S-1651 : Still Just a Bill

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.

Action Timeline

Action DateTypeTextSource
2017-07-27IntroReferralRead twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S4426-4427)Senate
2017-07-27IntroReferralIntroduced in SenateLibrary of Congress

Policy Area :

Labor and Employment
See Subjects
  • Temporary and part-time employment
  • Government trust funds
  • State and local finance
  • State and local government operations
  • Unemployment
  • Intergovernmental relations

Related Bills

See Related Bills