State tells NWA attendants: Give that money back

Mr_Creepy said:
The special assessment in both states is NOT to be passed on to employees. if your employer is "assessing" you for that tax, they are guilty of a felony.

Oh really?

This is what the DOL says.

http://workforcesecurity.doleta.gov/unemploy/uifactsheet.asp[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]

In the majority of States, benefit funding is based solely on a tax imposed on employers. (Three (3) States require minimal employee contributions.)
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I'm thinking Wang by 15. Anyone have the under/over on Tenney? :)
 
In the majority of States, benefit funding is based solely on a tax imposed on employers. (Three (3) States require minimal employee contributions.)

Well there it is! I stand corrected Tony.

My recurrent insurance class needs to be updated I see.
 
Mr_Creepy said:
The special assessment in both states is NOT to be passed on to employees. if your employer is "assessing" you for that tax, they are guilty of a felony.

That's right, you're not correct! And I AM the employer who is merely collecting the tax and passing it along as required by law.

For Pennsylvania:

Trigger Mechanism

The 1988 Amendments to the Pennsylvania UC Law added a "Trigger Mechanism" provision that compares the balance in the UC Fund with the average benefit costs in the last three fiscal years, which determines the solvency percentage. The fund solvency percentage will be calculated every July to determine which trigger level will be applicable for the next calendar year.


Calculating Employee Contribution







The employee contribution rate is determined annually. The employee contribution rate has been set at 0.09% for calendar year 2006; thus, it is necessary for employers to withhold and remit this tax with their quarterly reports.



For the periods in which employee contributions are in effect, all employers are required to withhold employee contributions at the time wages are paid, regardless of the method used to finance UC costs. These monies are a trust fund obligation and must be remitted to the Department of Labor & Industry with quarterly contribution reports. Failure to withhold employee contributions and to promptly remit to the Fund such contributions withheld in trust, can result in civil fines and/or criminal prosecution of the employer and/or personal liability; including the filing of liens against the employer and officers and agents of the employer.


Employee contributions are based on an individual's total (gross) wages. The $8,000 contributory taxable wage base ceiling does not apply to employee contributions. Employee contributions are not credited to an employer's reserve account, nor are they considered to be "contributions" for Federal certification purposes under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act [FUTA].​



For New Jersey:​


New Jersey Unemployment Tax Rules
Coverage: Any business paying employee compensation of at least $1,000 in either the current or preceding calendar year.
Employer Rates: 0.3% — 5.4%; new employer rates depend upon the fund reserve ratio in effect for a rate year (UI can be either .022825, DI .005000, WF/SWF .00175 and HC .004000)
Taxable Wage Limit: $24,900 for 2005; $25,800 for 2006
Employee Withholding: UI 0.003825 DI 0.005000 WF/SWF 0.000425 January 1, 2005 to June 30, 2006.


 
Doug Taylor said:
It's the taxpayers money. You know, to be used for things like public-sponsored football stadiums, $10 million studies to study whether or not a study should be done or not, or just getting filtered into the pockets of contractors who win 'no bid' contracts to build cement blocks for the federal building.

Yeah, those darned flight attendants should be ashamed of themselves. :sarcasm:

hell i'd study a study to see if it was viable for study in a specific field of study for like 10 bucks.
 
lostplanetairman said:
Actually, some states like New Jersey and Alaska do have an employee paid tax as well. The NJ tax is actually pretty hefty. In PA, there has been a special assessment to employees for the last two years.

When you get down to it all taxes are paid by us. There are no free rides. If an employer has a mandated tax to pay he does it by paying you less in compensation or by passing it along to customers. Either way taxes come out of all of our pockets.
 
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