WASHINGTON—U.S. Senators Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), and Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) sent a letter to Senate leadership urging the inclusion of ideas from their legislation, the Rebuilding Main Street Act, within the next relief package. The Rebuilding Main Street Act would incentivize and expand the use of the Work Share program, which allows businesses and nonprofits to bring employees back at reduced hours, while employees continue to receive unemployment insurance for their remaining hours. The legislation also provides grants to small businesses and nonprofits that utilize the program to help them cover the costs of operating during this uncertain time. The Work Share program has already provided crucial relief to small businesses who have utilized it, and the Senators’ provisions would help build on and improve its success.
“As Congress considers the next coronavirus response package, we urge you to include incentives for employers to utilize Work Sharing and to help states expand the availability of Work Sharing. We introduced the Rebuilding Main Street Act to leverage the Work Sharing program to provide comprehensive and flexible support for workers, small businesses, and nonprofits to get through the pandemic and reopen gradually as it becomes safe to do so,” the senators began.
They underscore the unique benefits of the Work Share program, writing, “Employers participating in Work Sharing avoid layoffs by instead reducing the hours of their employees – or bringing laid off employees back to work at reduced hours – and those employees receive a pro-rated Unemployment Insurance benefit to compensate for the lost wages. The Work Sharing unemployment benefit also includes the recently-expired $600 provided by Federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (FPUC). Supporting the widespread use of Work Sharing would address one of the concerns some have raised about extending FPUC, since all workers make more money from working reduced hours and receiving a Work Sharing unemployment benefit than they would receive from only unemployment benefits.”
The senators go on to list a number of ideas based on the Rebuilding Main Street Act that they urge Senate Leadership to include in the next COVID-19 relief package. These provisions, included in the letter below, would provide businesses with more tailored flexibility and relief and would help expand the use of the Work Share program.
Full text of the letter is available here and below.
Dear Leader McConnell and Leader Schumer:
As Congress considers the next coronavirus response package, we urge you to include incentives for employers to utilize Work Sharing and to help states expand the availability of Work Sharing. We introduced the Rebuilding Main Street Act to leverage the Work Sharing program to provide comprehensive and flexible support for workers, small businesses, and nonprofits to get through the pandemic and reopen gradually as it becomes safe to do so. As we detail below, there are a number of ways to incorporate the conceptual framework of this legislation and its specific provisions into a larger legislative package.
Employers participating in Work Sharing avoid layoffs by instead reducing the hours of their employees – or bringing laid off employees back to work at reduced hours – and those employees receive a pro-rated Unemployment Insurance benefit to compensate for the lost wages. The Work Sharing unemployment benefit also includes the recently-expired $600 provided by Federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (FPUC). Supporting the widespread use of Work Sharing would address one of the concerns some have raised about extending FPUC, since all workers make more money from working reduced hours and receiving a Work Sharing unemployment benefit than they would receive from only unemployment benefits.
There are many ways that the next coronavirus response package could incentivize more employers to utilize Work Sharing:
The CARES Act includes important policies to expand the availability of Work Sharing and encourage more states to adopt the program. We urge you to build on those policies with the following additional measures in the next package:
Work Sharing helps workers stay connected to their jobs, protects paychecks, helps small businesses and nonprofits stay in business, and fosters safe practices that will be vital to ensuring a sustainable recovery. We look forward to working with you to expand the Work Sharing program to reach its full potential as part of the next coronavirus relief package.
Sincerely,
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