SB 219

  • Virginia Senate Bill
  • 2022 Regular Session
  • Introduced in Senate Jan 10, 2022
  • Passed Senate Feb 11, 2022
  • Passed House Feb 25, 2022
  • Became Law Apr 27, 2022

Va. Employment Commission; administrative reforms, reporting requirements, electronic submissions.

Abstract

Virginia Employment Commission; administrative reforms; reporting requirements; electronic submissions; Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman established. Requires the Virginia Employment Commission to calculate and report the (i) average unemployment insurance benefit levels, (ii) average income replacement of unemployment insurance benefits, and (iii) recipiency rate for unemployment insurance benefits in the Commonwealth as part of the Commission's annual balance sheet. The bill also requires the Commission, as part of its biennial strategic plan submitted to the Department of Planning and Budget, to develop and maintain an unemployment insurance Resiliency Plan that describes the specific actions the agency would take, depending on the level of increase in unemployment insurance (UI) claims, to address staffing, communications, and other relevant aspects of operations to ensure continued efficient and effective administration of the UI program.The bill creates within the Commission on Unemployment Compensation a subcommittee that shall be responsible for monitoring the Virginia Employment Commission's management of the unemployment insurance program. The subcommittee shall meet at least once each quarter and shall report annually, beginning on December 1, 2022, to the House Committee on Appropriations, the House Committee on Commerce and Energy, the Senate Committee on Commerce and Labor, and the Senate Committee on Finance and Appropriations. The bill also directs the Commission to convene an advisory committee composed of stakeholders and subject matter experts to review information related to UI claims.The bill requires employers to submit claim-related forms and separation information electronically, as well as other information and electronic tax payments upon the Commission's request, unless the employer has received a waiver by the Commission.The bill provides that a claim for unemployment benefits that has been determined invalid by the Virginia Employment Commission as a result of the claimant's monetary ineligibility shall first be reviewed upon a request for redetermination prior to filing an appeal. The bill also creates an Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman position for the purpose of providing information and assistance to persons seeking assistance in the unemployment compensation process and exempts confidential case files of the Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman from the mandatory disclosure provisions of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act.The bill directs the Virginia Department of Human Resource Management to lead a multiagency work group to discuss strategies for staffing assistance and support for agencies that might need staffing assistance during emergencies. Additionally, the Virginia Employment Commission is directed to task its internal audit division to review and revise documents and online resources related to unemployment compensation. This bill is identical to HB 270.

Virginia Employment Commission; administrative reforms; reporting requirements; electronic submissions; Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman established; emergency. Requires the Virginia Employment Commission to calculate and report the (i) average unemployment insurance benefit levels, (ii) average income replacement of unemployment insurance benefits, and (iii) recipiency rate for unemployment insurance benefits in the Commonwealth as part of the Commission's annual balance sheet. The bill also requires the Commission, as part of its biennial strategic plan submitted to the Department of Planning and Budget, to develop and maintain an unemployment insurance Resiliency Plan that describes the specific actions the agency would take, depending on the level of increase in unemployment insurance (UI) claims, to address staffing, communications, and other relevant aspects of operations to ensure continued efficient and effective administration of the UI program.The bill creates within the Commission on Unemployment Compensation a subcommittee that shall be responsible for monitoring the Virginia Employment Commission's management of the unemployment insurance program. The subcommittee shall meet at least once each quarter and shall report annually, beginning on December 1, 2022, to the House Committee on Appropriations, the House Committee on Commerce and Energy, the Senate Committee on Commerce and Labor, and the Senate Committee on Finance and Appropriations. The bill also directs the Commission to convene an advisory committee composed of stakeholders and subject matter experts to review information related to UI claims.The bill requires employers to submit claim-related forms and separation information electronically, as well as other information and electronic tax payments upon the Commission's request, unless the employer has received a waiver by the Commission.The bill provides that a claim for unemployment benefits that has been determined invalid by the Virginia Employment Commission as a result of the claimant's monetary ineligibility shall first be reviewed upon a request for redetermination prior to filing an appeal. The bill also creates an Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman position for the purpose of providing information and assistance to persons seeking assistance in the unemployment compensation process and exempts confidential case files of the Unemployment Compensation Ombudsman from the mandatory disclosure provisions of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act.The bill directs the Virginia Department of Human Resource Management to lead a multiagency work group to discuss strategies for staffing assistance and support for agencies that might need staffing assistance during emergencies. Additionally, the Virginia Employment Commission is directed to task its internal audit division to review and revise documents and online resources related to unemployment compensation. The bill contains an emergency clause and is identical to HB 270.

Virginia Employment Commission; administrative reforms; reporting requirements; electronic submissions; Appeals Ombudsman established. Requires the Virginia Employment Commission to calculate and report the (i) average unemployment insurance benefit levels, (ii) average income replacement of unemployment insurance benefits, and (iii) recipiency rate for unemployment insurance benefits in the Commonwealth as part of the Commission's annual balance sheet. The bill also requires the Commission, as part of its biennial strategic plan submitted to the Department of Planning and Budget, to develop and maintain an unemployment insurance Resiliency Plan that describes the specific actions the agency would take, depending on the level of increase in unemployment insurance (UI) claims, to address staffing, communications, and other relevant aspects of operations to ensure continued efficient and effective administration of the UI program.The bill creates within the Commission on Unemployment Compensation a subcommittee that shall be responsible for monitoring the Virginia Employment Commission's management of the unemployment insurance program. The subcommittee shall meet at least once each quarter and shall report annually, beginning on December 1, 2022, to the House Committee on Appropriations, the House Committee on Commerce and Energy, the Senate Committee on Commerce and Labor, and the Senate Committee on Finance and Appropriations. The bill also directs the Commission to convene an advisory committee composed of stakeholders and subject matter experts to review information related to UI claims.The bill authorizes the Virginia Employment Commission to request, at any time, that an employer submit information related to a claim, including separation information, or unemployment insurance tax payments through electronic means, unless the employer has been granted a waiver by the Commission.The bill provides that a claim for unemployment benefits that has been determined invalid by the Virginia Employment Commission as a result of the claimant's monetary ineligibility is not eligible for appeal through the Commission's appeals division. The bill also creates an Appeals Ombudsman position for the purpose of providing information and assistance to persons seeking assistance in unemployment appeals proceedings and exempts confidential case files of the Appeals Ombudsman from the mandatory disclosure provisions of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act. The bill directs the Virginia Department of Human Resource Management to lead a multi-agency work group to discuss strategies for staffing assistance and support for agencies that might need staffing assistance during emergencies. Additionally, the Virginia Employment Commission is directed to task its internal audit division to review and revise documents and online resources related to unemployment compensation.

Bill Sponsors (5)

Votes


Actions


Apr 27, 2022

Senate

Senate concurred in Governor's recommendation (40-Y 0-N)

House

Enacted, Chapter 716 (effective 4/27/22)

House

Signed by Speaker as reenrolled

Senate

Signed by President as reenrolled

Senate

Reenrolled bill text (SB219ER2)

Senate

Reenrolled

Office of the Governor

Emergency clause added by Governor's recommendation

Office of the Governor

Governor's recommendation adopted

House

VOTE: Adoption (100-Y 0-N)

House

House concurred in Governor's recommendation BLOCK VOTE (100-Y 0-N)

Apr 11, 2022

Senate

Governor's recommendation received by Senate

Mar 11, 2022

Office of the Governor

Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 11, 2022

Senate

Enrolled Bill Communicated to Governor on March 11, 2022

Mar 02, 2022

Senate

Signed by President

Senate

Impact statement from DPB (SB219ER)

Mar 01, 2022

House

Signed by Speaker

Senate

Enrolled

Feb 25, 2022

House

Read third time

House

Passed House BLOCK VOTE (99-Y 0-N)

House

VOTE: Block Vote Passage (99-Y 0-N)

Feb 24, 2022

House

Read second time

Feb 23, 2022

Senate

Impact statement from DPB (SB219S2)

Feb 22, 2022

House

Reported from Commerce and Energy (22-Y 0-N)

Feb 21, 2022

House

Referred to Committee on Commerce and Energy

House

Read first time

House

Placed on Calendar

Feb 11, 2022

Senate

Read third time and passed Senate (40-Y 0-N)

Feb 10, 2022

Senate

Reading of substitute waived

Senate

Engrossed by Senate - floor substitute SB219S2

Senate

Substitute by Senator McPike agreed to 22106452D-S2

Senate

Committee substitute rejected 22105060D-S1

Senate

Read second time

Senate

Floor substitute printed 22106452D-S2 (McPike)

Feb 09, 2022

Senate

Constitutional reading dispensed (38-Y 0-N)

Feb 08, 2022

Senate

Reported from Finance and Appropriations with substitute (16-Y 0-N)

Senate

Committee substitute printed 22105060D-S1

Jan 17, 2022

Senate

Reported from Commerce and Labor (14-Y 0-N 1-A)

Senate

Rereferred to Finance and Appropriations

Jan 10, 2022

Senate

Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22101014D

Senate

Referred to Committee on Commerce and Labor

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22101014D PDF HTML
Committee substitute printed 22105060D-S1 PDF HTML
SB219S2 PDF HTML
SB219ER PDF HTML
SB219ER2 PDF HTML
CHAP0716 PDF HTML

Related Documents

Document Format
Fiscal Impact Statement: SB219FER122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: SB219FS2122.PDF PDF
Amendment: SB219AG HTML

Sources

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