Lawmakers advance $1.8 billion unemployment fund bailout
Send a link to a friend
[December 02, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – On the final day of their fall veto session, Illinois
lawmakers on Thursday advanced a pair of bills that would infuse $1.8
billion into the state’s unemployment trust fund, which was depleted
during the economic shutdown brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The bipartisan agreement came together after more than a year of
negotiations between business and labor organizations, the governor’s
office and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle.
Without the package, the state unemployment insurance premiums charged
to employers would have skyrocketed over the next several years, likely
coinciding with a reduction to benefits paid to unemployed workers who
are covered by the program.
“As everyone knows, as a result of the COVID pandemic, there was a
historic amount of unemployment here in Illinois and the rest of the
world,” Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea, said while explaining one of the
bills.
That drove the fund from a surplus exceeding $1 billion to a deficit of
$4.5 billion at the height of the pandemic.
“So, ultimately, we had to figure out what we were going to do,” he
said.
Illinois, like many states, was able to borrow the $4.5 billion from the
federal government to keep the unemployment insurance program going
during the pandemic, but that debt had been accruing interest at a rate
of 1.59 percent.
In March, lawmakers approved $2.7 billion from federal American Rescue
Plan Act funds to pay down the balance. And in September, after the
unemployment rate had returned to normal levels, the state made another
$450 million payment out of program-related revenues. That brought the
balance due to just under $1.4 billion.
[to top of second column]
|
Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea, is pictured
in a file photo. He was the sponsor of a measure aimed at paying
down Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund debt with $1.8 billion in
state revenues. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
The plan now moving through the General Assembly calls for using excess
revenues the state has seen this year to pay off the remaining $1.37
billion owed to the federal government, plus another $450 million in the
form of a zero-interest loan to the trust fund that is to be paid back
over the next 10 years.
In order to generate the money to pay back that loan, employers will see
an increase in the amount they pay into the fund in the form of
insurance premiums. But even with that, officials said, they will see a
$915 million savings compared to what they otherwise would have had to
pay if no deal had been reached.
Two bills were necessary to execute that package. House amendments to
Senate Bill 1698 authorized the structure of the program. It passed both
chambers on Thursday by wide margins: 95-8 in the House and 45-8 in the
Senate.
A separate bill containing the actual appropriation, an amendment to
Senate Bill 2801, cleared the Senate, 46-9.
But due to procedural rules, the House was not allowed to vote on it
immediately. Instead, the lower chamber is expected to take up the bill
during a lame duck session tentatively planned for the first week of
January.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation.
|