FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1407
C 327 L 07
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Funding the administration of Title 50 RCW, unemployment compensation.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Commerce & Labor (originally sponsored by Representatives Conway, Wood and Green; by request of Employment Security Department).
House Committee on Commerce & Labor
House Committee on Appropriations
Senate Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research & Development
Senate Committee on Ways & Means
Background:
The Employment Security Department (Department) administers the unemployment
compensation system and related funds, such as the Unemployment Compensation Fund and
the Administrative Contingency Fund. Moneys in the Unemployment Compensation Fund
may be used only for unemployment benefits. Most moneys in the Administrative
Contingency Fund may be expended when necessary for the proper administration of the
Employment Security Act and no federal funds are available for the particular expenditure.
Some moneys in the Administrative Contingency Fund, however, are subject to additional
limitations.
The Unemployment Compensation Fund includes 60 percent of contributions paid for
administration of the training benefits program. Qualified dislocated workers may receive
additional unemployment insurance benefits while they are in retraining. Employers are
required to pay additional contributions for administration of the training benefits program.
The contribution rate is one one-hundredth of 1 percent (.01 percent). Forty percent of these
contributions is retained in the Administrative Contingency Fund. The remaining 60 percent
is deposited in the Unemployment Compensation Fund.
The Administrative Contingency Fund includes certain claimant penalties. Overpayment
assessments are subject to an interest penalty of 1 percent for each month that payments are
delinquent. Interest penalties must be used, first, to fully fund Social Security number cross-match audits, and second, to fund other overpayment activities.
The Administrative Contingency Fund also includes certain employer penalties. When a
business is transferred to another employer or entity, the successorship provisions may
require a mandatory transfer of experience or prohibit the transfer. Penalties and interest
collected for evasion of the successorship provisions may be expended solely for prevention,
detection, and collection activities related to evasion of these provisions.
Summary:
Existing moneys are made generally available for administering the unemployment
compensation system and other programs under the Employment Security Act (Act). The
following moneys are included in the Administrative Contingency Fund:
Moneys in the Administrative Contingency Fund may be expended when necessary for the
proper administration of the Act and insufficient federal funds are available for the particular
expenditure.
The Department must conduct Social Security number cross-match audits or engage in other
more effective activities to prevent, detect, and recover overpayments. It also must engage in
prevention, detection, and collection activities related to evasion of the successorship
provisions.
Obsolete provisions, such as those applicable only to past biennia, are deleted.
Rules Authority: The bill does not address the rule-making powers of an agency.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 97 1
Senate 47 0 (Senate amended)
House 95 0 (House concurred)
Effective: July 1, 2007