SENATE BILL REPORT
SSB 6359
As Passed Senate, February 6, 2006
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:
Committee Activity: Labor, Commerce, Research & Development: 1/26/06 [DPS]
Passed Senate: 2/6/06, 44-0.
SENATE COMMITTEE ON LABOR, COMMERCE, RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6359 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.Signed by Senators Kohl-Welles, Chair; Franklin, Vice Chair; Parlette, Ranking Minority Member; Brown, Hewitt, Honeyford, Keiser and Prentice.
Staff: Jennifer Strus (786-7316)
Background: 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, 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).
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:
Summary of Bill: If ESD determines that a significant purpose of transferring a business was
to obtain a reduced array calculation factor rate, then one of two actions may occur:
If the successor was an employer at the time the transfer occurred, then the experience rating
accounts of all employers are combined into a single account and the employers are assigned the
higher of the predecessor or successor array calculation factor rate which takes effect the date of
the transfer; or if the successor is not an employer at the time the transfer occurs, then the
experience rating account of the acquired business cannot be transferred to the successor and,
instead, a new employer rate is assigned.
If ESD assesses a delinquency against an employer, and the delinquency or a part of it is due to
an intent to knowingly evade the successorship provisions, then for the rate year in which the
Commissioner assesses the delinquency and for the following three rate years, the Commissioner
must assign to the employer and to any business knowingly promoting the evasion of
successorship provisions, a civil penalty assessment rate in addition to the assigned rate that
increases the array calculation factor rate for that rate year to the maximum plus 2 percent, which
total rate is not limited by any maximum array calculation factor rate.
The employer may also be criminally prosecuted. An employer subject to the civil penalty
assessment must also pay the reasonable costs of auditing the employer's books and collecting the
penalty.
A person, not an employer, who knowingly evades, knowingly attempts to evade, or knowingly
promotes the evasion of the successorship provisions is subject to a civil penalty of $5000 per
occurrence. The person must also pay the reasonable costs of auditing the employer's books and
collecting the penalty.
Beginning the January 1st after the transfer occurs, the successor's contribution rate for each rate
year will be based on an array calculation factor rate that combines the successor's experience
with payrolls and benefits and any experience assigned to the predecessor involved in the transfer.
If only a portion of the business was transferred, then the experience attributable to the acquired
portion is assigned to the successor if the successor is a "qualified employer," by including the
transferred experience. If the successor is not a "qualified employer" the contribution rate will
equal the sum of rates determined by the Commissioner as well as the transferred experience.
Beginning the January 1st after the transfer occurs, the predecessor's contribution rate or the array
calculation factor rate must be based on its experience with payrolls and benefits excluding the
experience of the transferred business or portion of the business transferred.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and is to be applied retroactively to January 1, 2006.
Testimony For: The unemployment insurance system is a closed system so that when an employer does not pay his or her unemployment taxes, the employers who do pay their taxes shoulder the burden. If the legislature does not pass this bill, as required by federal law, employers could lose up to $1 billion in FUTA credit and ESD could lose $88 million in administrative costs. This bill takes care of the shell entities and the sham transactions but not the professional employee organizations. The civil penalties are too low. An average SUTA dumping case, according to a GAO report, is $634,000 in evaded taxes. SUTA dumping destroys the experience rating system and creates more socialized costs to be borne by employers who do pay their taxes.
Testimony Against: None.
Testimony Other: The first section of the bill, which reads that "a purpose" of the transfer was
to lower taxes, broadens federal law and could affect innocent employers.
Who Testified: PRO: Karen Lee, Commissioner of Employment Security Department; Annette
Copeland, ESD; Jeff Johnson, WSLC; Jan Gee, Washington Staffing Association/Washington
Retail Association; Gary Smith, Independent Business Association.
OTHER: Mellani McAleenan, AWB; Rick Slunaker, AGC.