SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE
ON
SUBSTITUTE FOR
SENATE BILL NO. 121
As Recommended by
Senate Committee on
Commerce
Brief
(1)
Sub. for SB 121 would codify the
relationship between a Professional Employment Organization (PEO)
and the business and employees for whom they provide services. A
PEO is a business organization that contracts with small business
owners to provide comprehensive human resource services through a
co-employment arrangement. Specifically, the bill contains the
following provisions:
Written Contract.
Each PEO would be required to have a written contract between the
client and the PEO setting out the responsibilities and duties of
each party. This contract would contain a description of the types
of services to be rendered by the PEO and the respective rights and
obligations of the parties.
Written Notice.
The PEO would be required to provide written notice to the assigned
workers located at the client work site describing the general
nature of the relationship between the PEO and the
client.
Income Tax
Withholding. The PEO would be considered an employer for
purposes of Kansas income tax withholding.
Tax and Tax Incentive
Treatment. The client would give payroll information for
assigned workers to the Department of Revenue for income tax
purposes and to qualify for certain tax incentives.
PEO
Responsibilities. For as long as the contract between the
PEO and client remains in force, the PEO would assume the following
responsibilities:
- •Pay wages and collect,
report, and pay employment taxes of assigned workers from its own
accounts.
- •Pay unemployment taxes as
required by law.
- •Secure and provide all
required workers compensation coverage for assigned workers either
in the PEO name or in the client's name.
PEO and Client
Status
- •Both the client and the PEO
would be considered the employer for purposes of the Workers
Compensation Act.
- •Both the client and the PEO
would be entitled to protection of the exclusive remedy provision
of the Workers Compensation Act irrespective of which entity
secures and provides the workers compensation coverage.
- •A recognized PEO would be
deemed the employer for the purposes of sponsoring and maintaining
benefit and welfare plans for assigned workers.
- •Assigned workers would be
deemed employees of the client for general liability purposes as
well as the following: automobile insurance, fidelity bonds, surety
bonds, or employer's liability insurance other than workers
compensation insurance.
- •A PEO providing human
resource services for a client engaged in the practice of an
occupation, trade, or profession that is licensed, certified, or
otherwise regulated by a governmental entity would not be engaged
in the unauthorized practice of such occupation, trade, or
profession.
Background
The Senate Committee held hearings
on SB 121, at which time representatives of Oasis Outsourcing, the
Kansas Trial Lawyers Association, the Kansas AFL-CIO, and the
Kansas Department of Revenue offered testimony regarding the bill.
Several amendments were adopted by the Senate Committee, including
the following:
- •Language declaring the
value of PEOs contained in the first section of the bill was
stricken and replaced with a simple statement naming the
act.
- •Language specifically
exempting labor organizations defined by the National Labor
Relations Act and governmental entities from the provisions of the
PEO Act and asserting that the bill would have no effect on
existing collective bargaining agreements was stricken.
- •Language giving PEOs the
right of direction and control over workers assigned to the
client's location was stricken.
- •Language designating the
client as the employer of an assigned worker for income tax
purposes and to establish eligibility for certain business tax
incentives was added.
- •Language clarifying that
assigned workers are employees of the client for general liability
purposes was added.
- •Technical
amendments.
The Division of the Budget reports
that passage of SB 121 would have no fiscal effect on the
state.
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi