FINAL BILL REPORT

SHB 3057


 

 

 



C 92 L 04

Synopsis as Enacted

 

Brief Description: Conforming the social security offset provisions of Title 51 RCW to the modified federal social security retirement age and continuing to allow the state to implement an offset otherwise imposed by the federal government.

 

Sponsors: By House Committee on Commerce & Labor (originally sponsored by Representatives Conway, Wood, McCoy, Kenney, Condotta and Chase; by request of Department of Labor & Industries).


House Committee on Commerce & Labor

Senate Committee on Commerce & Trade


Background:

 

In 1956 when the Congress enacted the federal social security disability program, it included provisions to coordinate benefits received under more than one disability program. Social security disability benefits were reduced by the full amount of state or federal workers' compensation benefits that were also being paid to the individual. This offset provision was repealed in 1958, but reenacted again in 1965 after the Congress heard testimony that the duplication of disability benefits led to workers receiving more in disability payments than they had been receiving in take-home pay and that continuing the duplication of benefits might erode the states' workers' compensation programs.

 

The 1965 social security disability offset provisions include a "reverse offset" so that the benefit reduction may be taken by a state's workers' compensation program instead of the federal disability program. Washington permitted this reverse offset beginning in 1975. When Washington's law was enacted, it applied to persons under age 62 who were receiving social security disability payments. In 1982 this limit was raised to age 65 after federal law changed the age limit for social security disability payments. In 1986, the Legislature required the reverse offset to continue for workers who had reached age 65 and were receiving both federal retirement benefits and time-loss or pension benefits. Under federal law, the age of eligibility for social security retirement is no longer a predetermined age but depends on the year in which the individual attains a specified age.

 

Summary:

 

The age limit of 65 years for the disability benefit reverse offset provision is deleted. The Department must reduce industrial insurance time-loss or pensions benefits to account for social security disability benefits received by a worker who becomes 65 years of age on or after the Act's effective date.

 

Votes on Final Passage:

 

House 95  0

Senate 46  0

 

Effective: June 10, 2004