SENATE BILL NO. 306 "An Act requiring an employing unit with a change in ownership, management, or control or similar change to notify the Department of Labor and Workforce Development of the change; relating to the unemployment contribution rate of an employing unit; defining 'business' for purposes of statutes setting unemployment contribution rates; establishing the crime of obtaining an unemployment rate by deception; and providing for an effective date." SENATOR BUNDE, SPONSOR, spoke to the bill. He explained that the bill provided deterrents to unemployment tax avoidance. He stated that some businesses tried to avoid paying unemployment tax by acquiring a business with a lower rating, and using that as a basis for their obligation. He noted that this costs the system and other businesses. Representative Bunde stated that the bill requires employers to notify the Department of Labor of a business change or acquisition, implements standards addressing transfers and assignment of rates, and establishes the crime of obtaining an unemployment rating by deception and sets penalties for that crime. He proposed that the bill maintains the integrity of the unemployment system, and prevents the increase of rates through under-funding, as well as promoting meaningful penalties for tax avoidance. 9:18:18 AM Co-Chair Meyer opened the floor to public testimony. WAYNE STEVENS, ALASKA STATE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE testified in strong support of the bill. He pointed out that SB306 addresses the issues of State Unemployment Tax dumping. The federal legislation established a nationwide minimum standard for curbing certain unemployment insurance tax avoidance activities by employers. He noted that if states do not adopt similar language as contained in the federal legislation, the state and businesses in those states stand to lose significant exemptions currently available to businesses. Mr. Stevens went on to state that failure to pass the bill would result in the de-certification of the Alaska Unemployment Insurance (UI) program and employers in the state would lose their federal offset credit of 5.4%, resulting in $103.9 million in additional taxes to employers. The state would lose $30.8 million for administrative and operational funding for UI programs. He concluded that the businesses community believes passage of this legislation is imperative. TOM NELSON, DIRECTOR, DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITIES, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR testified regarding the bill. He noted that they currently lacked the penalties to prevent those tax avoidance behaviors that are already being tracked. The bill would provide those needed penalties. 9:22:14 AM Co-Chair Meyer closed public testimony on the bill. Representative Foster MOVED to Report SB 306 out of Committee with individual recommendations and one previously published zero fiscal note (LWF). There being NO OBJECTIONS, it was so ordered. SB306 was Reported Out of Committee with one previously published zero fiscal note (LWF) and Individual Recommendations.