Sentinel & Enterprise

Decision time nears on rate hikes

- By Matt Murphy

When a bill filed by Gov. Charlie Baker to limit unemployme­nt insurance rate increases on employers in 2021 died on the vine in the frenzied finish to the legislativ­e session in early January, it didn’t seem like a big deal.

Supportive lawmakers and business groups said companies would appreciate time to plan, but they noted that unemployme­nt insurance bills wouldn’t come due for the first quarter until April. There was plenty of time to sort it out.

It’s now March, and time has just about run out.

“We’ve gotten a lot of helpful feedback from the business community. The bill is under active review right now. We’re mindful of the timeline here,” Rep. Josh Cutler, the new House chair of the Committee on Labor and Workforce Developmen­t, told the News Service this week.

When his bill from last session didn’t make it across the finish line, Baker filed a new version that would limit the per-employee increase in unemployme­nt insurance in 2021. That bill was referred straight to the House Ways and Means Committee.

Because of the high rates of unemployme­nt that climbed from a prepandemi­c low of 2.8% to a high of 17.7% in June, the trust fund used to pay unemployme­nt claims has been drained. To replenish it, businesses are looking at a 60% increase in their rates unless the Legislatur­e acts.

“Bringing people back to work is an immediate priority for AIM members and policymake­rs in the State House. Doing so will be virtually impossible, however, if money that can and should be used towards paychecks and employee benefits is diverted to the depleted Trust Fund instead,” Brooke Thomson, executive vice president of Associated Industries of Massachuse­tts, said in a blog post this week.

As the calendar turned to March, the business community began to ratchet up the pressure again on Beacon Hill, calling for the House and Senate to act immediatel­y on the governor’s bill.

Without action, employers are on track to see their rates increase from an average of $539 per employee to $866, an almost 60% increase. The governor’s bill would slow the growth in the rates to an average of $635 in 2021 and $665 per employee in 2022, according to AIM.

The latest unemployme­nt trust fund report from January forecast a deficit of more than $4.7 billion by the end of the year, with an estimated $4.82 billion in benefits to be paid out against $2.45 billion employer contributi­ons to the system.

The fund ended 2020 almost $2.4 billion in the red, and the state borrowed $2.2 billion from the federal unemployme­nt insurance account with a loan that will start accruing interest on March 14.

The Massachuse­tts Taxpayers Foundation in a white paper published Monday flagged two issues associated with unemployme­nt insurance, starting with the rates.

Allowing the rates to spike at the end of March would hinder job retention and creation, the business-backed think tank concluded.

The state must also repay the federal loans without jeopardizi­ng the solvency of the fund or its ability to pay out benefits. Additional borrowing of $3 billion is expected in 2021 to meet benefit obligation­s, and even increased employer contributi­ons cannot be used to pay off the interest on the federal loans.

“In spite of the complexity of the issue, it is apparent that the UI tax schedule must be frozen prior to April 1st and now is the time to put in place a plan to repay federal loans,” the MTF report stated.

Since the start of the new session, the Legislatur­e has prioritize­d the quick repassage of a climate change bill and a temporary extension of vote-by-mail authority, but little has been said about whether unemployme­nt insurance rates should be allowed to go up.

Senate Ways and Means Chairman Michael Rodrigues only briefly mentioned to Administra­tion and Finance Secretary Michael Heffernan at a budget hearing Tuesday that unemployme­nt insurance was one of the “very, very timely” issues he looked forward to working with the administra­tion on, along with the tax issues associated with Paycheck Protection Program grants to Massachuse­tts businesses.

One State House official said House and Senate leaders were concerned about the appearance of doing too much at the same time to benefit employers, and were negotiatin­g to include some types of benefits for workers in any final bill. “Politicall­y it presents a bit of a challenge,” the official said.

House Speaker Ronald Mariano did not respond to a request for comment this week on the bill.

 ?? Gov. Charlie Baker ??
Gov. Charlie Baker

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