Lawmakers pass bill to redirect
resources to job training
STATE
HOUSE – Legislators gave final passage to legislation yesterday that would stop
the state from taking a 10 percent cut from the employer-paid Job Development
Fund, or JDF.
The JDF, which provides money for
workforce training, is subject to a 10 percent indirect cost recovery charge
that most of the state’s restricted receipt accounts pay to the general fund.
Sponsored by Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham
and Rep. Donna M. Walsh (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, New Shoreham, South
Kingstown, Westerly), the legislation creates an exception for the JDF so it
would not be subject to indirect cost recovery.
The initiative is part of the
Senate’s “Rhode To Work” legislative package and is featured in the Fiscal Year
2015 budget, which Gov. Lincoln D. Chafee signed into law today.
The bills (2014-H
7244A, 2014-S
2216B) adhere to the belief that the state should be investing every penny
available in job training programs so the state can immediately address its
expansive skills gap.
“I introduced this bill last year
because we need every dollar we have for workforce training to go to training,”
Representative Walsh added. “We have too many out-of-work and underemployed
Rhode Islanders who need this help to be taking money out of this fund. As it
is, the state isn’t dedicating any of its own money to direct workforce
training. The only money we’re using comes from the federal government, and
from the Job Development Fund, which is paid for by employers. At the very
least, we could stop skimming some from off the top of that fund and use it all
for its intended purpose – helping our workforce succeed.”
The Job Development Fund is funded by
an assessment of 0.51 percent on the first $19,600 of each employee’s salary,
paid by their employers. About 60 percent of the money from the fund is
currently being used by the state to pay off federal loans the state borrowed
for its high unemployment insurance costs, to the tune of about $18 million a
year.
That leaves about $11 million for the Governor’s Workforce Board for
worker training programs. The assessment will be reduced to 0.21 percent once
the loans are paid off in November. The action taken today will free an
additional $1.26 million for job training and work experience efforts. The
state allows more than 70 other restricted receipt accounts such exceptions to
the indirect cost recoveries charge.
The Senate bill, which has been transferred
to the governor’s desk for a signature, is cosponsored by Senators Joshua Miller (D-Dist. 28, Cranston, Providence), Juan M. Pichardo
(D-Dist. 2, Providence), Roger A. Picard (D-Dist. 20, Woonsocket, Cumberland)
and David E. Bates (R-Dist. 32, Barrington, Bristol, East Providence).
Representatives Larry Valencia (D-Dist. 39, Richmond, Hopkinton, Exeter), Lisa
P. Tomasso (D-Dist. 29, Coventry, West Greenwich), Frank G. Ferri (D-Dist. 22,
Warwick) and Maria E. Cimini (D-Dist. 7, Providence) serve as cosponsors of the
House legislation.