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Julianne Broyles is director
of insurance, employee relations and small business for the
California Chamber of Commerce in Sacramento.
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Legislation
creating a paid leave entitlement program would require billions of dollars in
new taxes levied on all California employers and their workers. It
is high on the list of job-killing bills pending as the California Legislature
works toward the scheduled August 31 adjournment of the 2001-02 session.
The
coalition against SB 1661 (Kuehl) includes the California Chamber of Commerce,
the California Taxpayers' Association, the California Manufacturers and
Technology Association and numerous businesses (see
SB1661CoalitionOpposition.pdf
).
SB 1661
would establish a 12-week paid family leave entitlement program for all
California workers, whether employed by government or the private sector.
It would be available to care for ill children, spouses, parents, or domestic
partners, as well as for leave for the birth, adoption, or foster care placement
of a child.
To pay for
the mandated Family Leave Temporary Insurance (FTDI) paid leave entitlement
program, SB 1661 institutes two new taxes. It increases the current state
disability insurance (SDI) tax formula and mandates a 14 percent "administrative
fee" on large self-insured employers.
A $2 billion tax bill.
Along with increasing the maximum SDI tax rate, SB 1661 establishes the new FTDI
tax that will be assessed in addition to SDI tax contributions. As a result,
California workers will pay SDI/FTDI taxes of $698 in 2004 and $726 in 2005 – a
67 percent increase in worker SDI taxes in 2004 alone. Moreover, SB 1661
mandates that employers also match dollar for dollar the higher worker FTDI
premium amount. By 2005, the combined tax burden of the paid leave entitlement
on California employers and their workers will reach $2.22 billion. (See table
below.)
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SB 1661 (KUEHL) PAID FAMILY LEAVE WILL COST
CALIFORNIA EMPLOYERS and WORKERS BILLIONS in NEW TAXES
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2004 |
2005 |
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Maximum SDI Weekly
Benefit Amount |
$728 |
$840 |
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Taxable Wage Ceiling |
$68,829 |
$79,418 |
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Tax Rate |
1.5% SDI +
.05% FTDI = 1.55% |
1.5% SDI +
.05% FTDI = 1.55% |
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California
Average Taxable Wage + |
$45,024 |
$46,825 |
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New FTDI/SDI Tax on
Average Annual Wages per Worker |
$698 |
$726 |
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Average Annual FTDI
Worker Tax * |
$45 |
$47 |
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New Maximum Annual SDI/FTDI
Worker Tax |
$1,066 |
$1,230 |
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New Maximum FTDI Annual
Worker Tax |
$104 |
$123 |
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SB 1661 Median Employer
Tax (per worker) |
$75 |
$85 |
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Annual SB 1661 Employer
Tax Burden |
$ 975 Million |
$1.11 Billion |
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SB 1661 Overall Tax
Burden on California Workers
and Employers ** |
$1.96 Billion |
$2.22 Billion |
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+Average annual taxable wages calculated by
using CA 2001 average weekly wage data reported to the U.S. Department of
Labor and adjusting upward 4% annually beginning in 2001. |
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*SB 1661
provides for an unlimited, potentially retroactive FTDI tax increase
beginning October 2004. Estimated FTDI tax contributions are increased by
.05% to account for this variable. |
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**Overall tax burden calculated by adding the
median of all FTDI taxes paid by California workers plus the equal amount
of employer FTDI taxes as mandated by
SB 1661's requirement for equal FTDI tax payments by both
workers and employers. Note: In 2002,
California workers covered by state SDI
program is approximately 13 million, according to EDD. |
SB 1661 erases important employer rights contained
in current state and federal family leave laws. Current state and federal
family leave laws only apply to employers with 50 or more workers and permit
qualified employees to take up to 12 weeks of
unpaid family leave. The leave is
unpaid to prevent abuse of the leave laws. SB 1661 eliminates the 50 or more
worker coverage level requirement; eliminates requirement of 1,250 hours on the
job in the previous 12 months before eligible for leave; eliminates employer
right to designate leave as family leave; only permits certification of worker
or family member need for leave to go to the Employment Development Department (EDD);
and eliminates important notification requirements.
Hurts small businesses.
California small businesses are harmed by the elimination of the size
requirement. Keep in mind that SDI
benefits are portable and move with the worker if the worker changes jobs. If a
worker has sufficient SDI contributions, SB 1661 entitles a worker just hired on
Monday by a very small company to take up to 12 weeks of paid leave beginning
Tuesday to care for a family member.
New paid leave benefits, paid
for by new mandated taxes, would be impermissible under federal law. The
federal Employment Retirement and Income Security Act (ERISA) forbids states
from establishing mandated employee welfare benefits such as those contained in
SB 1661. A paid leave benefit it is an employee welfare benefit under ERISA.
Regardless of how the benefit is created or funded, it would still be an
employee benefit under ERISA and would therefore be preempted.
SDI Trust Fund is nearly
bankrupt. According to EDD, the SDI Trust Fund reserve
adequacy level has dropped alarmingly. Recent legislation permanently linked the
level of SDI benefits to workers' compensation benefits. Enactment of AB 749,
Ch. 6, Statutes of 2002 steeply increased both benefits levels. EDD information
shows that as of December 31, 2001, the SDI Trust Fund reserves plummeted to
only 15.4-a drop of nearly 70 percent. Even the most optimistic estimates by EDD
indicate SDI Trust Fund reserves to be less than 30% for the next several
years. This level of reserves is well below the 45% reserve level mandated by
law for fund adequacy.
Legislation like SB 1661 makes
California less competitive with
similarly situated businesses in other states. California employers
believe that bills like SB 1661
make it even more difficult, and certainly much more expensive, to do business
in California. |