Florida Senate - 2012 CS for SB 1440
By the Committee on Commerce and Tourism; and Senators Braynon,
Flores, Altman, Garcia, and Gibson
577-02852-12 20121440c1
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to unemployment compensation; amending
3 s. 443.036, F.S.; updating and revising definitions;
4 amending s. 443.101, F.S., relating to
5 disqualification for benefits; revising the definition
6 of the term “good cause”; amending ss. 443.1216 and
7 443.131, F.S.; conforming cross-references; providing
8 an effective date.
9
10 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
11
12 Section 1. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) and subsections
13 (5), (11), (14), (15), (18), (20), (21), (23), (25), (26), (27),
14 (35), (38), (39), (45), and (46) of section 443.036, Florida
15 Statutes, are amended to read:
16 443.036 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
17 (2) “Agricultural labor” means any remunerated service
18 performed:
19 (c) In connection with the production or harvesting of any
20 commodity defined as an agricultural commodity as defined in s.
21 15(f) in s. 15(g) of the Agricultural Marketing Act, as amended,
22 (46 Stat. 1550, s. 3; 12 U.S.C. s. 1141j); the ginning of
23 cotton; or the operation or maintenance of ditches, canals,
24 reservoirs, or waterways, not owned or operated for profit, used
25 exclusively for supplying and storing water for farming
26 purposes.
27 (5) “American vessel” means a any vessel documented or
28 numbered under the laws of the United States. The term includes
29 a any vessel that is not neither documented or numbered under
30 the laws of the United States or a, nor documented under the
31 laws of any foreign country, if its crew is employed solely by
32 one or more citizens or residents of the United States or
33 corporations organized under the laws of the United States or of
34 any state.
35 (11) “Casual labor” means labor that is occasional,
36 incidental, or irregular, not exceeding 200 person-hours in
37 total duration. As used in this subsection, the term “duration”
38 means the period of time from the commencement to the completion
39 of the particular job or project. Services performed by an
40 employee for an his or her employer during a period of 1
41 calendar month or any 2 consecutive calendar months, however,
42 are deemed to be casual labor only if the service is performed
43 on 10 or fewer calendar days, regardless of whether those days
44 are consecutive. If any of the services performed by an
45 individual on a particular labor project are not casual labor,
46 each of the services performed by the individual on that job or
47 project may not be deemed casual labor. Services must constitute
48 casual labor and may not be performed in the course of the
49 employer’s trade or business in order for those services to be
50 exempt under this section.
51 (14) “Contribution” means a payment of payroll tax to the
52 Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund which is required under
53 this chapter to finance unemployment benefits.
54 (15) “Crew leader” means an individual who:
55 (a) Furnishes individuals to perform service in
56 agricultural labor for another person.
57 (b) Pays, either on his or her own behalf or on behalf of
58 the other person, the individuals furnished by him or her for
59 the service in agricultural labor performed by those
60 individuals.
61 (c) Has not entered into a written agreement with the other
62 person under which the individual is designated as an employee
63 of the other person.
64 (18) “Employee leasing company” means an employing unit
65 that has a valid and active license under chapter 468, and that
66 maintains the records required by s. 443.171(5), and produces,
67 in addition, is responsible for producing quarterly reports
68 concerning the clients and the internal staff of the employee
69 leasing company and the internal staff of the employee leasing
70 company. As used in this subsection, the term “client” means a
71 party who has contracted with an employee leasing company that
72 provides to provide a worker, or workers, to perform services
73 for the client. Leased employees include employees subsequently
74 placed on the payroll of the employee leasing company on behalf
75 of the client. An employee leasing company must notify the tax
76 collection service provider within 30 days after the initiation
77 or termination of the company’s relationship with a any client
78 company under chapter 468.
79 (20) “Employing unit” means an individual; an or type of
80 organization, including a partnership, limited liability
81 company, association, trust, estate, joint-stock company,
82 insurance company, or corporation, whether domestic or foreign;
83 the receiver, trustee in bankruptcy, trustee, or successor of
84 any of the foregoing; or the legal representative of a deceased
85 person, who which has or had in his or her its employ one or
86 more individuals performing services for it within this state.
87 (a) Each individual employed to perform or to assist in
88 performing the work of any agent or employee of an employing
89 unit is deemed to be employed by the employing unit for the
90 purposes of this chapter, regardless of whether the individual
91 was hired or paid directly by the employing unit or by an agent
92 or employee of the employing unit, if the employing unit had
93 actual or constructive knowledge of the work.
94 (b) Each individual performing services in this state for
95 an employing unit maintaining at least two separate
96 establishments in this state is deemed to be performing services
97 for a single employing unit for the purposes of this chapter.
98 (c) A person who is an officer of a corporation, or a
99 member of a limited liability company classified as a
100 corporation for federal income tax purposes, and who performs
101 services for the corporation or limited liability company in
102 this state, regardless of whether those services are continuous,
103 is deemed an employee of the corporation or the limited
104 liability company during all of each week of his or her tenure
105 of office, regardless of whether he or she is compensated for
106 those services. Services are presumed to be rendered for the
107 corporation if in cases in which the officer is compensated by
108 means other than dividends upon shares of stock of the
109 corporation owned by him or her.
110 (d) A limited liability company shall be treated as having
111 the same status as it is classified for federal income tax
112 purposes. However, a single-member limited liability company
113 shall be treated as the employer.
114 (21) “Employment” means a service subject to this chapter
115 under s. 443.1216 which is performed by an employee for his or
116 her employer the person employing him or her.
117 (23) “Fund” means the Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund
118 created under this chapter, into which all contributions and
119 reimbursements required under this chapter are deposited and
120 from which all benefits provided under this chapter are paid.
121 (25) “Hospital” means an establishment institution that is
122 licensed as a hospital under chapter 395, certified, or approved
123 by the Agency for Health Care Administration as a hospital.
124 (26) “Initial skills review” means an online education or
125 training program, such as that established under s. 1004.99,
126 that is approved by the Department of Economic Opportunity
127 Agency for Workforce Innovation and designed to measure an
128 individual’s mastery level of workplace skills.
129 (27) “Institution of higher education” means an educational
130 institution that:
131 (a) Admits as regular students only individuals having a
132 certificate of graduation from a high school, or the recognized
133 equivalent of a certificate of graduation;
134 (b) Is legally authorized in this state to provide a
135 program of education beyond high school;
136 (c) Provides an educational program that for which it
137 awards a bachelor’s or higher degree, or provides a program that
138 is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor’s or higher
139 degree; a program of postgraduate or postdoctoral studies; or a
140 program of training to prepare students for gainful employment
141 in a recognized occupation; and
142 (d) Is a public or other nonprofit institution.
143
144 The term includes each community college and state university in
145 this state, and any each other institution in this state
146 authorized under s. 1005.03 to use the designation “college” or
147 “university.” under s. 1005.03.
148 (35) “Pay period” means a period of 31 or fewer consecutive
149 days for which a payment or remuneration is ordinarily made to
150 the employee by the person employing him or her.
151 (38) “Reimbursement” means a payment of money to the
152 Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund in lieu of a contribution
153 which is required under this chapter to finance unemployment
154 benefits.
155 (39) “Reimbursing employer” means an employer who is liable
156 for reimbursements in lieu of contributions made under this
157 chapter.
158 (45) “Wages” means remuneration subject to this chapter
159 under s. 443.1217.
160 (46) “Week” means a period of 7 consecutive days as defined
161 in the rules of the Department of Economic Opportunity. The
162 department may by rule prescribe that a week is deemed to be
163 “in,” “within,” or “during” the benefit year that contains the
164 greater part of the week.
165 Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
166 443.101, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
167 443.101 Disqualification for benefits.—An individual shall
168 be disqualified for benefits:
169 (1)(a) For the week in which he or she has voluntarily left
170 work without good cause attributable to his or her employing
171 unit or has been discharged by the employing unit for misconduct
172 connected with his or her work, based on a finding by the
173 Department of Economic Opportunity. As used in this paragraph,
174 the term “work” means any work, whether full-time, part-time, or
175 temporary.
176 1. Disqualification for voluntarily quitting continues for
177 the full period of unemployment next ensuing after the
178 individual has left his or her full-time, part-time, or
179 temporary work voluntarily without good cause and until the
180 individual has earned income equal to or greater than 17 times
181 his or her weekly benefit amount. As used in this subsection,
182 the term “good cause” includes only that cause attributable to
183 the employing unit which would compel a reasonable employee to
184 cease working or attributable to the individual’s illness or
185 disability requiring separation from his or her work. Any other
186 disqualification may not be imposed. An individual is not
187 disqualified under this subsection for voluntarily leaving
188 temporary work to return immediately when called to work by the
189 permanent employing unit that temporarily terminated his or her
190 work within the previous 6 calendar months, or for voluntarily
191 leaving work to relocate as a result of his or her military
192 connected spouse’s permanent change of station orders,
193 activation orders, or unit deployment orders.
194 2. Disqualification for being discharged for misconduct
195 connected with his or her work continues for the full period of
196 unemployment next ensuing after having been discharged and until
197 the individual is reemployed and has earned income of at least
198 17 times his or her weekly benefit amount and for not more than
199 52 weeks immediately following that week, as determined by the
200 department in each case according to the circumstances or the
201 seriousness of the misconduct, under the department’s rules for
202 determining adopted for determinations of disqualification for
203 benefits for misconduct.
204 3. If an individual has provided notification to the
205 employing unit of his or her intent to voluntarily leave work
206 and the employing unit discharges the individual for reasons
207 other than misconduct before the date the voluntary quit was to
208 take effect, the individual, if otherwise entitled, shall
209 receive benefits from the date of the employer’s discharge until
210 the effective date of his or her voluntary quit.
211 4. If an individual is notified by the employing unit of
212 the employer’s intent to discharge the individual for reasons
213 other than misconduct and the individual quits without good
214 cause before the date the discharge was to take effect, the
215 claimant is ineligible for benefits pursuant to s. 443.091(1)(d)
216 for failing to be available for work for the week or weeks of
217 unemployment occurring before the effective date of the
218 discharge.
219 5. As used in this paragraph, the term “good cause” means:
220 a. Cause attributable to the employing unit or an illness
221 or disability that requires separation from work; or
222 b. Domestic violence, as defined in s. 741.28, which causes
223 the individual to reasonably believe that continued employment
224 will jeopardize the individual’s safety or the safety of a
225 member of her or his immediate family. Such cause must be
226 substantiated by evidence that reasonably proves that domestic
227 violence has occurred, such as an injunction, protective order,
228 or other such reasonable and confidential documentation
229 authorized by state law.
230 Section 3. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1), subsection (2),
231 and paragraph (f) of subsection (13) of section 443.1216,
232 Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
233 443.1216 Employment.—Employment, as defined in s. 443.036,
234 is subject to this chapter under the following conditions:
235 (1)(a) The employment subject to this chapter includes a
236 service performed, including a service performed in interstate
237 commerce, by:
238 1. An officer of a corporation.
239 2. An individual who, under the usual common-law rules
240 applicable for in determining the employer-employee
241 relationship, is an employee. However, if whenever a client who,
242 as defined in s. 443.036(18), which would otherwise be
243 designated as an employing unit has contracted with an employee
244 leasing company to supply it with workers, those workers are
245 considered employees of the employee leasing company. An
246 employee leasing company may lease corporate officers of the
247 client to the client and other workers to the client, except as
248 prohibited by regulations of the Internal Revenue Service.
249 Employees of an employee leasing company must be reported under
250 the employee leasing company’s tax identification number and
251 contribution rate for work performed for the employee leasing
252 company.
253 a. In addition to any other report required to be filed by
254 law, an employee leasing company shall submit a report to the
255 Labor Market Statistics Center within the Department of Economic
256 Opportunity which includes each client establishment and each
257 establishment of the employee leasing company, or as otherwise
258 directed by the department. The report must include the
259 following information for each establishment:
260 (I) The trade or establishment name;
261 (II) The former unemployment compensation account number,
262 if available;
263 (III) The former federal employer’s identification number
264 (FEIN), if available;
265 (IV) The industry code recognized and published by the
266 United States Office of Management and Budget, if available;
267 (V) A description of the client’s primary business activity
268 in order to verify or assign an industry code;
269 (VI) The address of the physical location;
270 (VII) The number of full-time and part-time employees who
271 worked during, or received pay that was subject to unemployment
272 compensation taxes for, the pay period including the 12th of the
273 month for each month of the quarter;
274 (VIII) The total wages subject to unemployment compensation
275 taxes paid during the calendar quarter;
276 (IX) An internal identification code to uniquely identify
277 each establishment of each client;
278 (X) The month and year that the client entered into the
279 contract for services; and
280 (XI) The month and year that the client terminated the
281 contract for services.
282 b. The report shall be submitted electronically or as in a
283 manner otherwise prescribed by the Department of Economic
284 Opportunity in the format specified by the Bureau of Labor
285 Statistics of the United States Department of Labor for its
286 Multiple Worksite Report for Professional Employer
287 Organizations. The report must be provided quarterly to the
288 Labor Market Statistics Center within the department, or as
289 otherwise directed by the department, and must be filed by the
290 last day of the month immediately following the end of the
291 calendar quarter. The information required in sub-sub
292 subparagraphs a.(X) and (XI) need be provided only in the
293 quarter in which the contract to which it relates was entered
294 into or terminated. The sum of the employment data and the sum
295 of the wage data in the this report must match the employment
296 and wages reported in the unemployment compensation quarterly
297 tax and wage report. A report is not required for any calendar
298 quarter preceding the third calendar quarter of 2010.
299 c. The department shall adopt rules as necessary to
300 administer this subparagraph, and may administer, collect,
301 enforce, and waive the penalty imposed by s. 443.141(1)(b) for
302 the report required by this subparagraph.
303 d. For the purposes of this subparagraph, the term
304 “establishment” means any location where business is conducted
305 or where services or industrial operations are performed.
306 3. An individual other than an individual who is an
307 employee under subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2., who performs
308 services for remuneration for any person:
309 a. As an agent-driver or commission-driver engaged in
310 distributing meat products, vegetable products, fruit products,
311 bakery products, beverages other than milk, or laundry or
312 drycleaning services for his or her principal.
313 b. As a traveling or city salesperson engaged on a full
314 time basis in the solicitation on behalf of, and the
315 transmission to, his or her principal of orders from
316 wholesalers, retailers, contractors, or operators of hotels,
317 restaurants, or other similar establishments for merchandise for
318 resale or supplies for use in their business operations. This
319 sub-subparagraph does not apply to an agent-driver or a
320 commission-driver, or and does not apply to sideline sales
321 activities performed on behalf of a person other than the
322 salesperson’s principal.
323 4. The services described in subparagraph 3. are employment
324 subject to this chapter only if:
325 a. The contract of service contemplates that substantially
326 all of the services are to be performed personally by the
327 individual;
328 b. The individual does not have a substantial investment in
329 facilities used in connection with the services, other than
330 facilities used for transportation; and
331 c. The services are not in the nature of a single
332 transaction that is not part of a continuing relationship with
333 the person for whom the services are performed.
334 (2) The employment subject to this chapter includes service
335 performed in the employ of a public employer as defined in s.
336 443.036, if the service is excluded from the definition of
337 “employment” in s. 3306(c)(7) of the Federal Unemployment Tax
338 Act and is not excluded from the employment subject to this
339 chapter under subsection (4).
340 (13) The following are exempt from coverage under this
341 chapter:
342 (f) Service performed in the employ of a public employer as
343 defined in s. 443.036, except as provided in subsection (2), and
344 service performed in the employ of an instrumentality of a
345 public employer as described in s. 443.036(36)(b) or (c)
346 443.036(35)(b) or (c), to the extent that the instrumentality is
347 immune under the United States Constitution from the tax imposed
348 by s. 3301 of the Internal Revenue Code for that service.
349 Section 4. Paragraph (f) of subsection (3) of section
350 443.131, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
351 443.131 Contributions.—
352 (3) VARIATION OF CONTRIBUTION RATES BASED ON BENEFIT
353 EXPERIENCE.—
354 (f) Transfer of employment records.—
355 1. For the purposes of this subsection, two or more
356 employers who are parties to a transfer of business or the
357 subject of a merger, consolidation, or other form of
358 reorganization, effecting a change in legal identity or form,
359 are deemed a single employer and are considered to be one
360 employer with a continuous employment record if the tax
361 collection service provider finds that the successor employer
362 continues to carry on the employing enterprises of all of the
363 predecessor employers, and that the successor employer has paid
364 all contributions required of and due from all of the
365 predecessor employers, and has assumed liability for all
366 contributions that may become due from all of the predecessor
367 employers. In addition, An employer may not be considered a
368 successor under this subparagraph if the employer purchases a
369 company with a lower rate into which employees with job
370 functions unrelated to the business endeavors of the predecessor
371 are transferred for the purpose of acquiring the low rate and
372 avoiding payment of contributions. As used in this paragraph,
373 Notwithstanding s. 443.036(14), the term “contributions,” as
374 used in this paragraph, means all indebtedness to the tax
375 collection service provider, including, but not limited to,
376 interest, penalty, collection fee, and service fee.
377 2. A successor employer must accept the transfer of all of
378 the predecessor employers’ employment records within 30 days
379 after the date of the official notification of liability by
380 succession. If a predecessor employer has unpaid contributions
381 or outstanding quarterly reports, the successor employer must
382 pay the total amount with certified funds within 30 days after
383 the date of the notice listing the total amount due. After the
384 total indebtedness is paid, the tax collection service provider
385 shall transfer the employment records of all of the predecessor
386 employers to the successor employer’s employment record. The tax
387 collection service provider shall determine the contribution
388 rate of the combined successor and predecessor employers upon
389 the transfer of the employment records, as prescribed by rule,
390 in order to calculate any change in the contribution rate
391 resulting from the transfer of the employment records.
392 3.2. Regardless of whether a predecessor employer’s
393 employment record is transferred to a successor employer under
394 this paragraph, the tax collection service provider shall treat
395 the predecessor employer, if he or she subsequently employs
396 individuals, as an employer without a previous employment record
397 or, if his or her coverage is terminated under s. 443.121, as a
398 new employing unit.
399 4.3. The state agency providing unemployment tax collection
400 services may adopt rules governing the partial transfer of
401 experience rating when an employer transfers an identifiable and
402 segregable portion of his or her payrolls and business to a
403 successor employing unit. As a condition of each partial
404 transfer, these rules must require the following to be filed
405 with the tax collection service provider: an application by the
406 successor employing unit, an agreement by the predecessor
407 employer, and the evidence required by the tax collection
408 service provider to show the benefit experience and payrolls
409 attributable to the transferred portion through the date of the
410 transfer. These rules must provide that the successor employing
411 unit, if not an employer subject to this chapter, becomes an
412 employer as of the date of the transfer and that the transferred
413 portion of the predecessor employer’s employment record is
414 removed from the employment record of the predecessor employer.
415 For each calendar year after the date of the transfer of the
416 employment record in the records of the tax collection service
417 provider, the service provider shall compute the contribution
418 rate payable by the successor employer or employing unit based
419 on his or her employment record, combined with the transferred
420 portion of the predecessor employer’s employment record. These
421 rules may also prescribe what contribution rates are payable by
422 the predecessor and successor employers for the period between
423 the date of the transfer of the transferred portion of the
424 predecessor employer’s employment record in the records of the
425 tax collection service provider and the first day of the next
426 calendar year.
427 5.4. This paragraph does not apply to an employee leasing
428 company and client contractual agreement as defined in s.
429 443.036. The tax collection service provider shall, if the
430 contractual agreement is terminated or the employee leasing
431 company fails to submit reports or pay contributions as required
432 by the service provider, treat the client as a new employer
433 without previous employment record unless the client is
434 otherwise eligible for a variation from the standard rate.
435 Section 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2012.