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Iowa lawmakers advance $1 billion cut to unemployment program

News

March 13th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa/Iowa News Service) – The Iowa Legislature has advanced a bill to provide a $1 billion tax cut to companies covering unemployment benefits for out-of-work Iowans. Iowa lawmakers reduced the maximum number of weeks Iowans could file for unemployment benefits in 2022 from 26 weeks to 16. The money the state has saved by not paying the additional benefits went into a trust fund, which has reached nearly $2 billion. Now, lawmakers are giving half the money back to business in the form of a tax cut.

Peter Hird, secretary-treasurer of the Iowa Federation of Labor, said Senate File 504 is a blow to people who are looking for work and now have a lot less time to find it while watching companies get a tax cut. “If you take a benefit, a protection for workers, and then turn that into a tax savings for employers, it’s a totally man-made tax cut,” Hird pointed out. “This isn’t just because of good luck.” The bill is through committee and awaits action on the Senate floor. Gov. Kim Reynolds said she is following through on a campaign pledge to lower taxes for Iowa companies, making the state more attractive to those considering locating in the state.

Hird noted labor groups also worry about what happens in the event of an unexpected economic downturn and added the fears are prominent in rural Iowa. “Especially if you’re working in the ag sector where your job is at stake, and you’re talking about giving more benefits to rich people?,” Hird emphasized. “I feel like that’s just something that’s resonating across the country right now.”

Reynolds has proposed cutting the highest unemployment tax rate companies pay from 7% to 5.4%, which would save them nearly a billion dollars over five years.