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Landmark agreement announced on unemployment insurance bill
March 2, 2006
OLYMPIA – A breakthrough was achieved today as Democratic and Republican leaders
in the Senate and House of Representatives announced agreement on
Senate Bill 6885 to make permanent changes in the way in which unemployment
insurance benefits are calculated.
The House is expected to pass the measure this evening with changes agreed to by
the Senate. The bill would then return to the Senate for concurrence before
being sent to the governor for her signature.
Bill sponsor and chair of the Senate Labor, Commerce, Research & Development
Committee, Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, praised her colleagues for their
exceptional dedication to crafting a workable solution to a complex issue.
“We’ve spent countless hours individually with stakeholder groups and then
collectively to strike a balance among so many interests and needs,” Kohl-Welles
said. “None of us wanted to have to keep revisiting this issue year after year.
We wanted an agreement that could work — for our working people and for our
employer community. I’m appreciative of the hard work of this group in
developing a bill that we can all live with. This is one of the crowning
achievements of the session.”
“This is an historic and balanced compromise on unemployment insurance,” said
Rep. Steve Conway, D-Tacoma, chair of the
House Commerce and Labor Committee. “In 2003, legislation was passed over
labor’s objections. In ’05, business interests weren’t pleased with the end
result. Today we have a bill that protects claimants as well as reduces taxes
for business, and ensures a well-funded trust fund for the future.”
“All throughout these negotiations I’ve said that we needed to come to a
compromise that takes us to a fair and equitable system,” said Sen. Linda Evans
Parlette, R-Wenatchee, ranking Republican on the Senate Labor, Commerce,
Research & Development Committee. “With leadership from legislators on both
sides of the aisle, today we took a good first step to accomplishing that. I’m
so pleased to see that all the hard work my colleagues and I dedicated to the
Unemployment Insurance Task Force has culminated in this working compromise.”
“I’m proud of the work we did on this bill,” said Rep. Cary Condotta, R-East
Wenatchee, ranking Republican on the House Commerce and Labor Committee. “All of
us sat down at the table committed to come up with a workable solution. What
came out of the negotiation was a rate structure that will create less
subsidizing between rate classes and, most importantly, will stabilize rates for
our state’s businesses. It’s a solution for all involved and a true bipartisan
legislative effort.”
SB 6885 would retain the two-quarter averaging system put in place temporarily
in 2005 as the basis for determining benefits. The bill’s primary features
affecting benefits include:
• Two-quarter averaging, with an individual’s weekly benefit amount set at 3.85
percent of the average in the two quarters of the base year in which wages were
highest, and
• Considering it good cause when a spouse’s mandatory military transfer causes
relocation, regardless of the state to which the individual relocates. This
provision would apply to new claims on or after July 2, 2006.
The bill makes several important changes to the way unemployment taxes are
assessed to employers, including:
• Charging benefits as though the weekly benefit amount is 1 percent of wages in
all four quarters of the base year, or charging at four quarters.
• Reducing social taxes when the unemployment insurance trust fund contains
enough funding for 10 or more months of benefits.
• For seasonal industries such as agriculture, fishing and food processing, the
maximum tax rate would be capped at 5.4 percent until January 2008, and then
move to 5.7 percent.
In addition, the bill calls for the state Employment Security Department to look
into the issue of repeat episodes of unemployment, enhanced job search
requirements, employer turnover and the prevention of corporate fraud. Findings
and recommendations would be reported to committees of the Legislature by Dec.
1, 2006.
# # #
For more information: Kate Lykins Brown, (360) 786-7333
For interviews: Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, (360) 786-7670
For more information: Catherine Trinh, (360) 786-7503
For interviews: Sen. Linda Evans Parlette, (360) 786-7622
For more information: James Paribello, (360) 786-7843
For interviews: Rep. Steve Conway, (360) 786-7906
For more information: Bobbi Cussins, (360) 786-7252
For interviews: Rep. Cary Condotta, (360) 786-7954
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