The Florida Senate
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.)
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Appropriations Committee on Transportation, Tourism, and Economic
Development
BILL: SB 1260
INTRODUCER: Senator Trumbull
SUBJECT: Verification of Reemployment Assistance Benefit Eligibility
DATE: February 19, 2024 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Baird McKay CM Favorable
2. Nortelus Jerrett ATD Pre-meeting
3. FP
I. Summary:
SB 1260 makes a number of changes to reemployment assistance eligibility requirements. The
bill changes benefit eligibility conditions as follows:
 Requires that non-Florida residents seeking reemployment assistance benefits report to
workforce centers in their state of residence.
 Removes language explicitly stating that the online skills assessment offered by the
Department of Commerce (the department) is voluntary.
 Requires that weekly, a claimant must complete at least one job application in person with an
employer that has an expected job opening, and must certify and attest biweekly that they
will appear for all scheduled interviews and actively seek work.
The bill adds more conditions that can disqualify an individual from receiving benefits including:
 Failing to contact at least five prospective employers per week, unless otherwise exempt;
 Failing to appear on three or more occasions for a scheduled job interview;
 Failing to accept suitable work within 2 business days of being offered; or
 Failing to return to the individual’s self-employment when directed by the department, or
when recalled to work by his or her former employer.
The department must maintain a web page and e-mail address for employers to report known or
suspected violations of the disqualification for benefits provisions, and notify employers of the
web page and e-mail address.
Additionally, the bill creates a new section in chapter 443, F.S., which requires the department to
verify the identity of each claimant who applies for reemployment assistance benefits before
paying any benefits to that individual, and to weekly cross-check the information contained in
the claim with various specified national and state databases.
BILL: SB 1260 Page 2
The bill also requires that the department to do all of the following:
 Investigate any claim indicating suspicious activity associated with a mailing address, a bank
account, an e-mail address, a telephone number, or an internet protocol address that is
associated with another existing claim for reemployment assistance benefits and verify that
the claim is legitimate before paying any benefits.
 Scrutinize any claim filed from a foreign Internet protocol address before paying any
benefits.
 Work with the United States Department of Labor, state workforce agencies, and law
enforcement entities to share information related to fraudulent claims to the extent feasible
for further investigation and prosecution.
 Submit a yearly report to the Legislature on fraudulent reemployment assistance claims and
related information, including the number of fraudulent claims referred for investigation and
possible prosecution, and the sources of information that were used to cross-check claims
during the reporting period.
Finally, the bill requires the department to procure an online workforce search and match tool
that meets certain specified requirements.
The bill has an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on the Department of Commerce. See
Section V., Fiscal Impact Statement.
The bill takes effect July 1, 2024.
II. Present Situation:
Unemployment Compensation Overview
According to the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL), the Federal-State Unemployment
Insurance Program provides unemployment benefits to eligible workers who are unemployed
through no-fault of their own (as determined under state law) and who meet the requirements of
state law.1 The program is administered as a partnership of the federal government and the
states.2 The individual states collect unemployment compensation payroll taxes on a quarterly
basis, which are used to pay benefits, while the Internal Revenue Service collects an annual
federal payroll tax under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA).3 FUTA collections go to
the states for costs of administering state unemployment compensation and job service programs.
In addition, FUTA pays one-half of the cost of extended unemployment benefits (during periods
of high unemployment) and provides for a fund from which states may borrow, if necessary, to
pay benefits.4
1
USDOL, State Unemployment Insurance Benefits, available at https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/uifactsheet.asp (last visited
January 25, 2024).
2
There are 53 programs, including the 50 states, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia. USDOL,
Unemployment Compensation, Federal – State Partnership, available at https://oui.doleFta.gov/unemploy/pdf/partnership.pdf
(last visited January 25, 2024).
3
FUTA is codified at 26 U.S.C. § 3301-3309.
4
USDOL, Unemployment Insurance Tax Topic, available at
https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/uitaxtopic.asp#:~:text=FUTA%20taxes%20are%20calculated%20by,times%20the%20emplo
yer's%20taxable%20wages.&text=Employers%20who%20pay%20their%20state,tax%20paid%20to%20the%20state, (last
visited January 25, 2024).
BILL: SB 1260 Page 3
States are permitted to set benefit eligibility requirements, the amount and duration of benefits,
and the state tax structure, as long as state law does not conflict with FUTA or Social Security
Act requirements. Florida’s program was created by the Legislature in 1937.5 The department is
the current agency responsible for administering Florida’s laws, primarily through its Division of
Workforce Services. The department contracts with the Florida Department of Revenue (DOR)
to provide unemployment tax collections services.6
State Reemployment Assistance Benefits
In Florida, which rebranded the unemployment compensation program as the reemployment
assistance program in 2012,7 a qualified claimant may receive benefits equal to 25 percent of
wages, not to exceed $6,325 in a benefit year.8 Benefits range from a minimum of $32 per week
to a maximum weekly benefit amount9 of $275, for a maximum of between 12 weeks and 23
weeks,10 depending on the claimant’s length of prior employment and wages earned and the
unemployment rate.11
The maximum available weeks is set at the beginning of the year and applies for the entire
calendar year. The maximum available weeks is based upon the average seasonally adjusted
statewide unemployment rate for the months of July, August, and September.12 If the average
rate for that most recent third calendar year quarter is at or below 5 percent, then the maximum
weeks of benefits available is 12 weeks. For each 0.5 percent step about 5 percent, an additional
week of benefits is added to the maximum duration, up to 23 weeks of benefits if that average
third quarter unemployment rate is 10.5 percent. On January 1, 2021, the maximum weeks of
benefits increased from 12 weeks to 19 weeks based on the three month average of July, August,
and September of 2020, which was 8.6 percent.13
5
Chapter 18,402, Acts of 1937 Laws of Fla.
6
Section 443.1316, F.S.
7
Chapter 2012-30, Laws of Fla.
8
Section 443.111(5), F.S. The maximum amount of benefits available is calculated by multiplying an individual’s weekly
benefit amount by the number of available benefit weeks.
9
Pursuant to section 443.111(3), F.S., the “weekly benefit amount,” is an amount equal to one twenty-sixth of the total wages
for insured work paid during the quarter of the base period where the wages paid were highest.
10
Section 443.111(5)(c), F.S. If the average unemployment rate for the 3 months in the most recent third calendar year
quarter is at or below 5 percent, then the maximum weeks of benefits available is 12; for each 0.5 percent that the
unemployment rate is above 5 percent, an additional week of benefits becomes available up to 23 weeks at an unemployment
rate of 10.5 percent. On January 1, 2021, the maximum weeks of benefits increased from 12 weeks to 19 weeks based on the
three month average of July, August, and September of 2020, which was 8.7 percent.
11
The average weekly benefit amount for each quarter in 2020 was: first quarter – $254; second quarter – $236; third
quarter – $227; and fourth quarter – $228. USDOL, Unemployment Insurance Data, run report for Florida, available at
https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/data_summary/DataSum.asp, (last visited January 25, 2024).
12
Section 443.111(5)(c), F.S. Typically in the calculation of monthly unemployment rates, a rate is published about midway
through the following month and the revised rate is published about midway through the next month. See The Department of
Commerce, Unemployment – Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS) – Release Schedule, (2021), available at
http://lmsresources.labormarketinfo.com/library/DataReleaseSchedule.pdf, (last visited January 25, 2024).
13
The Department of Commerce, Florida Department of Economic Opportunity Announces Florida Achieves Six
Consecutive Months of Month-Over-Month Job Growth, (November 20, 2020), available at https://floridajobs.org/news-
center/DEO-Press/2020/11/20/florida-department-of-economic-opportunity-announces-florida-achieves-six-consecutive-
months-of-month-over-month-job-growth, (last visited January 25, 2024).
BILL: SB 1260 Page 4
To receive benefits, a claimant must meet certain monetary and non-monetary eligibility
requirements. Key eligibility requirements involve a claimant’s earnings during a certain period
of time, the manner in which the claimant became unemployed, and the claimant’s efforts to find
new employment.14
Benefit Eligibility Conditions
A claimant must meet certain requirements in order to be eligible for benefits for each week of
unemployment. Generally, these include efforts related to finding new employment, such as:15
 Completing the department’s online work registration;16
 Reporting to the One-Stop Career Center when directed to do so by the local CareerSource
board;
 Being able to and available for work;17
 Contacting at least 5 prospective employers each week or going to the One-Stop Career
Center for reemployment services; and
 Participating in reemployment services.
For each week of benefits claimed, a claimant must submit to the department the name, address,
and telephone number of each prospective employer contacted.18 A claimant must be actively
seeking work to be considered available for work. “This means engaging in systematic and
sustained efforts to find work, including contacting at least five prospective employers for each
week of unemployment claimed” or three prospective employers for individuals who live in
small counties.19 Proof of work search efforts cannot include the same prospective employer at
the same location in three consecutive weeks, unless in the meantime the employer has indicated
that it is hiring. The department conducts random audits of the submitted information to verify
that claimants are meeting these requirements.
The requirement to be available for work and able to work applies to an individual during the
major portion of the individual’s customary work week. Consequently, individuals whose
benefits are not based on full-time work are not required to seek or be available to accept
full-time work.20
14
See Section 443.101, F.S.
15
Section 443.091(1), F.S.,
16
See Section 443.091(1)(b), F.S., and Employ Florida, available at https://www.employflorida.com/vosnet/Default.aspx,
(last visited January 25, 2024). Employ Florida Marketplace is a partnership of Workforce Florida, Inc., and the Department
of Commerce. It provides job-matching and workforce resources.
17
“Able to work” means physically and mentally capable of performing the duties of the occupation in which work is being
sought. “Available for work” means actively seeking and being ready and willing to accept suitable work. See Section
443.036(1) and (6), F.S. See also Rule 73B-11.021(2), F.A.C.
18
Section 449.091(1)(c)1., F.S.
19
Section 443.091(1)(d), F.S. A “small county” is a county that has an unincarcerated population of 75,000 or less.
Section 120.52(19), F.S.
20
Rule 73B-11.021(2), F.A.C.
BILL: SB 1260 Page 5
An individual must make a thorough and continued effort to obtain work and take positive
actions to become reemployed. To aid unemployed individuals, free reemployment services and
assistance are available.21
The department’s website provides links to local, state, and national employment databases and
to resources for job training or further educational opportunities. The One-Stop Career Centers
provide job search counseling and workshops, occupational and labor market information,
referral to potential employers, and job training assistance. Claimants may also receive an e-mail
from the Employ Florida Marketplace with information about employment services or available
jobs. Additionally, a claimant may be selected to participate in reemployment assistance
services, such as the Reemployment Services and Eligibility Assessment (RESEA) program,
designed to address the reemployment needs of claimants.22
Currently, if you are a non-resident of Florida you are exempt from having to complete the
department’s online work registration and reporting to the one-stop career center as directed by
the local workforce development board for reemployment services.
Disqualification for Reemployment Assistance Benefits
Section 443.101, F.S., specifies the circumstances under which an individual would be
disqualified from receiving benefits. These circumstances include:
 Voluntarily leaving work without good cause, or being discharged by his or her employing
unit for misconduct connected with the work;23
 Failing to apply for available suitable work when directed by the department or the One-Stop
Career Center, to accept suitable work when offered, or to return to suitable self-employment
when directed to do so;24
 Making false or fraudulent representations in filing for benefits;
 Being discharged from employment due to drug use or rejection from a job offer for failing a
drug test; and
 Becoming unavailable for work due to incarceration or imprisonment.
The statute specifies the duration of the disqualification and the requirements for requalification
for an individual’s next benefit claim, depending on the reason for the disqualification.
21
Rule 73B-11.011(12), F.A.C. “Reemployment services” is defined as job search assistance, job and vocational training
referrals, employment counseling and testing, labor market information, employability skills enhancement, needs assessment,
orientation, and other related services provided by One-Stop Career Centers operated by local regional workforce boards.
22
RESEA services may include an orientation, initial assessment, labor market information, employability development plan,
and work search services. The Department of Commerce, Program Description, available at https://floridajobs.org/office-
directory/division-of-workforce-services/workforce-programs/reemployment-services-and-eligibility-assessment-program,
(last visited January 22,2024). Rule 73B-3.028, F.A.C., provides more information on reemployment services and
requirements for participation.
23
An individual is not disqualified for voluntarily leaving temporary work to return to full time work, or to relocate with his
or her military spouse due to relocation orders, or due to circumstances related to domestic violence.
24
Section 443.101(2), F.S.
BILL: SB 1260 Page 6
III. Effect of Proposed Changes:
Section 1 specifies that the act may be cited as the “Promoting Work, Deterring Fraud Act of
2024.”
Section 2 amends the benefit eligibility conditions in s. 443.091, F.S., to require non-Florida
residents seeking reemployment assistance benefits to report to workforce centers in their state of
residence. Non-Florida residents are curren