SB 702 Modifies the law relating to unemployment compensation benefits
Sponsor: Munzlinger
LR Number: 4037S.01T Fiscal Notes
Committee: Small Business, Insurance and Industry
Last Action: 7/14/2016 - Signed by Governor Journal Page:
Title: Calendar Position:
Effective Date: August 28, 2016
House Handler: Brown

Full Bill Text | All Actions | Amendments/CCRs/CCSs | Available Summaries | Senate Home Page | List of 2016 Senate Bills

Current Bill Summary


SB 702 - This act permits the recovery of:

• Overpaid unemployment compensation benefits;

• Benefits obtained by reason of nondisclosure or misrepresentation of a material fact; or

• Benefits obtained by reason of error, omission, or lack of knowledge of a material fact on the part of the Division of Employment Security

through billing, setoffs against state and federal tax refunds, intercepts of lottery winnings, and collection efforts as provided under current law.

The act further requires 15% of payments made toward a penalty assessed for benefits fraudulently received to be immediately deposited into the state unemployment compensation fund. The remaining penalty amount due is credited to the special employment security fund.

Current law states that any person who receives unemployment compensation benefits as a result of error or lack of knowledge of material fact on the part of the Division, shall have such sums of benefits deducted from future benefits, after an opportunity for a fair hearing. This act gives the Division the discretion, after an opportunity for a fair hearing, to either deduct the sums of wrongfully paid benefits from future benefits payable to the individual or require repayment to the Division the amount of benefits wrongfully received.

These provisions are identical to HB 1530 (2016), SB 406 (2015), and HB 1010 (2015).

The act further provides that a taxicab driver shall not be considered to be an employee of the company that leases the taxicab to the driver unless it is shown that the driver is an employee of that company by application of the IRS 20-factor right-to-control test.

SCOTT SVAGERA