GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2017
H 1
HOUSE BILL 5*
Short Title: Unemployment Insurance Technical Changes. |
(Public) |
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Sponsors: |
Representatives Howard, Arp, Warren, and Setzer (Primary Sponsors). |
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Referred to: |
Commerce and Job Development, if favorable, Finance |
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January 26, 2017
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT TO MAKE TECHNICAL, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND CLARIFYING CHANGES TO THE UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE LAWS, AS RECOMMENDED BY THE JOINT LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE ON UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
PART I. DISASTER UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
SECTION 1.(a) G.S. 96‑1(b) is amended by adding a new subdivision to read:
"§ 96‑1. Title and definitions.
...
(b) Definitions. – The following definitions apply in this Chapter:
...
(14a) Federal disaster declaration. – Declaration of a major natural disaster by the President under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, provided that the declaration allows disaster unemployment assistance under the federal act.
…."
SECTION 1.(b) G.S. 96‑11.3(b)(2) reads as rewritten:
"§ 96‑11.3. Noncharging of benefits.
...
(b) To Any Base Period Employer. – Benefits paid to an individual may not be charged to the account of an employer of the individual if the benefits paid meet any of the following descriptions:
...
(2) They were paid to an
individual for unemployment due directly to a major natural disaster declared
by the President pursuant to the Disaster Relief Act of 1970, and the
individual receiving the benefits would have been eligible for disaster
unemployment assistance under this federal act if the individual had not
received benefits under this Chapter.covered by a federal disaster declaration."
SECTION 1.(c) G.S. 96‑14.1(b) reads as rewritten:
"§ 96‑14.1. Unemployment benefits.
...
(b) Valid Claim. – To obtain
benefits, an individual must file a valid claim for unemployment benefits,
register for work, and have a weekly benefit amount calculated pursuant to
G.S. 96‑14.2(a) that equals or exceeds fifteen dollars ($15.00). An
individual must serve a one‑week waiting period for each claim filed. filed,
except no waiting period applies under this subsection to a claim for unemployment
due directly to a disaster covered by a federal disaster declaration. A
valid claim is one that meets the employment and wage standards in this
subsection for the individual's base period. A valid claim for a second benefit
year is one that meets the employment and wage standards in this subsection
since the beginning date of the prior benefit year and before the date the new
benefit claim is filed:
...."
SECTION 1.(d) G.S. 96‑14.9 is amended by adding a new subsection to read:
"§ 96‑14.9. Weekly certification.
(a) Requirements. – An individual's eligibility for a weekly benefit amount is determined on a week‑to‑week basis. An individual must meet all of the requirements of this section for each weekly benefit period. An individual who fails to meet one or more of the requirements is ineligible to receive benefits until the condition causing the ineligibility ceases to exist:
(1) File a claim for benefits.
(2) Report as requested by the Division and present valid photo identification meeting the requirements of subsection (k) of this section.
(3) Meet the work search requirements of subsection (b) of this section.
(b) Work Search Requirements. – The Division must find that the individual meets all of the following work search requirements:
(1) The individual is able to work.
(2) The individual is available to work.
(3) The individual is actively seeking work.
(4) The individual accepts suitable work when offered.
...
(l) Federal Disaster Declaration. – An individual who is unemployed due directly to a disaster covered by a federal disaster declaration has satisfied the work search requirements for any given week in the benefit period unless the Division requires the individual to conduct a work search."
SECTION 1.(e) This section becomes effective October 1, 2016.
PART II. paid time off excluded from Severance pay
SECTION 2.(a) G.S. 96‑15.01(c) reads as rewritten:
"(c) Separation Payments.
– An individual is not unemployed if, with respect to the entire calendar week,
the individual receives or will receive as a result of the individual's
separation from work remuneration in one or more of the forms listed in this
subsection. in any form. Amounts paid to an individual for paid time off
that was available, but unused, before the individual's separation under a
written policy in effect before the individual's separation are not remuneration
as a result of separation. If the remuneration is given in a lump sum, the
amount must be allocated on a weekly basis as if it had been earned by the
individual during a week of employment. An individual may be unemployed, as
provided in subsection (b) of this section, if the individual is receiving
payment applicable to less than the entire week:week.
(1) Wages in lieu of notice.
(2) Accrued vacation pay.
(3) Terminal leave pay.
(4) Severance pay.
(5) Separation pay.
(6) Dismissal payments or wages by whatever name."
SECTION 2.(b) This section becomes effective July 1, 2017, and applies to claims for benefits filed on or after that date.
PART III. MISCELLANEOUS CHANGES
SECTION 3.(a) G.S. 96‑9.7(b) reads as rewritten:
"§ 96‑9.7. Surtax for the Unemployment Insurance Reserve Fund.
(a) Surtax Imposed. – A surtax is imposed on an employer who is required to make a contribution to the Unemployment Insurance Fund equal to twenty percent (20%) of the contribution due under G.S. 96‑9.2. Except as provided in this section, the surtax is collected and administered in the same manner as contributions. Surtaxes collected under this section must be credited to the Unemployment Insurance Reserve Fund established under G.S. 96‑6.2. Interest and penalties collected on unpaid surtaxes imposed by this section must be credited to the Supplemental Employment Security Administration Fund. Penalties collected on unpaid surtaxes imposed by this section must be transferred to the Civil Penalty and Forfeiture Fund established in G.S. 115C‑457.1.
(b) Suspension of Tax. – The
tax does not apply in a calendar year if, as of the preceding August 1 computation
date, September 1 of the preceding calendar year, the amount in the
State's account in the Unemployment Trust Fund equals or exceeds one billion
dollars ($1,000,000,000)."
SECTION 3.(b) G.S. 96‑15(b)(2) reads as rewritten:
"(2) Adjudication. – When a protest is made by the claimant to the initial or monetary determination, or a question or issue is raised or presented as to the eligibility of a claimant, or whether any disqualification should be imposed, or benefits denied or adjusted pursuant to G.S. 96‑18, the matter shall be referred to an adjudicator. The adjudicator may consider any matter, document or statement deemed to be pertinent to the issues, including telephone conversations, and after such consideration shall render a conclusion as to the claimant's benefit entitlements. The adjudicator shall notify the claimant and all other interested parties of the conclusion reached. The conclusion of the adjudicator shall be deemed the final decision of the Division unless within 30 days after the date of notification or mailing of the conclusion, whichever is earlier, a written appeal is filed pursuant to rules adopted by the Division. The Division shall be deemed an interested party for such purposes and may remove to itself or transfer to an appeals referee the proceedings involving any claim pending before an adjudicator.
Provided,
any interested employer shall be allowed 14 days 10 days from the
mailing or delivery of the notice of the filing of a claim against the
employer's account, whichever first occurs, to file with the Division its
protest of the claim in order to have the claim referred to an adjudicator for
a decision on the question or issue raised. Any protest filed must contain a
basis for the protest and supporting statement of facts, and the protest may
not be amended after the 14‑day 10‑day period from
the mailing or delivery of the notice of filing of a claim has expired. No
payment of benefits shall be made by the Division to a claimant until one of
the following occurs:
a. The employer has filed a timely protest to the claim.
b. The 14‑day 10‑day
period for the filing of a protest by the employer has expired.
c. A determination under this subdivision has been made.
Provided further, no question or issue may be raised or presented by the Division as to the eligibility of a claimant, or whether any disqualification should be imposed, after 45 days from the first day of the first week after the question or issue occurs with respect to which week an individual filed a claim for benefits. None of the provisions of this subsection shall have the force and effect nor shall the same be construed or interested as repealing any other provisions of G.S. 96‑18.
An employer shall receive written notice of the employer's appeal rights and any forms that are required to allow the employer to protest the claim. The forms shall include a section referencing the appropriate rules pertaining to appeals and the instructions on how to appeal."
SECTION 3.(c) This section becomes effective July 1, 2017, applies to claims for benefits filed on or after that date, and applies to tax calculations on or after that date.
PART IV. FEDERAL CONFORMING CHANGES
SECTION 4.(a) G.S. 96‑11.7 reads as rewritten:
"§ 96‑11.7. Acquisition of employer and transfer Transfer
of account to another employer.
(a) Mandatory Transfer. –
Acquisition of a Business. – When an employer acquires all of the organization,
trade, or business of another employer, the account of the predecessor must
be transferred as of the date of the acquisition to the successor employer for
use in the determination of the successor's contribution rate. This mandatory
transfer subsection does not apply when there is no common ownership
between the predecessor and the successor and the successor acquired the assets
of the predecessor in a sale in bankruptcy. In this circumstance, the
successor's contribution rate is determined without regard to the predecessor's
contribution rate.
(b) Consent. – Acquisition
of Portion of a Business. – When a distinct and severable portion of an
employer's organization, trade, or business is transferred to a
successor employer and the successor employer continues to operate the acquired
organization, trade, or business, the portion of the account of the
transferring employer that related attributable to the transferred
business may, with the approval of the Division, be transferred by mutual
consent from the transferring employer to the successor employer. employer
as of the date of the transfer. A successor employer that is a related
entity of the transferring employer is eligible for a transfer from the
transferring employer's account only to the extent permitted by rules adopted
by the Division. No transfer may be made to the account of an employer that has
ceased to be an employer under G.S. 96‑11.9.
If a transfer of part or all of an
account is allowed but is not mandatory, under this subsection, the
successor employer requesting the transfer may make a request for transfer by
filing an application for transfer with the Division within two years after the
date the business was transferred or the date of notification by the
Division of the right to request an account transfer, whichever is later. If
the application is approved and the application was filed within 60 days after
notification from the Division of the right to request a transfer, the transfer
is effective as of the date the business was transferred. If the application is
approved and the application was filed later than 60 days after notification
from the Division, the effective date of the transfer is the first day of the
calendar quarter in which the application was filed.transferred.
If the effective date of a
transfer of an account under this subsection is after the computation date in a
calendar year, the Division must recalculate the contribution rate for the transferring
employer and the successor employer based on their account balances on the
effective date of the account transfer. The recalculated contribution rate
applies for the calendar year beginning after the computation date.
(c) Continuity of
Control. – Any new employer that has continuity of control with an existing
business enterprise shall continue to be the same employer as the existing
business enterprise for the purposes of this Chapter as before the existence of
the new employer. The Division shall assign any new employer with continuity of
control to the account of the existing business enterprise. Any new employer
with continuity of control shall not request or maintain an account with the
Division other than the account of the existing business enterprise. If a new
employer receives a new account and the Division subsequently finds that such
new employer has continuity of control with an existing business enterprise,
the Division shall recalculate the annual tax rates based on the combined annual
account balances of the new employer and the existing business enterprise.Acquisition
by Related Party. – If an employer transfers its business, or a portion
thereof, to another person and, at the time of the transfer, there is
substantially common ownership, management, or control of the predecessor employer
and the transferee, then the portion of the account attributable to the
transferred business must be transferred to the transferee as of the date of
the transfer.
Continuity of control Substantially common ownership, management, or control exists if one or more persons, entities, or other
organizations owning, managing, or controlling the business enterprise
remain in ownership, management, or control of the new employer. transferee.
Control may occur by means of ownership of the organization conducting the business
enterprise, business, ownership of assets necessary to conduct the business
enterprise, business, security arrangements or lease arrangements
covering assets necessary to conduct the business enterprise, business,
or a contract when the ownership, stated arrangements, or contract provide
for or allow direction of the internal affairs or conduct of the business
enterprise. business. Control is not affected by changes in the form
of a business enterprise, business, reorganization of a business
enterprise, business, or expansion of a business enterprise.business.
(c1) Acquisition to Obtain Lower Contribution Rate. – The account of the predecessor employer will not be transferred if the Division finds that a person acquired the business solely or primarily for the purpose of obtaining a lower contribution rate.
(d) Contribution Rate. – Notwithstanding
the other provisions in this section, when an account is transferred in its entirety
to a successor employer, the transferring employer's contribution rate is the
standard beginning rate.If the effective date of a transfer of an
account under this section is after the computation date in a calendar year,
the Division must recalculate the contribution rate for the transferring
employer and the transferee based on their account balances on the effective
date of the account transfer.
Notwithstanding the other
provisions in this section, if a successor employer to whom an account is transferred
was an employer as of the date of the business transfer, the account transfer
does not affect the successor employer's contribution rate for the calendar
year in which the business was transferred. If the successor employer was not
an employer as of the date of the business transfer, the successor employer's
contribution rate for the year in which the business transfer occurs is the
standard beginning rate unless one of the following applies:
(1) The account transfer is a mandatory transfer, in
which case the contribution rate of the successor employer is the contribution
rate of the transferring employer.
(2) The account transfer is by consent and the
successor employer filed an application within 60 days of the business
transfer, in which case the contribution rate of the successor employer is the
contribution rate of the transferring employer. If the business was transferred
from more than one employer and the transferring employers had different
contribution rates, the contribution rate of the successor employer is the rate
calculated as of the effective date of the account transfers.
(e) Liability for
Contributions. – An employer that, by operation of law, purchase, or otherwise
is the successor to an employer liable for contributions becomes liable for
contributions on the day of the succession. This provision subsection
does not affect the successor's liability as otherwise prescribed by law
for unpaid contributions due from the predecessor.
(f) Deceased or Insolvent
Employer. – When the organization, trade, or business of a deceased
person or of an insolvent debtor is taken over and operated by an
administrator, executor, receiver, or trustee in bankruptcy, the new employer
automatically succeeds to the account and contribution rate of the deceased
person or insolvent debtor without the necessity of filing an application for
the transfer of the account.
(g) Continuation of Existing Account. – Any transferee with substantially common ownership, management, or control of an existing business must not request or maintain an account with the Division other than the account of the existing business. If a transferee receives a new account and the Division subsequently finds that such new employer has substantially common ownership, management, or control with an existing business, the Division must recalculate the annual tax rates based on the combined annual account balances of the new employer and the existing business."
SECTION 4.(b) This section becomes effective July 1, 2017.
PART V. EFFECTIVE DATE
SECTION 5. Except as otherwise provided, this act is effective when it becomes law.