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New Mexico labor agency defends tax rates for unemployment

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Friday, April 23, 2021 9:51 AM
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham announces her decision to sign a law that legalizes recreational marijuana outside the state Capitol building in Santa Fe, N.M., on Monday, April 12, 2021. The Democratic governor described the law as a victory for social justice and a potential boon for economic development. Her decision makes New Mexico the seventh state since last November to legalize adult possession and sales of cannabis for recreational use. The legislation gives the governor strong oversight through the governor’s appointed superintendent of the Regulation and Licensing Department. (AP Photo/Morgan Lee)
FILE - In this Sept. 12, 2019 file photo New Mexico Workforce Solutions Secretary Bill McCamley listens to questions about wage theft complaints during a news conference in Albuquerque, N.M. The head of New Mexico’s labor agency is stepping down, just as the latest jobless numbers released Friday show over-the-year losses across all major sectors as the state struggles to recover from the economic fallout prompted by the coronavirus pandemic. McCamley’s last day as secretary of the state Department of Workforce Solutions is Friday, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan,File)

SANTA FE – New Mexico labor officials are responding with reassurances to an onslaught of complaints about increased tax rates on businesses to support unemployment insurance. In addition, the state intends to extend the time employers can file appeals if they suspect inappropriate tax increases.

A long list of business groups including the New Mexico Business Coalition began writing to the the Department of Workforce Solutions in February to express concern about calculations for increased unemployment tax rates and premiums.

They are questioning the state’s compliance with a state pandemic relief law that omits any layoffs from March 2020 through June 2021 from consideration in setting insurance rates. The provision was enacted during a special legislative session in June 2020.

Workforce Solutions Department spokeswoman Stacy Johnston said rate changes are based on a three-year average that can increase even as the state abides by the blackout period.

“A tax rate may have gone up due to benefit charges that took place in the three years prior to March 1, 2020,” Johnston said in an email. “This is the most likely cause for an increase based on our review.”

Rate notices come with a 30-day deadline for appeal, but all deadlines have been extended to May 30 as a courtesy, she said. A review by Workforce Solutions found no apparent miscalculations in business tax rates tied to unemployment insurance.

Out of 47,000 recent rate notices to businesses concerning unemployment insurance, roughly 15% or 7,000 involved rate increases. About 9,000 businesses saw decreases, Johnston said.

New Mexico Business Coalition President Carla Sonntag says many businesses that scaled back as a result of pandemic-related public health orders are among those experiencing rate increases.

“The bottom line is we shouldn’t be going through this,” she said.

Sonntag says she contacted state prosecutors and the state auditor’s office because she wasn’t getting satisfactory answers from the Workforce Solutions Department and former Secretary Bill McCamley, who left the agency last week.

State Auditor Brian Colón said Monday that a review by his office is underway.

“We’ve received enough complaints that we’re concerned that the issue is widespread,” he said. “So we are working very closely with Department of Workforce Solutions to get to the bottom of the matter.”

George Gundrey, owner of three restaurants including Tomasita’s in Santa Fe and Albuquerque, said he was puzzled about the cause of rate increases on unemployment insurance, including a four-fold increase at one restaurant. He has filed an appeal.

He says employment at his restaurants shrank from about 220 people to 45 in the depths of the pandemic while serving only take-out meals.

“They haven’t gotten back to me, I had to submit my payment at a higher rate last week,” he said.

Gundrey says the financial anxiety also is linked to newly approved legislation for mandatory sick leave and a veto by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham that called off a $600 million contribution in federal aid to the state unemployment insurance trust.

Lujan Grisham said the administration needs guidance first from the U.S. Treasury before that move can be made to avoid future payroll taxes.

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