No. 34155 (Amendment): Rule R994-401. Payment of Benefits  

  • (Amendment)

    DAR File No.: 34155
    Filed: 10/14/2010 04:09:02 PM

    RULE ANALYSIS

    Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:

    This amendment is to reflect changes in legislation.

    Summary of the rule or change:

    H.B. 18 which was passed in the 2010 General Session provides for an alternate base period which this proposed amendment reflects. Subsection 35A-4-401(2)(c) was changed to provide that after the $25 stimulus payments end, Social Security retirement will not be counted against unemployment benefits. This proposed amendment reflects that change. (DAR NOTE: H.B. 18 (2010) is found at Chapter 282, Laws of Utah 2010, and was effective 05/11/2010.)

    State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:

    Anticipated cost or savings to:

    the state budget:

    This is a federally-funded program so there are no costs or savings to the state budget.

    local governments:

    This is a federally-funded program so there are no costs of savings to local government.

    small businesses:

    There are no costs or savings to small businesses as there are no fees associated with this program and it is federally funded.

    persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local governmental entities:

    There are no costs or savings to any other persons as there are no fees associated with this program and it is federally funded.

    Compliance costs for affected persons:

    There are no costs or savings to any affected persons as there are no fees associated with this program and it is federally funded. These changes will not impact any employer's contribution rate.

    Comments by the department head on the fiscal impact the rule may have on businesses:

    There are no compliance costs associated with this change. There are no fees associated with this change. There will be no cost to anyone to comply with these changes. There will be no fiscal impact on any business. These changes will have no impact on any employer's contribution tax rate.

    Kristen Cox, Executive Director

    The full text of this rule may be inspected, during regular business hours, at the Division of Administrative Rules, or at:

    Workforce Services
    Unemployment Insurance
    140 E 300 S
    SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84111-2333

    Direct questions regarding this rule to:

    Interested persons may present their views on this rule by submitting written comments to the address above no later than 5:00 p.m. on:

    12/01/2010

    This rule may become effective on:

    12/08/2010

    Authorized by:

    Kristen Cox, Executive Director

    RULE TEXT

    R994. Workforce Services, Unemployment Insurance.

    R994-401. Payment of Benefits.

    R994-401-201. Weekly Benefit Amount (WBA), Maximum Benefit Amount (MBA), and Monetary Determination.

    (1) The formulas for determining the WBA and the MBA are found in Section 35A-4-401.

    (2) The wages used to determine the WBA and the MBA are limited to wages reported to the Department by base period employers and verifiable wages paid by additional base period employers reported by the claimant in the initial claim. If an employer does not report wages and the claimant can verify wages from that employer, those wages may be included.

    (3) The Department will send the claimant a "Notice of Monetary Determination." The notice will inform the claimant of the WBA, MBA, and the wages used to determine the claimant's monetary eligibility. The notice will also inform the claimant of his or her right to appeal the monetary determination. The claimant must notify the Department of any errors in the monetary determination. The time limit for notifying the Department of any errors or for appealing a monetary determination is the same as filing an appeal from an initial Department determination and is governed by rules R994-508-102 through R994-508-104.

    (4) The monetary determination is based on the wages actually paid during the base period regardless of when the work was performed.

    (5) To be monetarily eligible, a claimant must have earned base period wages of 1 and 1/2 times the high quarter wages and also meet a minimum dollar amount as established by the monetary base period wage requirement as defined in Section 35A-4-201.

    (6) For any claimant whose benefit year is effective on or before January 1, 2011, if the[If a] claimant is not monetarily eligible under the 1 and 1/2 times requirement in paragraph (5) of this section, but meets the monetary base period wage requirement, the claimant can still be eligible under this section if the claimant had earnings of at least five percent of the "monetary base period requirement for insured work," as defined in Subsection 35A-4-201(17), in each of at least 20 weeks during the base period. The earnings must be for work performed during each of the 20 weeks, all of which must fall within the base period, regardless of when the claimant received payment for the work. The requirement that the claimant show work and earnings in 20 weeks is only met if the claimant was paid wages as defined by the definition of "wages paid" in R994-401-202.

    (7) The dollar amount for each of the 20 weeks required to establish eligibility under subsection (6) of this section will be determined by the monetary base period requirement for insured work in effect for the calendar year in which the initial claim is filed even if some or all of the 20 weeks are in a different calendar year.

    (8) If the claimant is determined monetarily ineligible under the 1 and 1/2 times standard, and the claimant's benefit year is effective on or before January 1, 2011, it is the claimant's responsibility to show 20 weeks of covered employment which meet the minimum dollar amount. Acceptable proof of covered employment includes:

    (a) appropriately dated check stubs issued by the employer;

    (b) a written statement from the employer showing dates of employment and the amount of earnings for each week;

    (c) time cards;

    (d) canceled payroll checks; or

    (e) personal or business records kept in the normal course of employment that would substantiate work and earnings.

    (9) An employer's potential liability is based on its proportion of the claimant's base period wages. Employers will be informed of the wages used in determining a claimant's monetary entitlement, the employer's potential liability for benefits costs, and the right to and time limitation for requesting relief of charges or a correction to wages. A contributory employer is given a notice of all benefit costs each quarter and has the opportunity to report any errors or omissions to the Department at that time as well. The quarterly notices give the employer 30 days to advise the Department of any corrections, as provided in Subsection 35A-4-306(3).

    (10) A party failing to file a timely appeal or protest may lose its right to have the monetary determination corrected. An untimely appeal or protest may be considered if the party had good cause, as defined in R994-508-104.

    (11) The Department may revise the monetary determination after the expiration of the appeal time if there has been a mistake as to the facts or the revision would be substantial and required by fairness for a party who did not have access to the information and therefore could not have reasonably filed a timely appeal. The decision to revise a monetary determination after the appeal time has expired is discretionary with the Department.

     

    R994-401-203. Retirement or Disability Retirement Income.

    (1) A claimant's WBA is reduced by 100% of any retirement benefits, social security, pension, or disability retirement pay (referred to collectively in this section as "retirement benefits" or "retirement pay") received by the claimant. Except, for claims with an effective date on or after July 4, 2004, and on or before [June 27, 2010]December 11, 2010 the reduction for social security retirement benefits will only be 50%. For claims with an effective date on or after December 12, 2010, there is no reduction for social security retirement benefits. The payments must be:

    (a) from a plan contributed to by a base-period employer. Social security payments are counted if a base period employer contributed to social security even if the social security payment is not based on employment during the base period;

    (b) based on prior employment and the claimant qualifies because of age, length of service, disability, or any combination of these criteria. Disability payments must be based, at least in part, by length of service. Savings plans such as a 401(k) or IRA should not be used to reduce the WBA Payments from workers' compensation for temporary disability, black lung disability income, and benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs are not counted because the amount of the payment is based on disability and not on length of service. Payments received as a spouse or beneficiary are not counted. That portion of retirement benefits payable to a claimant's former spouse is not counted if the paying entity pays the former spouse directly and it is pursuant to court order or a signed, stipulated agreement in accordance with the law;

    (c) periodic and not made in a lump sum. Lump sum payments, even if drawn from the employer's contributions to a fund established for the purpose of retirement, are not treated as severance pay under Subsection 35A-4-405(7); and

    (d) payable during the benefit year. A claimant's WBA is not reduced if the claimant is eligible for, but not receiving, retirement income. However, if the claimant subsequently receives a retroactive payment of retirement benefits which, if received during the time unemployment insurance claims were filed, would have resulted in a reduced payment, an overpayment will be established. The period of time the payment represents, not the time of the receipt, is the determining factor. An assumption that a claimant is entitled to receive a pension, even if correct, is not sufficient basis to recompute the WBA. However, if a claimant has applied for a pension and expects to be determined eligible for a specific amount attributable to weeks when Unemployment Insurance benefits are payable, and the claimant is only awaiting receipt of those payments, a reduction of the claimant's WBA will be made.

    (2) A claimant who could be eligible for a retirement income, but does not apply until after the Unemployment Insurance benefits have been paid, will be at fault for any overpayment resulting from a retroactive payment of retirement benefits.

    (3) The formula for recomputation of the MBA in the event a claimant begins receiving retirement income after the beginning of the benefit year is found in Subsection 35A-4-401(2)(d). The recomputation is effective with the first full calendar week in which the claimant is eligible to receive applicable retirement benefits or adjustments to those benefits.

     

    KEY: unemployment compensation, benefits

    Date of Enactment or Last Substantive Amendment: [September 29, 2008]2010

    Notice of Continuation: May 17, 2007

    Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted Law: 35A-4-401(1); 35A-4-401(2); 35A-4-401(3); 35A-4-401(6)

     


Document Information

Effective Date:
12/8/2010
Publication Date:
11/01/2010
Type:
Notices of Proposed Rules
Filed Date:
10/14/2010
Agencies:
Workforce Services,Unemployment Insurance
Rulemaking Authority:

Subsection 35A-1-104(4)

Subsection 35A-4-502(1)(b)

Section 35A-1-104

Authorized By:
Kristen Cox, Executive Director
DAR File No.:
34155
Related Chapter/Rule NO.: (1)
R994-401. Payment of Benefits.