Gov. Walz Signs Bill To Replenish Unemployment Insurance Fund, Give Bonuses To Frontline Workers
UPDATE: Gov. Tim Walz signed a bill Friday to replenish the state's unemployment insurance trust fund and give bonus checks to workers who were on the front lines during the COVID-19 pandemic. The signing comes after the bill was passed through the state legislature earlier in the day.
"This is great progress for all Minnesotans," the governor said, in a statement. "Our small businesses and frontline workers deserve this relief after these past two years. This bill is both a way to thank and invest in our small business and frontline workers. I am proud to have bipartisan support for this bill and I'm grateful for the legislators who made this a priority."
As for the frontline worker checks, an estimated 667,000 Minnesota will be eligible for a payment. Frontline workers are defined as those who worked over the last two years in long-term care and home care, health care, emergency response, public health, social service, regulatory service, courts and corrections, child care, food service, retail, temporary shelters and hotels, building services, public transit, ground and air transportation services, manufacturing, and vocational rehabilitation.
Those seeking frontline worker bonuses must apply through Minnesota's Department of Labor and Industry over the next 45 days. Details of the program can be found here.
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP/WCCO) — The Minnesota Legislature pushed through a bill Friday to give bonuses to workers who were on the front lines during the COVID-19 pandemic and to replenish the state's unemployment insurance trust fund following months of negotiations.
Leaders of the Republican Senate and Democratic House majorities announced an agreement Thursday morning and moved to put together legislation and get it before both bodies for a vote on Friday. The final proposal includes $2.7 billion to refill the trust fund after it was depleted during the pandemic, and $500 million in bonuses of about $750 each for people whose jobs were deemed essential and who worked in-person.
The Senate passed the bill on a 65-1 vote Friday and sent it to the House, where it passed 124-5. Walz was expected to sign the bill into law later Friday.
Lawmakers hoped to move quickly and get the bill passed and signed before a Saturday due date for employers who saw higher tax bills after legislators missed a March 15 deadline to refill the trust fund and avert an automatic tax hike on businesses. But officials from Minnesota's employment and economic development agency said Thursday that the state would have to issue credits or refunds to employers because it was too late to distribute updated tax bills.
The amount for front-line worker bonuses is half of House Democrats' original $1 billion proposal but twice as large as the $250 million allocated by lawmakers for the bonuses last year. That money was never distributed due to disagreements on eligibility requirements and amount per worker.
Democratic Sen. Erin Murphy, of St. Paul, told reporters after her chamber voted that there was "no reason at all" that lawmakers couldn't have used $1 billion of Minnesota's $9.25 billion budget surplus for front-line workers. "But," she added, "$750 is real money. It's going to make a real difference for people."
Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman, of Brooklyn Park, said Thursday that state officials will start working on an online application portal for the worker payments as soon as Walz signs the bill into law. Republican Sen. Karin Housley said it will be a few months before workers get checks.
The National Federation of Independent Business in Minnesota, which represents more than 10,000 small businesses, praised lawmakers for the unemployment insurance plan.
"This is a huge win for small business owners across Minnesota," John Reynolds, the group's state director, said in a statement. "The UI repayment deal stops higher payroll taxes this year and avoids a decade or more of higher unemployment insurance taxes. Main Street businesses who are facing mounting economic headwinds will start saving money almost immediately."
(© Copyright 2022 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)