Section 3254.1 Of Chapter 6. Voluntary Plans From California Unemployment Insurance Code >> Division 1. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 6.
3254.1
. (a) For the purposes of this section,
"small-business-third-party administrator" (hereafter SBTPA), means
an applicant that the director finds meets all of the following
criteria at the time of application:
(1) The SBTPA administers voluntary disability plans on behalf of
its clients pursuant to a written agreement in a form and manner
approved by the director.
(2) The SBTPA has at least 1,000 California domiciled clients, 80
percent of whom have fewer than 20 employees.
(3) The SBTPA processes payroll for its California domiciled
clients.
(4) The SBTPA offers workers' compensation insurance to its
California domiciled clients through an affiliated California
domiciled insurance company.
(b) Except as modified by this section, "voluntary plan" shall be
defined as, and shall be subject to the same provisions as, a
"voluntary plan," as set forth in this chapter.
(c) The director may approve a single voluntary plan for all of an
SBTPA's clients and their employees where all of the following
criteria are met:
(1) The plan is administered by the SBTPA.
(2) The plan establishes a master trust account that is
administered by the SBTPA, and requires the SBTPA to maintain a
separate accounting ledger for each individual employer that is a
client of the SBTPA to reflect each client's specific plan
contributions. The master trust account shall be held in a federally
insured bank.
(3) If the plan does not provide for the assumption by an admitted
disability insurer of the liability of the employer to pay the
benefits afforded by the plan, the director shall not approve it
unless the SBTPA meets the financial security requirements of Section
3258 on behalf of the SBTPA clients and their employees.
(4) (A) The single voluntary plan will be in effect for a period
of not less than one year and, thereafter, continuously, unless the
Director of Employment Development finds that the SBTPA has given
notice of withdrawal of the plan. The notice filed by the SBTPA shall
be filed in writing with the Director of Employment Development and
shall be effective on the anniversary of the effective date of the
plan next following the filing of the notice, but in any event shall
not be less than 30 days from the time of the filing of the notice;
except that the plan may be withdrawn on the operative date of any
law increasing the benefit amounts provided by Sections 2653 and 2655
or the operative date of any change in the rate of worker
contributions as determined by Section 984, if notice of the
withdrawal from the plan is transmitted to the Director of Employment
Development not less than 30 days prior to the operative date of
that law or change. If the plan is not withdrawn on the 30 days'
notice because of the enactment of a law increasing benefits or
because of a change in the rate of worker contributions as determined
by Section 984, the plan shall be amended to conform to that
increase or change on the operative date of the increase or change.
(B) Any individual employer who is a client of the SBTPA, or a
majority of that client's employees employed in this state covered by
the plan, may also terminate their participation in the plan by
giving written notice of withdrawal from the plan to the SBTPA and to
the Director of Employment Development not less than 30 days prior
to the date of withdrawal.
(C) The Director of Employment Development may terminate the
participation of an individual employer client of the SBTPA from the
plan for cause, and the employer's voluntary plan assets shall be
recovered from the SBTPA and not from the employer as referenced in
Section 3262.
(5) The rights afforded to the covered employees are greater than
those provided for in Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 2625),
including those provided for in Chapter 7 (commencing with Section
3300).
(6) The plan has been made available to all of the employees of
the employer employed in this state or to all employees at any one
distinct, separate establishment maintained by the employer in this
state. "Employees" as used in this paragraph includes those
individuals in partial or other forms of short-time employment and
employees not in employment as the director shall prescribe by
authorized regulations.
(7) A majority of the employees of the client employed in this
state or a majority of the employees employed at any one distinct,
separate establishment maintained by the client in this state have
consented to the plan.
(8) If the plan provides for insurance, the form of the insurance
policies to be issued has been approved by the Insurance Commissioner
and is to be issued by an admitted disability insurer.
(9) The client has consented to the plan and has authorized the
SBTPA to make the payroll deductions required, if any, and deposit
the proceeds into the master account administered by the SBTPA as
referenced in paragraph (2).
(10) The plan provides for the inclusion of future employees.
(11) The amount of deductions from the wages of an employee of any
client in effect for the plan shall not be increased on other than
an anniversary of the effective date of the plan except to the extent
that any increase in the deductions from the wages of an employee
allowed by Section 3260 permits that amount to exceed the amount of
deductions in effect.
(12) The approval of the plan or plans will not result in a
substantial selection of risks adverse to the Disability Fund.
(d) The department may adopt application forms and procedures as
deemed necessary to ensure compliance with this section.
(e) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting paragraph (3)
of subdivision (c) that, in the event of the insolvency of an
employer-client of the SBTPA, or of the SBTPA, the disability claims
against the subaccount of any employer-client arising prior to the
date of the insolvency shall be satisfied by first accessing the
security of the SBTPA, as described in paragraph (3) of subdivision
(c), rather than satisfying the claims from the Disability Fund.