HOUSE BILL NO. 5712
April 16, 2020, Introduced by Rep. Iden and
referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
A bill to amend 1936 (Ex Sess) PA 1,
entitled
"Michigan employment security act,"
by amending sections 3, 27, 28, 28c, 29, and 48 (MCL 421.3, 421.27, 421.28, 421.28c, 421.29, and 421.48), section 3 as amended by 2003 PA 174, section 27 as amended by 2016 PA 522, section 28 as amended by 2020 PA 83, section 28c as amended by 2012 PA 579, section 29 as amended by 2013 PA 146, and section 48 as amended by 2011 PA 269.
the people of the state of michigan enact:
Sec. 3. (1) The bureau of worker's and unemployment
compensation shall establish policies in conformity with this act to do all of
the following:
(a) Reduce and prevent
unemployment.
(b) Promote the
reemployment of unemployed workers throughout this state in every other way
that may be feasible.
(c) Carry on and publish
the results of investigations and research studies.
(d) Investigate,
recommend, advise, and assist in the establishment and operation, by
municipalities, counties, school districts, and this state, of reserves for
public works to be used in times of business depression and unemployment.
(2) As used in this act:
(a) "Bureau",
"commission", and "unemployment
agency", and "unemployment insurance
agency" mean the bureau of worker's and unemployment
compensation created in section 5b.
(b) "Director"
means the director of the bureau of worker's and unemployment compensation.
(c) "Experience
account" means an account in the unemployment compensation fund showing an
employer's experience with respect to contribution payments and benefit charges
under this act, determined and recorded in the manner provided in this act. A
reference in this act to an employer's "experience record" or
"rating account" shall be construed to include reference to the
employer's experience account.
(d) "Nonchargeable
benefits account" and "solvency account" mean the account in the
unemployment compensation fund maintained as provided in section 17(2) and (3).
Sec. 27. (a)(1) When a determination, redetermination,
or decision is made that benefits are due an unemployed individual, the
benefits become payable from the fund and continue to be payable to the
unemployed individual, subject to the limitations imposed by the individual's
monetary entitlement, if the individual continues to be unemployed and to file
claims for benefits, until the determination, redetermination, or decision is
reversed, a determination, redetermination, or decision on a new issue holding
the individual disqualified or ineligible is made, or, for benefit years
beginning before October 1, 2000, a new separation issue arises resulting from
subsequent work.
(2) Benefits are payable
in person or by mail through employment security offices in accordance with
rules promulgated by the unemployment insurance agency.
(b)(1) Subject to
subsection (f), the weekly benefit rate for an individual, with respect to
benefit years beginning before October 1, 2000, is 67% of the individual's
average after tax weekly wage, except that the individual's maximum weekly
benefit rate must not exceed $300.00. However, with respect to benefit years
beginning on or after October 1, 2000, the individual's weekly benefit rate is
4.1% of the individual's wages paid in the calendar quarter of the base period
in which the individual was paid the highest total wages, plus $6.00 for each
dependent as defined in subdivision (4), up to a maximum of 5 dependents,
claimed by the individual at the time the individual files a new claim for
benefits, except that the individual's maximum weekly benefit rate must not
exceed $300.00 before April 26, 2002 and $362.00 for claims filed on and after
April 26, 2002. The weekly benefit rate for an individual claiming benefits on
and after April 26, 2002 must be recalculated subject to the $362.00 maximum
weekly benefit rate. The unemployment insurance agency shall establish the procedures
necessary to verify the number of dependents claimed. If a person fraudulently
claims a dependent, that person is subject to the penalties set forth in
sections 54 and 54c. For benefit years beginning on or after October 2, 1983,
the weekly benefit rate must be adjusted to the next lower multiple of $1.00.
(2) For benefit years
beginning before October 1, 2000, the state average weekly wage for a calendar
year is computed on the basis of the 12 months ending the June 30 immediately
before that calendar year.
(3) For benefit years
beginning before October 1, 2000, a dependent means any of the following
persons who are receiving and for at least 90 consecutive days immediately
before the week for which benefits are claimed, or, in the case of a dependent
husband, wife, or child, for the duration of the marital or parental
relationship, if the relationship has existed less than 90 days, has received
more than 1/2 the cost of his or her support from the individual claiming
benefits:
(a) A child, including
stepchild, adopted child, or grandchild of the individual who is under 18 years
of age, or 18 years of age or over if, because of physical or mental infirmity,
the child is unable to engage in a gainful occupation, or is a full-time
student as defined by the particular educational institution, at a high school,
vocational school, community or junior college, or college or university and
has not attained the age of 22.
(b) The husband or wife
of the individual.
(c) The legal father or
mother of the individual if that parent is either more than 65 years of age or
is permanently disabled from engaging in a gainful occupation.
(d) A brother or sister
of the individual if the brother or sister is orphaned or the living parents
are dependent parents of an individual, and the brother or sister is under 18
years of age, or 18 years of age or over if, because of physical or mental
infirmity, the brother or sister is unable to engage in a gainful occupation,
or is a full-time student as defined by the particular educational institution,
at a high school, vocational school, community or junior college, or college or
university and is less than 22 years of age.
(4) For benefit years
beginning on or after October 1, 2000, a dependent means any of the following
persons who received for at least 90 consecutive days immediately before the
first week of the benefit year or, in the case of a dependent husband, wife, or
child, for the duration of the marital or parental relationship if the
relationship existed less than 90 days before the beginning of the benefit
year, has received more than 1/2 the cost of his or her support from the
individual claiming the benefits:
(a) A child, including
stepchild, adopted child, or grandchild of the individual who is under 18 years
of age, or 18 years of age and over if, because of physical or mental
infirmity, the child is unable to engage in a gainful occupation, or is a
full-time student as defined by the particular educational institution, at a
high school, vocational school, community or junior college, or college or
university and has not attained the age of 22.
(b) The husband or wife
of the individual.
(c) The legal father or
mother of the individual if that parent is either more than 65 years of age or
is permanently disabled from engaging in a gainful occupation.
(d) A brother or sister
of the individual if the brother or sister is orphaned or the living parents
are dependent parents of an individual, and the brother or sister is under 18
years of age, or 18 years of age and over if, because of physical or mental
infirmity, the brother or sister is unable to engage in a gainful occupation,
or is a full-time student as defined by the particular educational institution,
at a high school, vocational school, community or junior college, or college or
university and is less than 22 years of age.
(5) The number of
dependents established for an individual at the beginning of the benefit year
shall remain in effect during the entire benefit year.
(6) Dependency status of
a dependent, child or otherwise, once established or fixed in favor of a person
is not transferable to or usable by another person with respect to the same
week.
Failure on the part of an
individual, due to misinformation or lack of information, to furnish all
information material for determination of the number of the individual's
dependents is good cause to issue a redetermination as to the amount of
benefits based on the number of the individual's dependents as of the beginning
of the benefit year.
(c) Subject to subsection
(f), all of the following apply to eligible individuals:
(1) Each eligible
individual must be paid a weekly benefit rate with respect to the week for
which the individual earns or receives no remuneration. Notwithstanding the
definition of week in section 50, if within 2 consecutive weeks in which an
individual was not unemployed within the meaning of section 48 there was a
period of 7 or more consecutive days for which the individual did not earn or
receive remuneration, that period is considered a week for benefit purposes
under this act if a claim for benefits for that period is filed not later than
30 days after the end of the period.
(2) The weekly benefit
rate is reduced with respect to each week in which the eligible individual
earns or receives remuneration at the rate of 40 cents for each whole $1.00 of
remuneration earned or received during that week. Beginning October 1, 2015, an
eligible individual's weekly benefit rate is reduced at the rate of 50 cents
for each whole $1.00 of remuneration in which the eligible individual earns or
receives remuneration in that benefit week. The weekly benefit rate is not
reduced under this subdivision for remuneration received for on-call or
training services as a volunteer firefighter, if the volunteer firefighter
receives less than $10,000.00 in a calendar year for services as a volunteer
firefighter.
(3) An individual who
receives or earns partial remuneration may not receive a total of benefits and
earnings that exceeds 1-3/5 times his or her weekly benefit amount. For each
dollar of total benefits and earnings that exceeds 1-3/5 times the individual's
weekly benefit amount, benefits are reduced by $1.00. Beginning October 1,
2015, the total benefits and earnings for an individual who receives or earns
partial remuneration may not exceed 1-1/2 times his or her weekly benefit
amount. The individual's benefits are reduced by $1.00 for each dollar by which
the total benefits and earnings exceed 1-1/2 times the individual's weekly
benefit amount.
(4) If the reduction in a
claimant's benefit rate for a week in accordance with subdivision (2) or (3)
results in a benefit rate greater than zero for that week, the claimant's
balance of weeks of benefit payments is reduced by 1 week.
(5) All remuneration for
work performed during a shift that terminates on 1 day but that began on the
preceding day is considered to have been earned by the eligible individual on
the preceding day.
(6) The unemployment insurance agency shall report annually
to the legislature the following information with regard to subdivisions (2)
and (3):
(a) The number of
individuals whose weekly benefit rate was reduced at the rate of 40 or 50 cents
for each whole $1.00 of remuneration earned or received over the immediately
preceding calendar year.
(b) The number of individuals
who received or earned partial remuneration at or exceeding the applicable
limit of 1-1/2 or 1-3/5 times their weekly benefit amount prescribed in
subdivision (3) for any 1 or more weeks during the immediately preceding
calendar year.
(7) The unemployment insurance agency shall not use prorated
quarterly wages to establish a reduction in benefits under this subsection.
(d) Subject to subsection
(f) and this subsection, the maximum benefit amount payable to an individual in
a benefit year for purposes of this section and section 20(d) is the number of
weeks of benefits payable to an individual during the benefit year, multiplied
by the individual's weekly benefit rate. The number of weeks of benefits
payable to an individual shall be calculated by taking 43% of the individual's
base period wages and dividing the result by the individual's weekly benefit
rate. If the quotient is not a whole or half number, the result is rounded down
to the nearest half number. However, for each eligible individual filing an
initial claim before January 15, 2012, not more than 26 weeks of benefits or
less than 14 weeks of benefits are payable to an individual in a benefit year.
For each eligible individual filing an initial claim on or after January 15,
2012, not more than 20 weeks of benefits or less than 14 weeks of benefits are
payable to an individual in a benefit year. The limitation of total benefits
set forth in this subsection does not apply to claimants declared eligible for
training benefits in accordance with subsection (g).
(e) When a claimant dies
or is judicially declared insane or mentally incompetent, unemployment
compensation benefits accrued and payable to that person for weeks of
unemployment before death, insanity, or incompetency, but not paid, become due
and payable to the person who is the legal heir or guardian of the claimant or
to any other person found by the commission to be equitably entitled to the
benefits by reason of having incurred expense in behalf of the claimant for the
claimant's burial or other necessary expenses.
(f)(1) For benefit years
beginning before October 1, 2000, and notwithstanding any inconsistent
provisions of this act, the weekly benefit rate of each individual who is
receiving or will receive a "retirement benefit", as defined in
subdivision (4), is adjusted as provided in subparagraphs (a), (b), and (c).
However, an individual's extended benefit account and an individual's weekly
extended benefit rate under section 64 is established without reduction under
this subsection unless subdivision (5) is in effect. Except as otherwise
provided in this subsection, all other provisions of this act continue to apply
in connection with the benefit claims of those retired persons.
(a) If and to the extent
that unemployment benefits payable under this act would be chargeable to an
employer who has contributed to the financing of a retirement plan under which
the claimant is receiving or will receive a retirement benefit yielding a pro
rata weekly amount equal to or larger than the claimant's weekly benefit rate
as otherwise established under this act, the claimant must not receive
unemployment benefits that would be chargeable to the employer under this act.
(b) If and to the extent
that unemployment benefits payable under this act would be chargeable to an
employer who has contributed to the financing of a retirement plan under which
the claimant is receiving or will receive a retirement benefit yielding a pro
rata weekly amount less than the claimant's weekly benefit rate as otherwise established
under this act, then the weekly benefit rate otherwise payable to the claimant
and chargeable to the employer under this act is reduced by an amount equal to
the pro rata weekly amount, adjusted to the next lower multiple of $1.00, which
the claimant is receiving or will receive as a retirement benefit.
(c) If the unemployment
benefit payable under this act would be chargeable to an employer who has not
contributed to the financing of a retirement plan under which the claimant is
receiving or will receive a retirement benefit, then the weekly benefit rate of
the claimant as otherwise established under this act is not reduced due to
receipt of a retirement benefit.
(d) If the unemployment
benefit payable under this act is computed on the basis of multiemployer credit
weeks and a portion of the benefit is allocable under section 20(e) to an
employer who has contributed to the financing of a retirement plan under which
the claimant is receiving or will receive a retirement benefit, the adjustments
required by subparagraph (a) or (b) apply only to that portion of the weekly
benefit rate that would otherwise be allocable and chargeable to the employer.
(2) If an individual's
weekly benefit rate under this act was established before the period for which
the individual first receives a retirement benefit, any benefits received after
a retirement benefit becomes payable must be determined in accordance with the
formula stated in this subsection.
(3) When necessary to
assure prompt payment of benefits, the commission shall determine the pro rata
weekly amount yielded by an individual's retirement benefit based on the best
information currently available to it. In the absence of fraud, a determination
must not be reconsidered unless it is established that the individual's actual
retirement benefit in fact differs from the amount determined by $2.00 or more
per week. The reconsideration applies only to benefits that may be claimed
after the information on which the reconsideration is based was received by the
commission.
(4)(a) As used in this
subsection, "retirement benefit" means a benefit, annuity, or pension
of any type or that part thereof that is described in subparagraph (b) that is
both:
(i) Provided as an incident of employment under an established
retirement plan, policy, or agreement, including federal social security if
subdivision (5) is in effect.
(ii) Payable to an
individual because the individual has qualified on the basis of attained age,
length of service, or disability, whether or not the individual retired or was
retired from employment. Amounts paid to individuals in the course of
liquidation of a private pension or retirement fund because of termination of
the business or of a plant or department of the business of the employer
involved are not retirement benefits.
(b) If a benefit as described in subparagraph (a) is payable
or paid to the individual under a plan to which the individual has contributed:
(i) Less than 1/2 of
the cost of the benefit, then only 1/2 of the benefit is treated as a retirement
benefit.
(ii) One-half or more
of the cost of the benefit, then none of the benefit is treated as a retirement
benefit.
(c) The burden of establishing the extent of an individual's
contribution to the cost of his or her retirement benefit for the purpose of
subparagraph (b) is upon the employer who has contributed to the plan under
which a benefit is provided.
(5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection,
for any week that begins after March 31, 1980, and with respect to which an individual
is receiving a governmental or other pension and claiming unemployment
compensation, the weekly benefit amount payable to the individual for those
weeks is reduced, but not below zero, by the entire prorated weekly amount of
any governmental or other pension, retirement or retired pay, annuity, or any
other similar payment that is based on any previous work of the individual.
This reduction is made only if it is required as a condition for full tax
credit against the tax imposed by the federal unemployment tax act, 26 USC 3301
to 3311.
(6) For benefit years beginning on or after October 1, 2000,
notwithstanding any inconsistent provisions of this act, the weekly benefit
rate of each individual who is receiving or will receive a retirement benefit,
as defined in subdivision (4), is adjusted as provided in subparagraphs (a),
(b), and (c). However, an individual's extended benefit account and an
individual's weekly extended benefit rate under section 64 is established
without reduction under this subsection, unless subdivision (5) is in effect.
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, all the other provisions of
this act apply to the benefit claims of those retired persons. However, if the
reduction would impair the full tax credit against the tax imposed by the
federal unemployment tax act, 26 USC 3301 to 3311, unemployment benefits are
not reduced as provided in subparagraphs (a), (b), and (c) for receipt of any
governmental or other pension, retirement or retired pay, annuity, or other
similar payment that was not includable in the gross income of the individual
for the taxable year in which it was received because it was a part of a
rollover distribution.
(a) If any base period or chargeable employer has contributed
to the financing of a retirement plan under which the claimant is receiving or
will receive a retirement benefit yielding a pro rata weekly amount equal to or
larger than the claimant's weekly benefit rate as otherwise established under
this act, the claimant is not eligible to receive unemployment benefits.
(b) If any base period employer or chargeable employer has
contributed to the financing of a retirement plan under which the claimant is
receiving or will receive a retirement benefit yielding a pro rata weekly
amount less than the claimant's weekly benefit rate as otherwise established
under this act, then the weekly benefit rate otherwise payable to the claimant
is reduced by an amount equal to the pro rata weekly amount, adjusted to the
next lower multiple of $1.00, which the claimant is receiving or will receive
as a retirement benefit.
(c) If no base period or separating employer has contributed
to the financing of a retirement plan under which the claimant is receiving or
will receive a retirement benefit, then the weekly benefit rate of the claimant
as otherwise established under this act shall not be reduced due to receipt of
a retirement benefit.
(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, an
individual pursuing vocational training or retraining pursuant to section 28(2)
who has exhausted all benefits available under subsection (d) may be paid for
each week of approved vocational training pursued beyond the date of exhaustion
a benefit amount in accordance with subsection (c), but not in excess of the
individual's most recent weekly benefit rate. However, an individual must not
be paid training benefits totaling more than 18 times the individual's most
recent weekly benefit rate. The expiration or termination of a benefit year
does not stop or interrupt payment of training benefits if the training for
which the benefits were granted began before expiration or termination of the
benefit year.
(h) A payment of accrued unemployment benefits is not payable
to an eligible individual or in behalf of that individual as provided in
subsection (e) more than 6 years after the ending date of the benefit year
covering the payment or 2 calendar years after the calendar year in which there
is final disposition of a contested case, whichever is later.
(i) Benefits based on service in employment described in
section 42(8), (9), and (10) are payable in the same amount, on the same terms,
and subject to the same conditions as compensation payable on the basis of
other service subject to this act, except that:
(1) With respect to service performed in an instructional,
research, or principal administrative capacity for an institution of higher
education as defined in section 53(2), or for an educational institution other
than an institution of higher education as defined in section 53(3), benefits
are not payable to an individual based on those services for any week of
unemployment beginning after December 31, 1977 that commences during the period
between 2 successive academic years or during a similar period between 2
regular terms, whether or not successive, or during a period of paid sabbatical
leave provided for in the individual's contract, to an individual if the
individual performs the service in the first of the academic years or terms and
if there is a contract or a reasonable assurance that the individual will
perform service in an instructional, research, or principal administrative
capacity for an institution of higher education or an educational institution
other than an institution of higher education in the second of the academic
years or terms, whether or not the terms are successive.
(2) With respect to service performed in other than an
instructional, research, or principal administrative capacity for an
institution of higher education as defined in section 53(2) or for an
educational institution other than an institution of higher education as
defined in section 53(3), benefits are not payable based on those services for
any week of unemployment beginning after December 31, 1977 that commences
during the period between 2 successive academic years or terms to any
individual if that individual performs the service in the first of the academic
years or terms and if there is a reasonable assurance that the individual will
perform the service for an institution of higher education or an educational
institution other than an institution of higher education in the second of the
academic years or terms.
(3) With respect to any service described in subdivision (1)
or (2), benefits are not payable to an individual based upon service for any
week of unemployment that commences during an established and customary
vacation period or holiday recess if the individual performs the service in the
period immediately before the vacation period or holiday recess and there is a
contract or reasonable assurance that the individual will perform the service
in the period immediately following the vacation period or holiday recess.
(4) If benefits are denied to an individual for any week
solely as a result of subdivision (2) and the individual was not offered an
opportunity to perform in the second academic year or term the service for
which reasonable assurance had been given, the individual is entitled to a
retroactive payment of benefits for each week for which the individual had
previously filed a timely claim for benefits. An individual entitled to
benefits under this subdivision may apply for those benefits by mail in
accordance with R 421.210 of the Michigan Administrative Code as promulgated by
the commission.
(5) Benefits based upon services in other than an
instructional, research, or principal administrative capacity for an
institution of higher education are not denied for any week of unemployment
commencing during the period between 2 successive academic years or terms
solely because the individual had performed the service in the first of the
academic years or terms and there is reasonable assurance that the individual
will perform the service for an institution of higher education or an
educational institution other than an institution of higher education in the
second of the academic years or terms, unless a denial is required as a
condition for full tax credit against the tax imposed by the federal
unemployment tax act, 26 USC 3301 to 3311.
(6) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, and
notwithstanding subdivisions (1), (2), and (3), the denial of benefits does not
prevent an individual from completing requalifying weeks in accordance with
section 29(3) nor does the denial prevent an individual from receiving benefits
based on service with an employer other than an educational institution for any
week of unemployment occurring between academic years or terms, whether or not
successive, or during an established and customary vacation period or holiday
recess, even though the employer is not the most recent chargeable employer in
the individual's base period. However, in that case section 20(b) applies to
the sequence of benefit charging, except for the employment with the
educational institution, and section 50(b) applies to the calculation of credit
weeks. When a denial of benefits under subdivision (1) no longer applies,
benefits are charged in accordance with the normal sequence of charging as
provided in section 20(b).
(7) For benefit years beginning on or after October 1, 2000,
and notwithstanding subdivisions (1), (2), and (3), the denial of benefits does
not prevent an individual from completing requalifying weeks in accordance with
section 29(3) and does not prevent an individual from receiving benefits based
on service with another base period employer other than an educational
institution for any week of unemployment occurring between academic years or
terms, whether or not successive, or during an established and customary
vacation period or holiday recess. However, if benefits are paid based on
service with 1 or more base period employers other than an educational
institution, the individual's weekly benefit rate is calculated in accordance
with subsection (b)(1) but during the denial period the individual's weekly benefit
payment is reduced by the portion of the payment attributable to base period
wages paid by an educational institution and the account or experience account
of the educational institution is not charged for benefits payable to the
individual. When a denial of benefits under subdivision (1) is no longer
applicable, benefits are paid and charged on the basis of base period wages
with each of the base period employers including the educational institution.
(8) For the purposes of this subsection, "academic year"
means that period, as defined by the educational institution, when classes are
in session for that length of time required for students to receive sufficient
instruction or earn sufficient credit to complete academic requirements for a
particular grade level or to complete instruction in a noncredit course.
(9) In accordance with subdivisions (1), (2), and (3),
benefits for any week of unemployment are denied to an individual who performed
services described in subdivision (1), (2), or (3) in an educational
institution while in the employ of an educational service agency. For the
purpose of this subdivision, "educational service agency" means a
governmental agency or governmental entity that is established and operated
exclusively for the purpose of providing the services to 1 or more educational
institutions.
(j) Benefits are not payable to an individual on the basis of
any base period services, substantially all of which consist of participating
in sports or athletic events or training or preparing to participate, for a
week that commences during the period between 2 successive sport seasons or
similar periods if the individual performed the services in the first of the
seasons or similar periods and there is a reasonable assurance that the
individual will perform the services in the later of the seasons or similar
periods.
(k)(1) Benefits are not payable on the basis of services
performed by an alien unless the alien is an individual who was lawfully
admitted for permanent residence at the time the services were performed, was
lawfully present for the purpose of performing the services, or was permanently
residing in the United States under color of law at the time the services were
performed, including an alien who was lawfully present in the United States
under section 212(d)(5) of the immigration and nationality act, 8 USC 1182.
(2) Any data or information required of individuals applying
for benefits to determine whether benefits are payable because of their alien
status are uniformly required from all applicants for benefits.
(3) If an individual's application for benefits would
otherwise be approved, a determination that benefits to that individual are not
payable because of the individual's alien status must not be made except upon a
preponderance of the evidence.
(m)(1) An individual filing a new claim for unemployment
compensation under this act, at the time of filing the claim, shall disclose
whether the individual owes child support obligations as defined in this
subsection. If an individual discloses that he or she owes child support
obligations and is determined to be eligible for unemployment compensation, the
unemployment insurance
agency shall notify the state or local child support enforcement agency
enforcing the obligation that the individual has been determined to be eligible
for unemployment compensation.
(2) Notwithstanding section 30, the unemployment insurance agency shall
deduct and withhold from any unemployment compensation payable to an individual
who owes child support obligations by using whichever of the following methods
results in the greatest amount:
(a) The amount, if any, specified by the individual to be
deducted and withheld under this subdivision.
(b) The amount, if any, determined pursuant to an agreement
submitted to the commission under 42 USC 654(19)(B)(i), by the state or local
child support enforcement agency.
(c) Any amount otherwise required to be deducted and withheld
from unemployment compensation by legal process, as that term is defined in 42
USC 659(i)(5), properly served upon the commission.
(3) The amount of unemployment compensation subject to
deduction under subdivision (2) is that portion that remains payable to the
individual after application of the recoupment provisions of section 62(a) and
the reduction provisions of subsections (c) and (f).
(4) The unemployment insurance agency shall pay any amount
deducted and withheld under subdivision (2) to the appropriate state or local
child support enforcement agency.
(5) Any amount deducted and withheld under subdivision (2) is
treated for all purposes as if it were paid to the individual as unemployment
compensation and paid by the individual to the state or local child support
enforcement agency in satisfaction of the individual's child support
obligations.
(6) Provisions concerning deductions under this subsection
apply only if the state or local child support enforcement agency agrees in
writing to reimburse and does reimburse the unemployment insurance agency for the administrative costs
incurred by the unemployment insurance
agency under this subsection that are attributable to child
support obligations being enforced by the state or local child support
enforcement agency. The administrative costs incurred are determined by the
unemployment insurance agency.
The unemployment insurance agency,
in its discretion, may require payment of administrative costs in advance.
(7) As used in this subsection:
(a) "Unemployment compensation", for purposes of
subdivisions (1) to (5), means any compensation payable under this act,
including amounts payable by the unemployment insurance agency pursuant to an agreement
under any federal law providing for compensation, assistance, or allowances
with respect to unemployment.
(b) "Child support obligations" includes only obligations
that are being enforced pursuant to a plan described in 42 USC 654 that has
been approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services under 42 USC 651 to
669b.
(c) "State or local child support enforcement
agency" means any agency of this state or a political subdivision of this
state operating pursuant to a plan described in subparagraph (b).
(n) Subsection (i)(2) applies to services performed by school
bus drivers employed by a private contributing employer holding a contractual
relationship with an educational institution, but only if at least 75% of the
individual's base period wages with that employer are attributable to services
performed as a school bus driver. Subsection (i)(1) and (2) but not subsection
(i)(3) applies to other services described in those subdivisions that are
performed by any employees under an employer's contract with an educational
institution or an educational service agency.
(o)(1) For weeks of unemployment beginning after July 1,
1996, unemployment benefits based on services by a seasonal worker performed in
seasonal employment are payable only for weeks of unemployment that occur
during the normal seasonal work period. Benefits are not payable based on
services performed in seasonal employment for any week of unemployment
beginning after March 28, 1996 that begins during the period between 2
successive normal seasonal work periods to any individual if that individual
performs the service in the first of the normal seasonal work periods and if
there is a reasonable assurance that the individual will perform the service
for a seasonal employer in the second of the normal seasonal work periods. If
benefits are denied to an individual for any week solely as a result of this
subsection and the individual is not offered an opportunity to perform in the
second normal seasonal work period for which reasonable assurance of employment
had been given, the individual is entitled to a retroactive payment of benefits
under this subsection for each week that the individual previously filed a
timely claim for benefits. An individual may apply for any retroactive benefits
under this subsection in accordance with R 421.210 of the Michigan
Administrative Code.
(2) Not less than 20 days before the estimated beginning date
of a normal seasonal work period, an employer may apply to the commission in
writing for designation as a seasonal employer. At the time of application, the
employer shall conspicuously display a copy of the application on the
employer's premises. Within 90 days after receipt of the application, the
commission shall determine if the employer is a seasonal employer. A
determination or redetermination of the commission concerning the status of an
employer as a seasonal employer, or a decision of an administrative law judge,
the Michigan compensation appellate commission, or the courts of this state
concerning the status of an employer as a seasonal employer, which has become
final, together with the record thereof, may be introduced in any proceeding
involving a claim for benefits, and the facts found and decision issued in the
determination, redetermination, or decision is conclusive unless substantial
evidence to the contrary is introduced by or on behalf of the claimant.
(3) If the employer is determined to be a seasonal employer,
the employer shall conspicuously display on its premises a notice of the
determination and the beginning and ending dates of the employer's normal
seasonal work periods. The commission shall furnish the notice. The notice must
additionally specify that an employee must timely apply for unemployment
benefits at the end of a first seasonal work period to preserve his or her
right to receive retroactive unemployment benefits if he or she is not
reemployed by the seasonal employer in the second of the normal seasonal work
periods.
(4) The commission may issue a determination terminating an
employer's status as a seasonal employer on the commission's own motion for
good cause, or upon the written request of the employer. A termination
determination under this subdivision terminates an employer's status as a
seasonal employer, and becomes effective on the beginning date of the normal
seasonal work period that would have immediately followed the date the
commission issues the determination. A determination under this subdivision is
subject to review in the same manner and to the same extent as any other
determination under this act.
(5) An employer whose status as a seasonal employer is
terminated under subdivision (4) may not reapply for a seasonal employer status
determination until after a regularly recurring normal seasonal work period has
begun and ended.
(6) If a seasonal employer informs an employee who received
assurance of being rehired that, despite the assurance, the employee will not
be rehired at the beginning of the employer's next normal seasonal work period,
this subsection does not prevent the employee from receiving unemployment
benefits in the same manner and to the same extent he or she would receive
benefits under this act from an employer who has not been determined to be a
seasonal employer.
(7) A successor of a seasonal employer is considered to be a
seasonal employer unless the successor provides the commission, within 120 days
after the transfer, with a written request for termination of its status as a
seasonal employer in accordance with subdivision (4).
(8) At the time an employee is hired by a seasonal employer,
the employer shall notify the employee in writing if the employee will be a
seasonal worker. The employer shall provide the worker with written notice of
any subsequent change in the employee's status as a seasonal worker. If an
employee of a seasonal employer is denied benefits because that employee is a
seasonal worker, the employee may contest that designation in accordance with
section 32a.
(9) As used in this subsection:
(a) "Construction industry" means the work activity
designated in sector group 23 - construction of the North American classification system Classification System -
United States Office of Management and Budget, 1997 edition.
(b) "Normal seasonal work period" means that period
or those periods of time determined under rules promulgated by the unemployment
insurance agency during
which an individual is employed in seasonal employment.
(c) "Seasonal employment" means the employment of 1
or more individuals primarily hired to perform services during regularly
recurring periods of 26 weeks or less in any 52-week period other than services
in the construction industry.
(d) "Seasonal employer" means an employer, other
than an employer in the construction industry, who applies to the unemployment insurance agency for
designation as a seasonal employer and who the unemployment insurance agency determines
is an employer whose operations and business require employees engaged in
seasonal employment. A seasonal employer designation under this act need not
correspond to a category assigned under the North American classification system Classification System —
United States Office of Management and Budget.
(e) "Seasonal worker" means a worker who has been
paid wages by a seasonal employer for work performed only during the normal
seasonal work period.
(10) This subsection does not apply if the United States
Department of Labor finds it to be contrary to the federal unemployment tax
act, 26 USC 3301 to 3311, or the social security act, chapter 531, 49 Stat 620,
and if conformity with the federal law is required as a condition for full tax
credit against the tax imposed under the federal unemployment tax act, 26 USC
3301 to 3311, or as a condition for receipt by the commission of federal
administrative grant funds under the social security act, chapter 531, 49 Stat
620.
(p) Benefits are not payable to an individual based upon his
or her services as a school crossing guard for any week of unemployment that
begins between 2 successive academic years or terms, if that individual
performs the services of a school crossing guard in the first of the academic
years or terms and has a reasonable assurance that he or she will perform those
services in the second of the academic years or terms.
Sec. 28. (1) An
unemployed individual is eligible to receive benefits with respect to any week
only if the unemployment insurance
agency finds all of the following:
(a) The individual has registered for work and has continued
to report pursuant to unemployment insurance agency rules and is actively
engaged in seeking work. The requirements that the individual must report, must
register for work, must be available to perform suitable full-time work, and
must seek work may be waived by the unemployment insurance agency if the individual is laid
off and the employer who laid the individual off notifies the unemployment insurance agency in
writing or by computerized data exchange that the layoff is temporary and that
work is expected to be available for the individual within a declared number of
days, not to exceed 45 calendar days following the last day the individual
worked. This waiver is not effective unless the notification from the employer
is received by the unemployment insurance
agency before the individual has completed his or her first
compensable week following layoff. If the individual is not recalled within the
specified period, the waiver ceases to be operative with respect to that
layoff. Except for a period of disqualification, the requirement that the
individual shall seek work may be waived by the unemployment insurance agency if it
finds that suitable work is unavailable both in the locality where the
individual resides and in those localities in which the individual has earned
wages during or after the base period. This waiver does not apply to a claimant
enrolled and attending classes as a full-time student. An individual is
considered to have satisfied the requirement of personal reporting at an
employment office, as applied to a week in a period during which the
requirements of registration and seeking work have been waived by the
unemployment insurance agency
pursuant to this subdivision, if the individual has satisfied the personal reporting
requirement with respect to a preceding week in that period and the individual
has reported with respect to the week by mail pursuant to the rules promulgated
by the unemployment insurance
agency.
(b) The individual has made a claim for benefits pursuant to
section 32 and has provided the unemployment insurance agency with all of the following:
(i) His or her Social
Security number.
(ii) His or her driver
license number, and the state that issued the license, or state identification
card number, and the state that issued the identification card, or copies of
the acceptable documents as provided in the Form I-9.
(iii) If the
unemployment insurance agency
has requested them, copies of the acceptable documents as provided in the Form
I-9. As used in this subdivision, "Form I-9" means the employment
verification form that fulfills the employment verification obligations under 8
CFR 274a.2.
(c) The individual is able and available to appear at a
location of the unemployment insurance
agency's choosing for evaluation of eligibility for benefits, if
required, and to perform suitable full-time work of a character that the
individual is qualified to perform by past experience or training, which is of
a character generally similar to work for which the individual has previously
received wages, and for which the individual is available, full time, either at
a locality at which the individual earned wages for insured work during his or
her base period or at a locality where it is found by the unemployment insurance agency that
such work is available. An individual is considered unavailable for work under
any of the following circumstances:
(i) The individual
fails during a benefit year to notify or update a chargeable employer with
telephone, electronic mail, or other information sufficient to allow the
employer to contact the individual about available work.
(ii) The individual
fails, without good cause, to respond to the unemployment insurance agency within 14 calendar days of
the later of the mailing of a notice to the address of record requiring the
individual to contact the unemployment insurance agency or of the leaving of a
telephone message requesting a return call and providing a return name and
telephone number on an automated answering device or with an individual
answering the telephone number of record.
(iii) Unless the
claimant shows good cause for failure to respond, mail sent to the individual's
address of record is returned as undeliverable and the telephone number of
record has been disconnected or changed or is otherwise no longer associated
with the individual.
(d) In the event of the death of an individual's immediate
family member, the eligibility requirements of availability and reporting are
waived for the day of the death and for 4 consecutive calendar days thereafter.
As used in this subdivision, "immediate family member" means a
spouse, child, stepchild, adopted child, grandchild, parent, grandparent,
brother, or sister of the individual or his or her spouse. It shall also include
the spouse of any of the persons specified in the previous sentence.
(e) The individual participates in reemployment services,
such as job search assistance services, if the individual has been determined
or redetermined by the unemployment insurance agency to be likely to exhaust
regular benefits and need reemployment services pursuant to a profiling system
established by the unemployment insurance
agency.
(2) The unemployment insurance agency may authorize an individual
with an unexpired benefit year to pursue vocational training or retraining only
if the unemployment insurance agency
finds all of the following:
(a) Reasonable opportunities for employment in occupations
for which the individual is fitted by training and experience do not exist in
the locality in which the individual is claiming benefits.
(b) The vocational training course relates to an occupation
or skill for which there are, or are expected to be in the immediate future,
reasonable employment opportunities.
(c) The training course has been approved by a local advisory
council on which both management and labor are represented, or if there is no
local advisory council, by the unemployment insurance agency.
(d) The individual has the required qualifications and
aptitudes to complete the course successfully.
(e) The vocational training course has been approved by the
state board of education and is maintained by a public or private school or by
the unemployment insurance agency.
(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, an
otherwise eligible individual is not ineligible for benefits because he or she
is participating in training with the approval of the unemployment insurance agency. For
each week that the unemployment
insurance agency finds that an individual who is claiming
benefits under this act and who is participating in training with the approval
of the unemployment insurance agency,
is satisfactorily pursuing an approved course of vocational training, it shall
waive the requirements that he or she be available for work and be seeking work
as prescribed in subsection (1)(a) and (c), and it shall find good cause for
his or her failure to apply for suitable work, report to a former employer for
an interview concerning suitable work, or accept suitable work as required in
section 29(1)(c), (d), and (e).
(4) The waiver of the requirement that a claimant seek work
under subsection (1)(a) is not applicable to weeks of unemployment for which
the claimant is claiming extended benefits and to which section 64(7)(a)(ii) applies, unless the individual is participating in training
approved by the unemployment insurance
agency.
(5) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this act, an
otherwise eligible individual must not be denied benefits solely because the
individual is in training approved under section 236(a)(1) of the trade act of
1974, 19 USC 2296, nor shall the individual be denied benefits by reason of
leaving work to enter such training if the work left is not suitable
employment. Furthermore, an otherwise eligible individual must not be denied
benefits because of the application to any such week in training of provisions
of this act, or any applicable federal unemployment compensation law, relating
to availability for work, active search for work, or refusal to accept work.
For purposes of this subsection, "suitable employment" means, with
respect to an individual, work of a substantially equal or higher skill level
than the individual's past adversely affected employment, as defined for
purposes of the trade act of 1974, 19 USC 2101 to 2497b, and wages for that
work at not less than 80% of the individual's average weekly wage as determined
for the purposes of the trade act of 1974, 19 USC 2101 to 2497b.
(6) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (7), for
purposes of this section, for benefit years beginning on or after January 1,
2013, to be actively engaged in seeking work, an individual must conduct a
systematic and sustained search for work in each week the individual is
claiming benefits, using any of the following methods to report the details of
the work search:
(a) Reporting at monthly intervals on the unemployment insurance agency's online
reporting system the name of each employer and physical or online location of
each employer where work was sought and the date and method by which work was
sought with each employer.
(b) Filing a written report with the unemployment insurance agency by
mail or facsimile transmission not later than the end of the fourth calendar
week after the end of the week in which the individual engaged in the work
search, on a form approved by the unemployment insurance agency, indicating the name of each
employer and physical or online location of each employer where work was sought
and the date and method by which work was sought with each employer.
(c) Appearing at least monthly in person at a Michigan works
agency office to report the name and physical or online location of each
employer where the individual sought work during the previous month and the
date and method by which work was sought with each employer.
(7) For purposes of this section, beginning on the effective date of the
amendatory act that added this subsection, April 2, 2020, to be actively engaged in
seeking work, an individual must conduct a systematic and sustained search for
work in each week the individual is claiming benefits and must report to the
unemployment insurance agency
the details of the work search at least once every 2 weeks or, if the
unemployment insurance agency
prescribes a shorter reporting period, the reporting period prescribed by the
unemployment insurance agency.
An individual may conduct a systematic and sustained search for work by doing
any of the following:
(a) Using resources available at a Michigan works agency
office to do any of the following:
(i) Participate in
reemployment services and eligibility assessment activities.
(ii) Identify the
skills the individual possesses that are consistent with target or demand
occupations in the local workforce development area.
(iii) Obtain job
postings and seek employment for suitable positions needed by local employers.
(b) Attending job search seminars or other employment
workshops that offer instruction in improving an individual's skills for
finding and obtaining employment.
(c) Creating a user profile on a professional networking site
or using an online career tool. Creating duplicate user profiles or
resubmitting or reuploading the same resume to the same professional networking
site does not satisfy the requirements of this subdivision.
(d) Applying for an available position with, submitting a
resume to, or interviewing with employers. Applying for the same position
within a 4-week period or contacting an employer to determine whether a
position is available does not satisfy the requirements of this subdivision,
unless the individual uses his or her union hiring hall to conduct a search for
work.
(e) Registering for work with a private employment agency or,
if it is available to the individual in his or her occupation or profession,
the placement facility of a school, college, or university.
(f) Taking an examination that is required for a position in
the state civil service.
(8) The work search conducted by the claimant is subject to
audit by the unemployment
insurance agency.
(9) The unemployment insurance agency shall request but shall not
require an individual who is applying for benefits to submit his or her base
period employer's unemployment insurance
agency account number and federal employer identification number.
(10) The unemployment insurance agency shall use all of the
documentation and information provided by an individual applying for benefits
to verify the identity of the individual before making an initial payment on
the individual's claim.
Sec. 28c. (1) An
employer that meets all of the following requirements may apply to the
unemployment insurance agency
for approval of a shared-work plan:
(a) The employer has filed all quarterly reports and other
reports required under this act and has paid all obligation assessments,
contributions, reimbursements in lieu of contributions, interest, and penalties
due through the date of the employer's application.
(b) If the employer is a contributing employer, the
employer's reserve in the employer's experience account as of the most recent
computation date preceding the date of the employer's application is a positive
number.
(c) The employer has paid wages for the 12 consecutive
calendar quarters preceding the date of the employer's application.
(2) An application under this section shall be made in the
manner prescribed by the unemployment insurance agency and contain all of the
following:
(a) The employer's assurance that it will provide reports to
the unemployment insurance agency
relating to the operation of its shared-work plan at the times and in the
manner prescribed by the unemployment insurance agency and containing all
information required by the unemployment insurance agency.
(b) The employer's assurance that it will not hire new
employees in, or transfer employees to, the affected unit during the effective
period of the shared-work plan.
(c) The employer's assurance that it will not lay off
participating employees during the effective period of the shared-work plan, or
reduce participating employees' hours of work by more than the reduction
percentage during the effective period of the shared-work plan, except in cases
of holidays, designated vacation periods, equipment maintenance, or similar
circumstances.
(d) The employer's certification that it has obtained the
approval of any applicable collective bargaining unit representative and has
notified all affected employees who are not in a collective bargaining unit of
the proposed shared-work plan.
(e) A list of the week or weeks within the requested
effective period of the plan during which participating employees are
anticipated to work fewer hours than the number of hours determined under
section 28d(1)(e) due to circumstances listed in subdivision (c).
(f) The employer's certification that the implementation of a
shared-work plan is in lieu of layoffs that would affect at least 15% of the
employees in the affected unit and would result in an equivalent reduction in
work hours.
(g) The employer's assurance that it will abide by all terms
and conditions of sections 28b to 28m.
(h) The employer's certification that, to the best of his or
her knowledge, participation in the shared-work plan is consistent with the
employer's obligations under federal law and the law of this state.
(i) Any other relevant information required by the
unemployment insurance agency.
(3) An employer may apply to the unemployment insurance agency for
approval of more than 1 shared-work plan.
Sec. 29. (1) Except
as provided in subsection (5), an individual is disqualified from receiving
benefits if he or she:
(a) Left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to
the employer or employing unit. An individual who left work is presumed to have
left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to the employer or
employing unit. An individual who is absent from work for a period of 3
consecutive work days or more without contacting the employer in a manner
acceptable to the employer and of which the individual was informed at the time
of hire shall be considered to have voluntarily left work without good cause
attributable to the employer. An individual who becomes unemployed as a result
of negligently losing a requirement for the job of which he or she was informed
at the time of hire shall be considered to have voluntarily left work without
good cause attributable to the employer. An individual claiming benefits under
this act has the burden of proof to establish that he or she left work
involuntarily or for good cause that was attributable to the employer or
employing unit. An individual claiming to have left work involuntarily for
medical reasons must have done all of the following before the leaving: secured
a statement from a medical professional that continuing in the individual's
current job would be harmful to the individual's physical or mental health;
unsuccessfully attempted to secure alternative work with the employer; and
unsuccessfully attempted to be placed on a leave of absence with the employer
to last until the individual's mental or physical health would no longer be
harmed by the current job. However, if any of the following conditions is met,
the leaving does not disqualify the individual:
(i) The individual
has an established benefit year in effect and during that benefit year leaves
unsuitable work within 60 days after the beginning of that work. Benefits paid after
a leaving under this subparagraph shall not be charged to the experience
account of the employer the individual left, but shall be charged instead to
the nonchargeable benefits account.
(ii) The individual is
the spouse of a full-time member of the United States armed forces, Armed Forces, and the leaving is due to the
military duty reassignment of that member of the United States armed forces Armed Forces to a
different geographic location. Benefits paid after a leaving under this
subparagraph shall not be charged to the experience account of the employer the
individual left, but shall be charged instead to the nonchargeable benefits
account.
(iii) The individual is
concurrently working part-time for an employer or employing unit and for
another employer or employing unit and voluntarily leaves the part-time work
while continuing work with the other employer. The portion of the benefits paid
in accordance with this subparagraph that would otherwise be charged to the
experience account of the part-time employer that the individual left shall not
be charged to the account of that employer, but shall be charged instead to the
nonchargeable benefits account.
(b) Was suspended or discharged for misconduct connected with
the individual's work or for intoxication while at work.
(c) Failed without good cause to apply diligently for
available suitable work after receiving notice from the unemployment insurance agency of the
availability of that work or failed to apply for work with employers that could
reasonably be expected to have suitable work available.
(d) Failed without good cause while unemployed to report to
the individual's former employer or employing unit within a reasonable time
after that employer or employing unit provided notice of the availability of an
interview concerning available suitable work with the former employer or
employing unit.
(e) Failed without good cause to accept suitable work offered
to the individual or to return to the individual's customary self-employment,
if any, when directed by the employment office or the unemployment insurance agency. An
employer that receives a monetary determination under section 32 may notify the
unemployment insurance agency
regarding the availability of suitable work with the employer on the monetary determination
or other form provided by the unemployment insurance agency. Upon receipt of the notice
of the availability of suitable work, the unemployment insurance agency shall notify the claimant of
the availability of suitable work. Until 1 year after the effective date of the amendatory act
that added this sentence, an individual is considered to have refused an offer
of suitable work if the prospective employer requires as a condition of the
offer a drug test that is subject to the same terms and conditions as a drug
test administered under subdivision (m), and the employer withdraws the
conditional offer after either of the following:
(i) The individual tests positive for a
controlled substance and lacks a valid, documented prescription, as defined in
section 17708 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.17708, for the
controlled substance issued to the individual by his or her treating physician.
(ii) The individual refuses without good
cause to submit to the drug test.
(f) Lost his or her job due to absence from work resulting
from a violation of law for which the individual was convicted and sentenced to
jail or prison. This subdivision does not apply if conviction of an individual
results in a sentence to county jail under conditions of day parole as provided
in 1962 PA 60, MCL 801.251 to 801.258, or if the conviction was for a traffic
violation that resulted in an absence of less than 10 consecutive work days
from the individual's place of employment.
(g) Is discharged, whether or not the discharge is
subsequently reduced to a disciplinary layoff or suspension, for participation
in either of the following:
(i) A strike or other
concerted action in violation of an applicable collective bargaining agreement
that results in curtailment of work or restriction of or interference with
production.
(ii) A wildcat strike
or other concerted action not authorized by the individual's recognized
bargaining representative.
(h) Was discharged for an act of assault and battery
connected with the individual's work.
(i) Was discharged for theft connected with the individual's
work.
(j) Was discharged for willful destruction of property
connected with the individual's work.
(k) Committed a theft after receiving notice of a layoff or
discharge, but before the effective date of the layoff or discharge, resulting
in loss or damage to the employer who would otherwise be chargeable for the
benefits, regardless of whether the individual qualified for the benefits
before the theft.
(l) Was employed by a
temporary help firm, which as used in this section means an employer whose
primary business is to provide a client with the temporary services of 1 or
more individuals under contract with the employer, to perform services for a
client of that firm if each of the following conditions is met:
(i) The temporary
help firm provided the employee with a written notice before the employee began
performing services for the client stating in substance both of the following:
(A) That within 7 days after completing services for a client
of the temporary help firm, the employee is under a duty to notify the
temporary help firm of the completion of those services.
(B) That a failure to provide the temporary help firm with
notice of the employee's completion of services pursuant to sub-subparagraph
(A) constitutes a voluntary quit that will affect the employee's eligibility
for unemployment compensation should the employee seek unemployment
compensation following completion of those services.
(ii) The employee did
not provide the temporary help firm with notice that the employee had completed
his or her services for the client within 7 days after completion of his or her
services for the client.
(m) Was discharged for illegally ingesting, injecting,
inhaling, or possessing a controlled substance on the premises of the employer;
refusing to submit to a drug test that was required to be administered in a
nondiscriminatory manner; or testing positive on a drug test, if the test was
administered in a nondiscriminatory manner. If the worker disputes the result
of the testing, and if a generally accepted confirmatory test has not been
administered on the same sample previously tested, then a generally accepted
confirmatory test shall be administered on that sample. If the confirmatory
test also indicates a positive result for the presence of a controlled
substance, the worker who is discharged as a result of the test result will be
disqualified under this subdivision. A report by a drug testing facility
showing a positive result for the presence of a controlled substance is
conclusive unless there is substantial evidence to the contrary. As used in
this subdivision and subdivision (e):
(i) "Controlled
substance" means that term as defined in section 7104 of the public health
code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.7104.
(ii) "Drug
test" means a test designed to detect the illegal use of a controlled
substance.
(iii)
"Nondiscriminatory manner" means administered impartially and
objectively in accordance with a collective bargaining agreement, rule, policy,
a verbal or written notice, or a labor-management contract.
(n) Theft from the employer that resulted in the employee's
conviction, within 2 years of the date of the discharge, of theft or a lesser
included offense.
(2) A disqualification under subsection (1) begins the week
in which the act or discharge that caused the disqualification occurs and
continues until the disqualified individual requalifies under subsection (3).
(3) After the week in which the disqualifying act or
discharge described in subsection (1) occurs, an individual who seeks to
requalify for benefits is subject to all of the following:
(a) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, the
individual shall complete 6 requalifying weeks if he or she was disqualified
under subsection (1)(c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (l), or 13
requalifying weeks if he or she was disqualified under subsection (1)(h), (i),
(j), (k), or (m). A requalifying week required under this subdivision is each
week in which the individual does any of the following:
(i) Earns or receives
remuneration in an amount at least equal to an amount needed to earn a credit
week, as that term is defined in section 50.
(ii) Otherwise meets
all of the requirements of this act to receive a benefit payment if the
individual were not disqualified under subsection (1).
(iii) Receives a
benefit payment based on credit weeks subsequent to the disqualifying act or
discharge.
(b) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, if
the individual is disqualified under subsection (1)(a) or (b), he or she shall
requalify, after the week in which the disqualifying discharge occurred by
earning in employment for an employer liable under this act or the unemployment
compensation act of another state an amount equal to, or in excess of, 7 times
the individual's potential weekly benefit rate, calculated on the basis of
employment with the employer involved in the disqualification, or by earning in
employment for an employer liable under this act or the unemployment
compensation act of another state an amount equal to, or in excess of, 40 times
the state minimum hourly wage times 7, whichever is the lesser amount.
(c) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, a
benefit payable to an individual disqualified under subsection (1)(a) or (b)
shall be charged to the nonchargeable benefits account, and not to the account
of the employer with whom the individual was involved in the disqualification.
(d) For benefit years beginning on or after October 1, 2000,
after the week in which the disqualifying act or discharge occurred, an
individual shall complete 13 requalifying weeks if he or she was disqualified
under subsection (1)(c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (l), or 26
requalifying weeks if he or she was disqualified under subsection (1)(h), (i),
(j), (k), (m), or (n). A requalifying week required under this subdivision is
each week in which the individual does any of the following:
(i) Earns or receives
remuneration in an amount equal to at least 1/13 of the minimum amount needed
in a calendar quarter of the base period for an individual to qualify for
benefits, rounded down to the nearest whole dollar.
(ii) Otherwise meets
all of the requirements of this act to receive a benefit payment if the
individual was not disqualified under subsection (1).
(e) For benefit years beginning on or after October 1, 2000
and beginning before April 26, 2002, if the individual is disqualified under
subsection (1)(a) or (b), he or she shall requalify, after the week in which
the disqualifying act or discharge occurred by earning in employment for an
employer liable under this act or the unemployment compensation law of another
state at least the lesser of the following:
(i) Seven times the
individual's weekly benefit rate.
(ii) Forty times the
state minimum hourly wage times 7.
(f) For benefit years beginning on or after April 26, 2002,
if the individual is disqualified under subsection (1)(a), he or she shall
requalify, after the week in which the disqualifying act or discharge occurred
by earning in employment for an employer liable under this act or the
unemployment compensation law of another state at least 12 times the
individual's weekly benefit rate.
(g) For benefit years beginning on or after April 26, 2002,
if the individual is disqualified under subsection (1)(b), he or she shall
requalify, after the week in which the disqualifying act or discharge occurred
by earning in employment for an employer liable under this act or the
unemployment compensation law of another state at least 17 times the
individual's weekly benefit rate.
(h) A benefit payable to the individual disqualified or
separated under disqualifying circumstances under subsection (1)(a) or (b),
shall be charged to the nonchargeable benefits account, and not to the account
of the employer with whom the individual was involved in the separation.
Benefits payable to an individual determined by the unemployment insurance agency to be
separated under disqualifying circumstances shall not be charged to the account
of the employer involved in the disqualification for any period after the
employer notifies the unemployment insurance agency of the claimant's possible
ineligibility or disqualification. However, an individual filing a new claim
for benefits who reports the reason for separation from a base period employer
as a voluntary leaving shall be presumed to have voluntarily left without good
cause attributable to the employer and shall be disqualified unless the
individual provides substantial evidence to rebut the presumption. If a
disqualifying act or discharge occurs during the individual's benefit year, any
benefits that may become payable to the individual in a later benefit year
based on employment with the employer involved in the disqualification shall be
charged to the nonchargeable benefits account.
(4) The maximum amount of benefits otherwise available under
section 27(d) to an individual disqualified under subsection (1) is subject to
all of the following conditions:
(a) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, if
the individual is disqualified under subsection (1)(c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or
(l) and the maximum amount of benefits is based on wages and
credit weeks earned from an employer before an act or discharge involving that
employer, the amount shall be reduced by an amount equal to the individual's
weekly benefit rate as to that employer multiplied by the lesser of either of
the following:
(i) The number of
requalifying weeks required of the individual under this section.
(ii) The number of
weeks of benefit entitlement remaining with that employer.
(b) If the individual has insufficient or no potential
benefit entitlement remaining with the employer involved in the disqualification
in the benefit year in existence on the date of the disqualifying
determination, a reduction of benefits described in this subsection applies in
a succeeding benefit year with respect to any benefit entitlement based upon
credit weeks earned with the employer before the disqualifying act or
discharge.
(c) For benefit years established before October 1, 2000, an
individual disqualified under subsection (1)(h), (i), (j), (k), or (m) is not
entitled to benefits based on wages and credit weeks earned before the
disqualifying act or discharge with the employer involved in the
disqualification.
(d) The benefit entitlement of an individual disqualified
under subsection (1)(a) or (b) is not subject to reduction as a result of that
disqualification.
(e) A denial or reduction of benefits under this subsection
does not apply to benefits based upon multiemployer credit weeks.
(f) For benefit years established on or after October 1,
2000, if the individual is disqualified under subsection (1)(c), (d), (e), (f),
(g), or (l), the maximum number of weeks otherwise
applicable in calculating benefits for the individual under section 27(d) shall
be reduced by the lesser of the following:
(i) The number of
requalifying weeks required of the individual under this section.
(ii) The number of
weeks of benefit entitlement remaining on the claim.
(g) For benefit years beginning on or after October 1, 2000,
the benefits of an individual disqualified under subsection (1)(h), (i), (j),
(k), (m), or (n) shall be reduced by 13 weeks and any weekly benefit payments
made to the claimant thereafter shall be reduced by the portion of the payment
attributable to base period wages paid by the base period employer involved in
a disqualification under subsection (1)(h), (i), (j), (k), (m), or (n).
(5) If an individual leaves work to accept permanent
full-time work with another employer or to accept a referral to another
employer from the individual's union hiring hall and performs services for that
employer, or if an individual leaves work to accept a recall from a former
employer, all of the following apply:
(a) Subsection (1) does not apply.
(b) Wages earned with the employer whom the individual last
left, including wages previously transferred under this subsection to the last
employer, for the purpose of computing and charging benefits, are wages earned
from the employer with whom the individual accepted work or recall, and
benefits paid based upon those wages shall be charged to that employer.
(c) When issuing a determination covering the period of
employment with a new or former employer described in this subsection, the
unemployment insurance
agency shall advise the chargeable employer of the name and address of the
other employer, the period covered by the employment, and the extent of the
benefits that may be charged to the account of the chargeable employer.
(6) In determining whether work is suitable for an
individual, the unemployment insurance
agency shall consider the degree of risk involved to the individual's health,
safety, and morals, the individual's physical fitness and prior training, the
individual's length of unemployment and prospects for securing local work in
the individual's customary occupation, and the distance of the available work
from the individual's residence. Additionally, the unemployment insurance agency shall
consider the individual's experience and prior earnings, but an unemployed
individual who refuses an offer of work determined to be suitable under this
section shall be denied benefits if the pay rate for that work is at least 70%
of the gross pay rate he or she received immediately before becoming
unemployed. Beginning January 15, 2012, after an individual has received
benefits for 50% of the benefit weeks in the individual's benefit year, work shall
not be considered unsuitable because it is outside of the individual's training
or experience or unsuitable as to pay rate if the pay rate for that work meets
or exceeds the minimum wage; is at least the prevailing mean wage for similar
work in the locality for the most recent full calendar year for which data are
available as published by the department of technology, management, and budget
as "wages by job title", by standard metropolitan statistical area;
and is 120% or more of the individual's weekly benefit amount.
(7) Work is not suitable and benefits shall not be denied
under this act to an otherwise eligible individual for refusing to accept new
work under any of the following conditions:
(a) If the position offered is vacant due directly to a strike,
lockout, or other labor dispute.
(b) If the remuneration, hours, or other conditions of the
work offered are substantially less favorable to the individual than those
prevailing for similar work in the locality.
(c) If as a condition of being employed, the individual would
be required to join a company union or to resign from or refrain from joining a
bona fide labor organization.
(8) All of the following apply to an individual who seeks
benefits under this act:
(a) An individual is disqualified from receiving benefits for
a week in which the individual's total or partial unemployment is due to either
of the following:
(i) A labor dispute
in active progress at the place at which the individual is or was last
employed, or a shutdown or start-up operation caused by that labor dispute.
(ii) A labor dispute,
other than a lockout, in active progress or a shutdown or start-up operation
caused by that labor dispute in any other establishment within the United
States that is both functionally integrated with the establishment described in
subparagraph (i) and operated by
the same employing unit.
(b) An individual's disqualification imposed or imposable
under this subsection is terminated if the individual performs services in
employment with an employer in at least 2 consecutive weeks falling wholly
within the period of the individual's total or partial unemployment due to the
labor dispute, and in addition earns wages in each of those weeks in an amount
equal to or greater than the individual's actual or potential weekly benefit
rate.
(c) An individual is not disqualified under this subsection
if the individual is not directly involved in the labor dispute. An individual
is not directly involved in a labor dispute unless any of the following are
established:
(i) At the time or in
the course of a labor dispute in the establishment in which the individual was
then employed, the individual in concert with 1 or more other employees
voluntarily stopped working other than at the direction of the individual's employing
unit.
(ii) The individual is
participating in, financing, or directly interested in the labor dispute that
causes the individual's total or partial unemployment. The payment of regular
union dues, in amounts and for purposes established before the inception of the
labor dispute, is not financing a labor dispute within the meaning of this
subparagraph.
(iii) At any time a
labor dispute in the establishment or department in which the individual was
employed does not exist, and the individual voluntarily stops working, other
than at the direction of the individual's employing unit, in sympathy with
employees in some other establishment or department in which a labor dispute is
in progress.
(iv) The individual's
total or partial unemployment is due to a labor dispute that was or is in
progress in a department, unit, or group of workers in the same establishment.
(d) As used in this subsection, "directly
interested" shall be construed and applied so as not to disqualify
individuals unemployed as a result of a labor dispute the resolution of which
may not reasonably be expected to affect their wages, hours, or other
conditions of employment, and to disqualify individuals whose wages, hours, or
conditions of employment may reasonably be expected to be affected by the
resolution of the labor dispute. A "reasonable expectation" of an
effect on an individual's wages, hours, or other conditions of employment
exists, in the absence of a substantial preponderance of evidence to the
contrary, in any of the following situations:
(i) If it is
established that there is in the particular establishment or employing unit a
practice, custom, or contractual obligation to extend within a reasonable
period to members of the individual's grade or class of workers in the establishment
in which the individual is or was last employed changes in terms and conditions
of employment that are substantially similar or related to some or all of the
changes in terms and conditions of employment that are made for the workers
among whom there exists the labor dispute that has caused the individual's
total or partial unemployment.
(ii) If it is
established that l of the issues in or purposes of the labor dispute is to
obtain a change in the terms and conditions of employment for members of the individual's
grade or class of workers in the establishment in which the individual is or
was last employed.
(iii) If a collective
bargaining agreement covers both the individual's grade or class of workers in
the establishment in which the individual is or was last employed and the
workers in another establishment of the same employing unit who are actively
participating in the labor dispute, and that collective bargaining agreement is
subject by its terms to modification, supplementation, or replacement, or has
expired or been opened by mutual consent at the time of the labor dispute.
(e) In determining the scope of the grade or class of
workers, evidence of the following is relevant:
(i) Representation of
the workers by the same national or international organization or by local
affiliates of that national or international organization.
(ii) Whether the
workers are included in a single, legally designated, or negotiated bargaining
unit.
(iii) Whether the
workers are or within the past 6 months have been covered by a common master
collective bargaining agreement that sets forth all or any part of the terms
and conditions of the workers' employment, or by separate agreements that are
or have been bargained as a part of the same negotiations.
(iv) Any functional
integration of the work performed by those workers.
(v) Whether the
resolution of those issues involved in the labor dispute as to some of the
workers could directly or indirectly affect the advancement, negotiation, or
settlement of the same or similar issues in respect to the remaining workers.
(vi) Whether the
workers are currently or have been covered by the same or similar demands by
their recognized or certified bargaining agent or agents for changes in their
wages, hours, or other conditions of employment.
(vii) Whether issues on
the same subject matter as those involved in the labor dispute have been the
subject of proposals or demands made upon the employing unit that would by
their terms have applied to those workers.
(9) Notwithstanding subsections (1) to (8), if the employing
unit submits notice to the unemployment insurance agency of possible ineligibility
or disqualification beyond the time limits prescribed by unemployment insurance agency rule
and the unemployment insurance agency
concludes that benefits should not have been paid, the claimant shall repay the
benefits paid during the entire period of ineligibility or disqualification. The
unemployment insurance agency
shall not charge interest on repayments required under this subsection.
(10) An individual is disqualified from receiving benefits
for any week or part of a week in which the individual has received, is
receiving, or is seeking unemployment benefits under an unemployment
compensation law of another state or of the United States. If the appropriate
agency of the other state or of the United States finally determines that the
individual is not entitled to unemployment benefits, the disqualification
described in this subsection does not apply.
Sec. 48. (1) An
individual shall be considered unemployed for any week during which he or she
performs no services and for which remuneration is not payable to the
individual, or for any week of less than full-time work if the remuneration
payable to the individual is less than 1-1/2 times his or her weekly benefit
rate, except that for payable weeks of benefits beginning after the effective date of the
amendatory act that added section 15a December 19, 2011 and before October 1, 2015,
an individual is considered unemployed for any week or less of full-time work
if the remuneration payable to the individual is less than 1-3/5 times his or
her weekly benefit rate. However, any loss of remuneration incurred by an
individual during any week resulting from any cause other than the failure of
the individual's employing unit to furnish full-time, regular employment shall
be included as remuneration earned for purposes of this section and section
27(c). The total amount of remuneration lost shall be determined pursuant to
regulations prescribed by the unemployment insurance agency. For the purposes of this
act, an individual's weekly benefit rate means the weekly benefit rate
determined pursuant to section 27(b).
(2) All amounts paid to a claimant by an employing unit or
former employing unit for a vacation or a holiday, and amounts paid in the form
of retroactive pay, pay in lieu of notice, severance payments, salary
continuation, or other remuneration intended by the employing unit as
continuing wages or other monetary consideration as the result of the separation,
excluding SUB payments as described in section 44, shall be considered
remuneration in determining whether an individual is unemployed under this
section and also in determining his or her benefit payments under section
27(c), for the period designated by the contract or agreement providing for the
payment, or if there is no contractual specification of the period to which
payments shall be allocated, then for the period designated by the employing
unit or former employing unit. However, payments for a vacation or holiday, or
the right to which has irrevocably vested, after 14 days following a vacation
or holiday shall not be considered wages or remuneration within the meaning of
this section.
(3) An individual shall not be considered to be unemployed
during any leave of absence from work granted by an employer either at the
request of the individual or pursuant to an agreement with the individual's
duly authorized bargaining agent, or in accordance with law. An individual
shall neither be considered not unemployed nor on a leave of absence solely
because the individual elects to be laid off, pursuant to an option provided
under a collective bargaining agreement or written employer plan that permits
an election, if there is a temporary layoff because of lack of work and the
employer has consented to the election.