Oregon Senator
Doug Whitsett Newsletter June 18, 2009
The
Governor’s Proposed Oregon Emergency Jobs Program
Oregon’s unemployment rate rose to 12.4 percent in
May, the second highest in the country. In reaction to this,
Governor Kulongoski has proposed an Emergency Jobs Program to
assist unemployed Oregonians. Provisions for this program have
been introduced in
House Bill 3500 and contain three components: emergency
job creation, retraining for unemployed workers, and benefit
extension.
The first component of HB 3500 would be the
creation of the Oregon Emergency Jobs Program within the
Department of Community Colleges and Workforce Development (CCWD)
to create temporary employment for unemployed Oregonians. This
program is to be funded by diverting a percentage of payroll
taxes from the Unemployment Insurance (UI) Trust Fund into the
Oregon Emergency Jobs, Training and Support Account. The
money in the UI Trust Fund comes from Oregon employers who
give a percentage of the wages they pay employees to provide a
reserve of funds for unemployment benefits. When the money in
the UI Trust Fund declines, rates paid by employers increase
to replenish the reserves. $50.8 million would be diverted out
of the Fund to cover the costs of only this one part of the
program. The Governor’s office has estimated that this amount
will create 7,100 entry-level jobs for an average of 13 weeks.
State agencies are to submit job listings for activities such
as wildlife habitat restoration, maintenance of park trails,
and warehousing and distribution for state-run programs and
services. These jobs are to be distributed statewide
proportionate to each county’s share of unemployed, legal
workers.
The second component of the bill is to provide
training for high demand occupations. This part of the program
is designed to train 3,500 workers per year for the next two
years. These training benefits are to go to “distressed
workers” who earned 110 percent of the minimum wage before
being laid off and choose to enroll in training programs for
high demand occupations. The amount to be diverted from the UI
Trust Fund for this part of the program is $9.2 million.
Unemployment benefits are to be provided during the training.
This part of the program will sunset 24 months after passage.
The last component of HB 3500 is an extension of
UI benefits. Oregonians can currently receive up to 79 weeks
of unemployment benefits through state and federal fund
extensions. It is estimated that 11,000 Oregonians now
receiving unemployment benefits are likely to exhaust them
this fall. Under this bill, an additional extension program of
13 weeks would be available for individuals after all other
federal government extensions are exhausted. The amount to be
diverted from the UI Trust Fund for this part of the program
is $30 million.
In total, $90 million will be diverted from the UI
Trust Fund to fund the programs in HB 3500.
The policy used to implement this program raises
many concerns, the first and most prominent being the funding
source. Employers pay payroll taxes to the Unemployment
Insurance fund to create a safety net against layoffs that
protects employees, not create temporary jobs. This brings the
viability of implementing this bill in accordance with federal
law in to question. Our own Legislative Counsel has issued an
opinion stating that this plan could force Oregon employers to
fall into noncompliance with federal unemployment insurance
law. Even if you can reconcile the use of UI funds outside of
designated purpose, there are still concerns raised on the
nature of the jobs created. Employers would provide the
funding for the program with the taxes they pay, and yet under
this bill they would not have the opportunity to help create
and provide new jobs themselves that could directly benefit
their operations. If employers were given the opportunity to
use the taxes paid in this way, it is more likely that
permanent and gainful positions would be created by this
program instead of temporary, low paying positions.
The way this bill is currently written, the result
of this program would be higher rates paid by Oregon companies
for the purpose of creating a new government program and
increase spending. Oregonians have already seen that this
method of borrowing public money and government spending to
create jobs does not work, as exemplified by SB 338, the “Go
Oregon” state stimulus plan that the Legislature passed back
in February. Through this bill, the government borrowed $177
million to spend primarily on deferred maintenance of state
owned buildings and community colleges. This measure promised
to create over 3,000 jobs and to date only a little over 100
new jobs have been confirmed as a result.
Whatever amount that is withdrawn from the UI
Trust Fund must be replaced with payroll taxes paid by
employers. This means that HB 3500 adds yet another $90
million tax burden to Oregon’s business community. This burden
will be in addition to the $823 billion in tax increases that
the Legislature passed last week. You should recall that $733
million in taxes came from the passage of HB 2649 and HB 3405,
the Revenue Package, and $90 million came from passage of HB
2116, levying a health care premium tax. The majority of
these tax increases will be assumed by Oregon’s small and
family owned businesses. These tax increases, as all increased
business costs, are passed on to the consumer of business
products. Oregon households
HB 3500 is still in the House and being considered
in committee. Our office would like to hear your input on the
issue.
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