Tom Yamachika is the president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii.
Two weeks ago, , we discussed the unemployment tax and insurance system and how employers are likely to be hit with a significant and automatic rate increase at the end of this year.
For many nonprofit employers, the system works differently. Tax-exempt 501(c)(3) charities (like the Tax Foundation of Hawaii) may 鈥渟elf-insure鈥 against unemployment claims.
That means a nonprofit sector employer doesn鈥檛 need to pay the unemployment tax that for-profit employers need to pay, but if a nonprofit sector employee gets laid off and makes an unemployment claim that the state pays, the state bills the employer and doesn鈥檛 take the money out of its unemployment insurance trust fund.
Some of the larger nonprofits have cash reserves and can pay the bill. Others buy unemployment insurance from insurance companies selling only to the nonprofit sector and find that their premiums are quite a bit less because they are not sharing losses with high-cost seasonal businesses.
With employees in the nonprofit sector dropping like flies just as in the private sector, nonprofits have good news and bad news.
The good news is that the huge rate increase that is likely to hit at the end of the year won鈥檛 affect them. The bad news is that they need to get out their checkbooks now to pay the unemployment claims that they are being charged with.
One provision of the CARES Act, section 2103, is supposed to help with that situation. It says that the federal government is going to cover half of the unemployment benefit costs that self-insured employers need to pay to the state for weeks of unemployment beginning on or after March 13 and ending on or before Dec. 31.
But, the U.S. Department of Labor, the employer needs to pay the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations first, the federal government reimburses half the cost, and then DLIR repays or credits the employer for the federal money received.
(The CARES Act says that the state workforce agency can鈥檛 use the money for any purpose other than reimbursing the employers, so it can鈥檛 keep the money.)
More Work For DLIR
The trouble is that these reimbursement processes 鈥渢ake a while,鈥 and by the time the state receives the federal funds and gets around to repaying the nonprofit employer, the employer either may have closed for good or may be overwhelmed with penalties and interest if they couldn鈥檛 pay the full amount of the unemployment benefits when they were billed.
When I spoke with the Employer Services Section at the DLIR, the good folks there were aware of the federal provision but hadn鈥檛 yet received guidance from their leadership on how the state was going to implement it. (Translation: They either haven鈥檛 figured out what to do or haven鈥檛 yet been convinced that they have to do anything.)
The public needs DLIR and the nonprofits do too.
I can鈥檛 help but wonder if the DLIR feels like it is being forced to do something it doesn鈥檛 want to do. It鈥檚 certainly more work for DLIR to keep tabs on its self-insured employers, put together claims to the federal government, and then dole out the money to the employers when the federal money appears.
DLIR doesn鈥檛 get separately paid to do that. And it does seem that they already have their hands full fighting the backlog on individual unemployment claimants.
DLIR, please hang in there. The public needs you and the nonprofits do too!
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If for whatever reason the unemployment trust fund has too few dollars in it, employer tax rates will remain high. It芒聙聶s a mathematical formula. At least until the lawmakers decide to change the rules again.聽
TYamachika·
4 years ago
And Ministers are not covered either way.
Fruitfarmer·
4 years ago
Aloha Tom, Mahalo nui loa for highlighting this issue. I wonder how someone might check to see if a non-profit they plan to / or聽 support - is paid up concerning their unemployment claims. Is there an unemployment delinquent list published by the DLIR? if so - where might we find this list.
Donors - do your due diligence BEORE cutting that check!
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