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SPONSOR: |
Stewart |
DATE TYPED: |
02/05/02 |
HB |
349 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Unemployment Compensation Revisions |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Woodlee |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY02 |
FY03 |
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
$1,340.4 |
|
Non-Recurring |
General Fund |
|
|
|
$955.8 |
Recurring |
Federal Funds |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
New Mexico Labor Department (NMDOL)
U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Bill 349 makes significant changes to the Unemployment Compensation system by paying benefits from an “administration” fund, increasing the average weekly benefit and extending the benefit period, eliminating the one week waiting period before an individual is eligible for benefits, expanding the definition of what constitutes good cause for voluntarily leaving work, and providing for deposit of benefits into a solvency fund.
Significant
Issues
The bill amends statute to read that all
benefits are payable from the unemployment compensation administration
fund. According to USDOL, the Federal
Unemployment Tax Act defines the three parts of a state’s unemployment funds as
1) a Clearing Account into which employer remittances are deposited, 2) the
State’s account in the Unemployment Trust Fund, and 3) a Benefit Payment
Account which contains amounts drawn down from the Unemployment Trust Fund for
the payment of unemployment compensation.
The “administration” account of a state may not be considered a special
“Benefit Payment Account.” Instead,
this account is used by states to deposit and hold federal grant monies such as
funds for salaries. Federal grant monies
may not be used to pay unemployment compensation benefits nor may they be
co-mingled with unemployment compensation benefits in the Benefit Payment
Account. Therefore,
if benefits are paid from the federal grant monies set aside for administrative
costs, federal conformity hearings could be brought against the state for
violating federal statutory requirements.
The bill also amends statute to increase the
individual’s weekly benefits. The bill
provides that the weekly benefit amount is equal to one twenty-third of the
total wages for insured work paid to him or her in that quarter of the base
period in which total wages were highest. Currently, the amount is equal to one
twenty-sixth. Also, the bill provides
that no benefit may be less than fifteen percent or more than sixty percent of
the state’s average weekly wage for all insured work. Currently, the threshold
is no less than ten percent or more than fifty-two and one-half percent.
The proposed bill removes the waiting week for unemployment compensation purposes. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, UIPL 14-81 contains provisions made under P.L. 96-499 that if the State does not provide for a waiting week for regular benefits, the state will not be entitled to reimbursement for the first week of extended benefits paid to any claimant; that is, the first week of what otherwise would be sharable between the State and the U.S. Department of Labor. Accordingly, New Mexico would have to bear 100 percent of the benefit costs for the first week of extended benefits paid if this bill is enacted.
HB 349 adds a provision that states no one will
be denied benefits because of compelling domestic circumstances for leaving
work, which is defined as:
Section 51-1-48 NMSA 1978 is proposed to be amended by adding Section D to establish a State “trigger” for extended benefits and sets the benefit amount payable. Section E, establishes a total benefit amount payable based on a “high-unemployment period” and sets forth conditions and the benefit amount payable. Section G provides that the benefits paid under Section D or E shall not be charged to the employer’s account but shall be charged to the solvency account. New Mexico does not have a “solvency account.” New legislation would be needed to create such a fund.
The New Mexico unemployment tax rate is between
0.5 and 5.4 percent. Rates are a
function of the number of unemployment insurance claims filed against a firm
and the total amount of those claims.
Employers are assigned a rate for each calendar year. The Unemployment Trust Fund is the amount of
reserves available for payment of unemployment benefits. New Mexico’s unemployment insurance trust
fund is one of the most solvent in the nation.
The following table and chart display the fund balance of the
Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund, the projected amount of contributions and
the projected amount of benefit payout, given a recession scenario and current
rates:
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
House Bill 349 does
not contain an appropriation. However,
both the U.S. Department of Labor and the New Mexico Labor Department indicate
a potential significant fiscal and administrative impact. In a letter to NMDOL, the regional
administrator for USDOL indicates that the bill will cause an undetermined
amount of administrative cost for NMDOL that must be absorbed within state resources,
as federal funds will not be available for such costs.
NMDOL indicates a
non-recurring cost of $1,340.4 which includes such items as reprogramming costs
for computer system modifications, professional services contracts for development
of the system, furniture and equipment for additional personnel, and costs for
facilities for additional personnel. A
letter from the USDOL states that these costs cannot be covered using federal
funds and therefore would require state general fund support. The agency also indicates recurring costs
from $955.8. These recurring costs
include ten additional staff, eight for State Office Claims and two for the
Unemployment Insurance Tax Section, and the associated overhead costs for such
staffing levels. The Unemployment
Insurance bureau within the NMDOL is 100 percent federally funded. The agency would have to absorb the
recurring costs within their federal appropriations, which may or may not be
available.
Additionally, the
NMDOL suggests that the extended benefits could increase the payout of benefits
to individuals, thus reducing the balance in the trust fund. This will lead to higher unemployment tax
rates charged to employers in order to maintain the solvency of the Unemployment
Insurance Trust Fund.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The New Mexico Labor Department indicates that the emergency clause attached to this bill would put a significant time-burden upon the agency. The agency is currently engaged in a project to re-engineer the entire unemployment insurance application and payment system, moving from a paper-based system to an electronic-based one, including a call center. Some portions of this project would have to be stopped and modified if the proposed changes are adopted.
RELATIONSHIP
House Bill 349 relates
to House Bill 348 and Senate Bill 324 which also propose significant changes to
the unemployment insurance system.
MW/njw
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