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S 1651 115th Congress Senate Labor and Employment Government trust funds Intergovernmental relations State and local finance State and local government operations Temporary and part-time employment Unemployment

Layoff Prevention Act of 2017

Introduced: July 27, 2017 Introduced by: Reed, Jack Democratic · Rhode Island See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Jul 27, 2017
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S4426-4427)
Jul 27, 2017
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Layoff Prevention Act of 2017

This bill requires each state that has already enacted a short-time compensation program to be paid 100% of the amount of short-time compensation paid under such program. Under a short-time compensation program, an employer may avoid a layoff of one or more employees by reducing the hours of all workers in the employer's workforce. Employees affected by a reduction in hours may receive a partial short-time compensation payment to compensate for lost wages. This is a voluntary and temporary program, beginning upon the enactment of this bill and ending five and one-half years later.

The bill imposes certain limitations on payments to states and requires employers to pay their states one-half of the short-time compensation paid under the employer plan.

The Department of Labor must: (1) award grants to states that enact short-time compensation programs to implement or improve the administration of such plans, (2) develop model legislative language for states in developing and enacting short-time compensation plans, and (3) provide technical assistance to states and establish reporting requirements for such programs.

What's happening now July 27, 2017

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S4426-4427)

 Committees of jurisdiction 1