never appears to stabilize.
The most troubling factor is the lack of data, and the only available data shows the system not
balancing out. There is not any data that breaks down the effects of SSB 6885 by industry
level. The available data shows that unemployment insurance costs in Washington continue
to be twice the national average.
The task force has not finished its work. It has not yet taken Dr. Vroman's recommendations
and come up with a proposal. A reasonable approach is within our grasp. A situation where
business can put a proposal on the table is close. The Legislature should give business and
labor time to come up with a reasonable solution. The Legislature has until the middle of
next year to act. It is not necessary to act this year.
SSB 6885 is neither a solution nor a compromise. It will only increase costs and shift the
burden among industry. A fair, long-term solution is needed so that the Legislature does not
come back to this issue year after year.
SSB 6885 is unfair. Benefits will be the same for full-time workers as part-time workers.
Some workers will get twice as much as others that earn the same amount. Taxes will shift
from some employers to other employers. Some businesses will subsidize others. This
proposal does not assure solvency or stability.
We are contemplating the fifth change in six years. Yearly changes are frustrating for
business and for labor. We want to come up with a solution that lets us leave this system
alone for awhile. We want a solution that results in stability and predictability.
For the food industry, SSB 6885 will result in lower worker benefits and increased employer
costs. Benefits will be increased for higher-paid construction workers and decreased for
UFCW grocery workers. Benefits will be increased for seasonal workers over year-round
workers. It will take the food industry back to the conditions that existed prior to enactment
of the 2003 reforms. At that time, a significant part of our taxes went towards paying other
employers' costs.
The construction industry is a high cost industry. Layoffs are not unexpected. When the job
is done, the workers are laid off. Employers know that and pay a good wage to the workers.
Year after year, the same people are receiving benefits. In 2003 we tried to do something
about the repeat situation, and in 2006 we still need to do something about it.
The construction industry agreed to the changes in 2ESB 6097, knowing that the tax rate
would go up. However, there was another side of that coin and that has now been removed.
The construction industry will stay at the same tax rate under SSB 6885, and will not cover
its own costs. Other industries will pay for the construction industry's costs, and that is not
equitable. Seasonal workers will be paid the same as year-round, stable workers, and that is
not equitable
More than 60 percent of the fishing industry is currently in rate class 40 and, no matter what
they do, they will stay in rate class 40. The fishing industry needs relief. SSB 6885 does not
provide it. The fishing industry was promised an opportunity to deal with seasonality the
next time that the issue of unemployment insurance came up.
Unemployment insurance is among the top five problems faced by small business. These
changes greatly decrease the ability of small businesses to provide other benefits. Thousands
of small businesses are paying more than they cost the system. SSB 6885 only increases that
problem. It creates more socialized costs, and does not provide a seasonal fix. It also
restores liberal construction, which makes decisions biased in favor of the employee.
Small business is not being heard. Our small business needs to hire two more employees to
handle our increased volume, but the cost of unemployment taxes per employee is too high to
hire additional staff. Please give very careful thought to the ramifications of the proposed
changes for companies like ours. Please let the parties work towards a true compromise.
There is a win-win approach if both sides are willing to give a little. One way is to pay
benefits using two quarter averaging and a 3.67 percent multiplier, charge benefits using four
quarter averaging and a 4.0 percent multiplier, and add a buy down factor when the trust fund
is ten months or grater. This proposal could restore 92 percent of benefits that were reduced
by moving from two quarter averaging to four quarter averaging. The difference is about
$120 million in benefits versus tax payments. We can each take an equal share in covering
that difference. We can pay that difference through social taxes and buy downs. For
example, there could be a reduction in the social tax, a requirement for 1.5 high quarter
earnings with increased hours, a fishing industry opt-in, or a limit on high-wage recipiency.
These options show that we can come up with solution with a little bit of give from everyone.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Owen Linch, Joint Council of Teamsters Local 28; Dave
Johnson, Washington State Building and Construction Trades Council; Joe Crump, United
Food and Commercial Workers; Jeff Johnson, Washington State Labor Council; Bob Abbott,
Washington and Northern Idaho District Council of Laborers; Pamela Crone, Unemployment
Law Project and Amalgamated Transit Unit; Eric Nicholson, United Farm Workers; Geraldo
Rios; Richard King, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers; John Lowell,
Northwest Carpenters Union; and Phil Jack, American Federation of Teachers.
(Neutral) Karen Lee and Annette Copeland, Employment Security Department.
(Opposed) Mellani McAleenan, Association of Washington Business; Judy Coovert,
Printcom, Inc.; Clif Finch, Washington Food Industry; Jim Fenton, QFC; Larry Stevens,
National Electrical Contractors Association and Mechanical Contractors Association; Gina
Bacigalupo, National Electrical Contractors Association; Rick Slunaker, Associated General
Contractors; Ed Owens, Coalition of Coastal Fisheries and Purse Seine Vessels' Owners
Association; Carolyn Logue, National Federation of Independent Business; Mark Johnson,
Washington Retail Association; Gary Smith, Independent Business Association; Bruce
Beckett, Weyerhaueser; and Brian Minnich, Building Industry Association of Washington.