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Rep. Brendan Williams, serving the 22nd District Serving the northern portion of Thurston County, including all of Olympia and portions of Lacey and Tumwater, and the unincorporated communities of Johnson Point, Cooper Point, Tanglewilde, Thompson Place and Boston Harbor. |
April 10, 2009
OLYMPIA – Thanks to a healthy and robust unemployment insurance trust
fund flush with cash, lawmakers in the state House voted to provide
employers a tax break worth hundreds of millions, while offering a modest
increase and better protections for unemployed workers.
Washington
is the first and only state in the nation to reduce unemployment insurance
rates for employers, thanks to state policies in place since 2003 that
reduced payouts to workers while streamlining rate classes for employers.
The move is noteworthy at a time when many other states are facing
bankrupt UI trust funds brought on by skyrocketing unemployment, forcing
them into tax increases for employers to sustain their benefit levels.
“Over the past six or so years, this Legislature has worked tirelessly
to make the UI system more equitable and less burdensome for business.
Consequently, businesses in our state have saved hundreds of millions, while
unemployed workers have received less,” said
State Rep. Steve Conway (D – Tacoma), the Chair of the House Commerce
and Labor committee. “This bill continues to reduce the tax burden on
business but in a way that also provides some benefit to the unemployed
workers.”
The bill was prompted by a non-conformity issue with
federal law, which could have led to higher tax rates for businesses. By
using the ample funds in the UI trust fund, this plan mitigates the cost of
federal conformity - a $452 million price tag – so employers are not forced
to pay that cost.
\In addition, this plan provides a permanent tax
break for businesses in the form of lower tax rates, increasing as the
economy improves and fewer jobs are lost. Over the next six years,
businesses will see their tax rate decrease, saving them an estimated $224
million.
House Democrats also amended the Senate version of the bill,
SSB 5963, to include a modest increase to the weekly benefit amount given to
unemployed workers in Washington, and authorized greater discretion to the
commissioner of the state Employment Security Department to grant benefits
in situations when a worker voluntarily quits.
“We’re providing
massive tax relief to employers in our state, but also doing the right thing
by our working families who have lost their jobs and are struggling to make
ends meet,” said
Rep. Tami Green (D – Lakewood). “As important as it is to help our
state’s businesses, it’s just as important to ensure our workers can pay
their rent and put food on the table.”
“ It’s a symbiotic
relationship; our workers need jobs, but we also need consumers who can keep
spending at our local businesses.”
State Rep. Brendan Williams (D –
Olympia), a member of the House Commerce and Labor committee also emphasized
the balance struck with the adopted House amendments: “A major win for
business has been balanced with hope for unemployed workers.”