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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

A Short Story About Connecticut Unemployment Reporting


I read that the Governor of Connecticut has signed a bill repealing certain additional payroll reporting requirements otherwise slated to start next year.

As background, all state quarterly unemployment returns include certain basic information, including:

·       Name

·       Social security number

·       Wages paid in the quarter

Prior to repeal, Connecticut employers were to report additional information with their quarterly unemployment returns. The reporting was to start in 2024, with the exact phase-in depending on the number of employees:

·       Gender identity

·       Age

·       Race

·       Ethnicity

·       Veteran status

·       Disability status

·       Highest education completed

·       Home address

·       Address of primary work site

·       Occupational code under the standard occupational classification (SOC) system of the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics

·       Hours worked

·       Days worked

·       Salary or hourly wage

·       Employment start date in the current job title

·       Employment end date (if applicable)

Ten of the above 15 data elements are not collected by any other state.

There was concern that the additional elements could negatively impact people filing for benefits – that is, the actual purpose of unemployment taxes.

“The Department of Labor would need to edit incoming reports against certain standards and reject employer wage/tax reports or suspend processing while seeking clarification of elements reported.   

“Rejected or suspended wage reports could make wage information unavailable when unemployment claimants apply for benefits.”

It appears a breath of sanity.


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