Posts tagged as:

2010 General Assembly Session

The 2010 Maryland General Assembly session ended at 12 a.m. this morning. During the 90-day session the Maryland Chamber took positions on 146 of the 2,700 bills introduced. You can view all of our bill positions here and access our legislative updates here.

Here are a few items of interest from the 2010 session:

Unemployment Insurance: The biggest issue of the session for most Maryland employers was the Administration’s unemployment insurance bill (SB 107). As introduced, the legislation would have liberalized several standards for granting unemployment insurance benefits in order for the state receive a one-time payment of $127 million in federal stimulus funds. While well-intentioned, the bill would have increased state borrowing from the federal government and increased long-term costs to employers. The Maryland Chamber stood united with other business organizations to insist on amendments to the bill that contained employer costs. The resulting compromise was enacted in a manner that will qualify the state for the federal funds, strengthen the long-term health of the unemployment insurance trust fund, reduce interest on late payments, and allow employers to use payment plans to extend unemployment insurance payments this year.

Budget: The state operating budget was again balanced through heavy reliance on fund shifts and borrowing from special funds, and federal stimulus funds. Significant downside risks continue, with an uncertain economic recovery, an anticipated further loss of over $1 billion in federal stimulus funds next year, and an ongoing gap between state spending and revenues of over $1.5 billion. This could lead to pressure for increased taxes, which we think would be ill-advised on top of the $1.3 billion of new taxes adopted in 2007. The new General Assembly will face major budget decisions.

Taxes: The General Assembly resisted efforts to adopt new taxes this session. The business community worked to defeat a number of tax proposals, including legislation to extend the duration of the 6.25 percent individual income tax bracket on high wage earners and legislation to implement a corporate income tax system of unitary combined reporting. We worked to achieve passage of legislation to extend the research and development tax credit and a bill to allow small businesses with real property tax bills of less than $50,000 to pay their taxes in semiannual installments, starting in 2011.

Workplace Regulation: There were a number of bills dealing with workplace regulation. We worked to defeat legislation that would have expanded Maryland employers’ obligations under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act, prohibited employers from using an applicant’s credit history when making hiring decisions, required employers to compensate employees for jury duty and more.

Stormwater Management: The Maryland Chamber and its business allies successfully advocated changes to the stormwater regulations set to take effect in May 2010. The emergency regulations will give developers more time to complete their projects before having to meet the new, stricter stormwater management rules. The compromise will “grandfather” some additional projects that were already in the planning pipeline and also give developers additional flexibility for redevelopment projects in designated growth areas.

To review our complete 2010 session recap here.

{ 0 comments }

The Maryland Chamber’s Legislative Committee voted this afternoon to support an amended version of the unemployment insurance bill (SB 107). The committee took action after reviewing a draft of the amended bill and meeting with Senate Finance Committee Chairman Thomas McLain (Mac) Middleton (D-Dist. 28) and Senate Minority Leader Alan H. Kittleman (R-Dist. 9), a member of the Finance Committee.

“We thank the Finance Committee, the Unemployment Insurance Oversight Committee and representatives from the administration for working to address our concerns,” Maryland Chamber President/CEO Kathy Snyder, CCE said. “Our goals have been to give employers payment plan options, offset the cost of any unemployment insurance system changes and ensure the long-term health and stability of the unemployment insurance trust fund. This bill accomplishes those goals.”

Senator Middleton said the Finance Committee could vote on the amended bill as early as Tuesday afternoon, March 2.

The bill was amended to address a number of the Maryland Chamber’s concerns:

Payment Plans & Reduced Interest Rate: Since its introduction the Maryland Chamber has strongly supported the provision to provide payment plans and reduced interest rates. The payment plans will help Maryland employers spread the cost of increased unemployment insurance taxes over the course of the year. Unemployment insurance taxes are calculated based on the first $8,500 of taxable wages. Without this option, the weight of the unemployment insurance tax increase will hit many businesses especially hard at the end of the first quarter.

Long-Term Cost: As introduced, the bill would adopt a number of changes to the unemployment insurance system to make the state eligible for $126.8 million of federal stimulus funds. The changes would result in approximately $18.4 million to $19.4 million of additional benefits per year. The amended bill includes an estimated $18.2 million to $19.5 million in annual benefit reductions to offset the cost of the increases.

Stability of the UI Trust Fund: The amended bill also keeps the rate schedule at table F, rather than moving to table E. The original bill used much of the federal stimulus funds to provide employers with a small one-year rate deferral. While deferring a small portion of the unemployment insurance tax increase may sound appealing, the Chamber believes it would weaken the unemployment insurance system and cause Maryland employers to pay higher rates for a longer period of time. Staying at Table F and dedicating the federal dollars to the trust fund will help rebuild the trust fund faster, which is an important step to reducing unemployment insurance tax rates for all Maryland employers.

{ 0 comments }

It’s been a snowy week in Annapolis. We had to postpone our Congressional Dinner. We are working with Maryland’s congressional delegation to find a date to reschedule. The weather also forced the Maryland General Assembly to cancel a number of bill hearings in Annapolis. Here are a few headlines from the Chamber Action Network Blog this week:

{ 0 comments }

Here are some of this week’s legislative updates from the Chamber Action Network blog:

{ 0 comments }

This Week in Annapolis – Jan. 22, 2010

January 22, 2010

Here are some of this week’s legislative updates from the Chamber Action Network blog: State Budget Flat, But Shaky Some initial thoughts on the state budget from Maryland Chamber Vice President of Government Affairs Ron Wineholt. UI Bill Hearing is Next Week The Maryland Chamber of Commerce opposes the Administration’s proposal to modify Maryland’s unemployment [...]

Read the full article →

Chamber Opposes UI Tax Proposal

December 19, 2009

The Maryland Chamber of Commerce opposes the Administration’s proposal to modify Maryland’s unemployment insurance (UI) system to permanently expand eligibility and benefits in order to obtain one-time federal stimulus funds. “We’re looking at more people collecting for longer periods of time with increased eligibility and perhaps higher benefit amounts. That’s not a recipe that’s sustainable,” [...]

Read the full article →

Chamber Board Approves 2010 Business Agenda

November 9, 2009

The Maryland Chamber’s Board of Directors approved the 2010 Business Agenda during its November 5 meeting. The agenda outlines the Chamber’s priorities for the coming year and guides the organization’s advocacy efforts. Thank you to all the outstanding volunteers that participated on Chamber committees and helped us draft the Agenda. The current state of the [...]

Read the full article →