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Battling Over Unemployment

By By Richard Roesler March 31, 2010

Tough market conditions have forced Wenatchee motor sportsdealer Cary Condotta to reduce his workforce from about 13 people to six. Now,as demand starts to pick up, he wants to hire new employees but has been scaredaway by high payroll taxes. The cost of having people in this state is too high, saysCondotta. And hes not…

Tough market conditions have forced Wenatchee motor sports
dealer Cary Condotta to reduce his workforce from about 13 people to six. Now,
as demand starts to pick up, he wants to hire new employees but has been scared
away by high payroll taxes.

The cost of having people in this state is too high, says
Condotta.

And hes not just speaking as an employer. Condotta, a
Republican member of the state House of Representatives, was on the front lines
this year of a high-drama battle in Olympia over unemployment benefits and
taxes.

It was, he says, the hardest-fought situation Ive been
through in the seven years Ive been there.

And it looks like the fight isnt over.Businesses have
warned for years that the high payments to unemployed workers are a drag on
economic development. According to the Washington Alliance for a Competitive
Economy, the state last year was second only to Alaska in taxes paid annually
per average full-time worker: $637. Average unemployment benefits, including
part-timers, were $343 a week last yearthe fifth highest in the nation,
although workers here tend to get back into the workforce sooner and,
therefore, collect benefits for a shorter period.

The state reduced unemployment benefits six years ago as
part of then-Gov. Gary Lockes effort to persuade Boeing to build its new 787
assembly line locally, a move that infuriated organized labor.

In 2003, [the state] devastated our UI system, absolutely
ripped it apart, says Jeff Johnson, a lobbyist with the Washington State Labor
Council.

We were run over, recalls state Rep. Steve Conway, a
Democrat from Tacoma.

But in the years that followed, changes were rolled back,
and, with the help of healthy economic growth, the unemployment fund grew to be
one of the best-funded in the country. At a time when states like California
and New York were borrowing from the federal government to pay unemployment
benefits, Washingtons fund had grown to $3.6 billion by March, up 360 percent
from 2004.

According to the state Employment Security Department, which
runs the unemployment system, thats enough cash to pay nearly 19 months of
benefits in a severe recession. Federal guidelines recommend 12 to 15 months,
says Mark Varadian, the departments spokesperson.

Then two things happened, making a showdown all but
inevitable. Last June, a state Supreme Court opinion broadened the range of
situations in which a worker can quit a job and still qualify for benefits.
Until then, state law had listed about a dozen appropriate scenarios, such as
fleeing domestic violence. But the court, ruling on the case of two workers,
including one roofing company employee who suffered daily verbal abuse,
granted the department more discretion.

Secondly, the U.S. Department of Labor warned that some of
the changes had left Washington with an unemployment system that no longer
conformed to federal laws. If not fixed, the federal agency warned, state
businesses would lose $300 million a year in federal tax credits.

A tentative deal between business and labor leaders that
would have given temporary benefit increases for workers and temporary tax
reductions for employers fell apart shortly after Christmas 2008. Labor then backed a bill that would
have boosted benefits by about $45 a week.

That was a great thing for unemployed workers, says
lobbyist Jeff Johnson. Its also a great thing for Main Street. It was the
very first bill signed into law this year by Gov. Chris Gregoire.

Business continued to push for a fix to make the state
system conform to federal law, also adding provisions to reduce some employer
payments into the trust fund. The business-backed bill also undid the state
Supreme Courts move, explicitly stating that only lawmakers list of
good-cause quits would qualify for benefits. Gregoire backed the bill, telling
lawmakers she wouldnt let them leave Olympia until they passed it.

Labor groups balked at the prospect of permanent tax breaks
for businesses at a time when workers were getting only a temporary increase in
benefits. And many lawmakers wanted to preserve some discretion for good-cause
quits. They also tried to increase benefits permanently by reverting to an
older benefits calculation.

After a weeks-long confrontation, the business-backed
version won. A big factor: widespread worries that Boeing might move production
of future planes to a more business-friendly state. Shortly before the
legislative session ended at midnight April 26, bleary-eyed lawmakers passed
the bill. The new law will save businesses $385 million over five years,
according to Gregoire.

But labor groups say the issues not settled. Ten House
lawmakers have already introduced a bill for next year to bring back better
benefits for the unemployedand higher taxes for businesses.

This is not the end, says the Labor Councils Johnson.
They want an unemployment fight? They got it.

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