Warning! Your browser is extremely outdated and not web standards compliant.
Your browsing experience would greatly improve by upgrading to a modern browser.

SB22-234 Unemployment Compensation

Background

Due to the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic and the state government’s policy responses, Colorado’s unemployment levels spiked in early 2020 and caused the state’s Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund to become deeply insolvent. Now, the Trust Fund is projected to remain insolvent until the 2024 fiscal year.
  • Colorado is one of only 9 states with an unemployment insurance program in debt to the federal government and has the 6th-highest debt among those states.[i]
  • Between 2023 and 2026, Colorado employers stand to pay $4.2 billion more in state and federal UI taxes than they would at a pre-pandemic baseline.
  • Total UI taxes are projected to peak in 2024 at $1.64 billion, which amounts to a 135% increase from the 2020 level of $697 million.
A rising unemployment insurance tax is just one piece among many new taxes and fees estimated to cost Coloradans billions of dollars in total over the coming years.[ii]

SB22-234: Unemployment Compensation

SB22-234 proposes to allocate $600 million received from the American Rescue Plan Act to the repayment of the federal loan, which will reduce employers’ UI payroll taxes. It also makes several minor changes to the state’s unemployment insurance program that will permanently increase total benefit payments.[iii] Employer Savings
  • SB22-234 would save employers $845 million by 2026.
    • The bill would trigger lower UI payroll tax rates and suspend the solvency surcharge through 2023.
  • Before 2026, much of the allocation would increase the Trust Fund’s resilience against the potential of another economic downturn.
Benefit Changes SB22-234 makes several changes to Colorado’s unemployment insurance law. Among them are:
  • A permanent benefit increase for partially unemployed workers.
  • A repeal of the one-week ineligibility period for recently unemployed workers.
  • An increase of funding to the Employment Support Fund for the purpose of granting “recovery benefits” to eligible unemployed people irrespective of immigration status.

[i] https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/budget.asp

[ii] https://commonsenseinstituteco.org/the-steep-price-tag-of-the-2021-legislative-session/

[iii] https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/sb22-234

Jobs & Our Economy
Colorado Jobs and Labor Force Update – August 2024 Update

Colorado's total employment increased by 7,400 in August. Private-sector employment grew by 7,700 while government employment decreased by 300, the first decline in 13 months.

September 20, 2024 Jimena Sanchez
Jobs & Our Economy
Weighing Minimum Wage Increases Across Boulder County

By 2030, for every one person estimated to be drawn out of poverty from new minimum wage policies in Colorado, between 4 and 12 people would lose a job.

September 18, 2024 Chris Brown
Jobs & Our Economy
Employment Update Preliminary QCEW Benchmark

This report summarizes the revisions to the CES employment levels for the U.S. and the four states where the Common Sense Institute operates.

August 21, 2024 Zachary Milne
Jobs & Our Economy
Colorado Jobs and Labor Force Update – July 2024 Update

Employers in Colorado added 4,800 jobs in July after adding only 1,500 in the prior month.

August 16, 2024 Cole AndersonErik Gamm