Topics:
September 7, 2023 Last Edit: June 5, 2025
Will Assembly Committee Dig a Deeper Hole in UI Fund?
- Only employers, through their payroll taxes, pay into the state’s unemployment insurance trust fund so that those out of work through no fault of their own can collect benefits.
- Thanks in part to the $30 billion in fraudulent claims paid out by the Employment Development Department during the pandemic, the trust fund needed to borrow from the federal government to keep the fund solvent and today owes the feds more than $18 billion in loan repayment. Twenty-two other states also needed to borrow, but all but two (California, New York) have paid the feds back. The Legislature punted on its opportunity to use some of the federal bailout largesse (CARES and ARPA money) and its own surplus to pay down or off its trust fund loan. Small business owners will know in December how much higher their 2024 payroll taxes will be.
- SB 799 would overturn more than 70 years of precedent by allowing workers who voluntarily leave their jobs to go on strike to collect UI benefits while on strike.
- To add insult to injury, SB 799 began its legislative life as a bill on prison visitations, passed all its committees and house-of-origin deadlines before being hijacked, gutted, and replaced with language adding unemployment benefits for striking workers. So much for open and transparent government.
State:
Get to know NFIB
NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.
Related Articles
February 7, 2026
2026 Session of Oregon Legislature Commences
Lawmakers start work on an initial 300 bills
Read More
February 6, 2026
Your Action Needed—Oppose Federal Tax Disconnect
100% bonus depreciation would be lost if state separates itself from 2025 federal tax bill
Read More
February 5, 2026
NFIB Urges Arizona State Lawmakers to Align State Tax Code with Department of Revenue’s Forms
With tax filing season underway, small business owners need certainty now
Read More
February 4, 2026
Illinois Year-over-Year Tax Collections Climb Further in January
Federal transfers are down for the year, partially offsetting record collections in Illinois
Read More