Introduced
by
To authorize a change in the formula that determines employer payroll tax assessments to a state fund that provides expeditious payment of unemployment benefits, based on whether the fund has sufficient money to cover expected claims.
Referred to the Committee on Economic Development and International Investment
Reported without amendment
With the recommendation that the substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Amendment offered
by
To tie-bar the bill to Senate Bill 525, meaning this bill cannot become law unless that one does also. SB 525 would increase unemployment benefits.
The amendment failed 10 to 25 (details)
Amendment offered
by
To tie-bar the bill to House Bill 4655, meaning this bill cannot become law unless that one does also. HB 4655 would increase unemployment benefits.
The amendment failed 10 to 25 (details)
Passed in the Senate 26 to 9 (details)
Referred to the Committee on Workforce and Talent Development
Reported without amendment
Without amendment and with the recommendation that the bill pass.
Amendment offered
by
To revise the amount of reserves that must be kept in the state insurance fund the bill would affect from a dollar figure ($2.5 billion) to an amount that would based on an specified adequacy calculation.
The amendment failed by voice vote
Passed in the House 60 to 46 (details)
To authorize a change in the formula that determines employer payroll tax assessments to a state fund that provides expeditious payment of unemployment benefits, based on whether the fund has sufficient money to cover expected claims.