Minnesota Businesses Need to Take Steps to Comply with Frontline Worker Bonus Pay

Minnesota, a hotbed of COVID-19 at various times over the past two years, has a new law that recognizes the state’s frontline workers by offering them the chance to receive part of a $500 million bonus pool.

Employers need to take specific steps to ensure they fulfill their obligations to this new “hero pay” law. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz signed the bonus-pay legislative bill, also informally referred to as the “Frontline Worker Pay Law,” on April 29, and the period of time that workers will be able to apply for their share of these funds starts June 8, kicking employers’ 15-day notice obligations into gear.

These bonus funds are intended to thank front-line workers for showing up to work in-person and providing critical services during the height of the state’s COVID-19 emergency in conditions that may have exceeded those contemplated by their ordinary employment.

Their work ensured Minnesota was “able to continue functioning during the pandemic,” the law states, and it enabled the continued flow of essential services and supplies throughout Minnesota.

The bonus concept behind this new law was the subject of extended political debate and compromise. But it is now a new statute, and employers need to take notice and act promptly, starting before the bonus application process starts. Although the law is funded by state monies, private employers still have an important role to play and need to take steps to comply.

Is Your Business is Covered?

First and foremost, only frontline businesses that employed someone who worked in Minnesota need to act. What are these frontline sectors? The law identifies 15 job sectors, specifically:

  • long-term care and home care;
  • health care;
  • emergency responders;
  • public health, social service, and regulatory service;
  • courts and corrections;
  • child care;
  • schools (including charter schools, state schools, and higher education);
  • food service (including production, processing, preparation, sale, and delivery);
  • retail (including sales, fulfillment, distribution, and delivery);
  • temporary shelters and hotels;
  • building services (including maintenance, janitorial, and security);
  • public transit;
  • ground and air transportation services;
  • manufacturing; and
  • vocational rehabilitation.

Are Specific Workers Eligible?

Whether a worker is an eligible frontline worker is not something you should try to determine. Rather, if you are in one of the applicable industry sectors, and you employed individuals who work in Minnesota, you should proceed with your notice obligations and let your employees decide whether they are eligible to apply.

However, you may be interested in learning more about eligibility. In addition to working in one or more of the 15 identified job sectors and applying in a timely fashion, there are certain criteria that need to be satisfied for your workers to be eligible:

The worker must have been employed for at least 120 hours in Minnesota between March 15, 2020 and June 30, 2021.

Due to the nature of their job, they must not have been able to telework.

They must have worked in close proximity to individuals outside their household.

For at least one of the taxable years beginning after December 31, 2019, and before January 1, 2022, any worker employed in an occupation with direct COVID-19 patient care responsibilities must have an adjusted gross income that is less than $350,000 if married and filing jointly, or $175,000 for any other tax filer.

For workers without direct COVID-19 patient care responsibilities, their adjusted gross income must be less than $185,000 if married and filing jointly, or $85,000 for any other tax filer.

Such workers must not have received unemployment insurance benefits for more than 20 weeks on a cumulative basis from March 15, 2020 through June 26, 2021.

Satisfy Your Notice Obligations

Even though the bonus pool is state-funded with no dollars coming directly from employers of frontline workers, the Frontline Worker Pay Law makes clear that, “no later than 15 days after the bonus application period is opened,” which is June 8, “employers in a frontline sector must provide notice” that advises “all current workers who may be eligible” to receive the bonus pay “of the assistance potentially available to them and how to apply” for the bonus pay benefits.

The employer must give notice in a form approved by the Commissioner of Minnesota’s Department of Labor and Industry (DOLI) and must give such notice “using the same means the employer uses to provide other work-related notices to employees.” You can download the DOLI-approved form in English, Spanish, Hmong, and Somali.

The notice must be at least as conspicuous as posting a copy of the notice at each work site where workers work and where the notice may be readily observed and reviewed by all workers working at the site, or providing a paper or electronic copy of the notice to all workers.

Employers must provide notice by June 23 to comply with their notification duties.

Take Steps to Prove You Provided Notice

The prudent employer will provide notice in a fashion where you can prove notice was provided, even if that means providing the notice multiple ways. Although the law does not require this additional step, it may help you down the road.

This new law does not address what happens if an employer fails to timely comply with the statutorily required notice obligations, but one can anticipate that affected employees may look to the employer to obtain the bonus amount if they learned about it too late to apply with the state.

When providing notice, you should provide notice based on the work that was performed in Minnesota, not based on residency of the worker in Minnesota or where your company is centrally located. That’s because an eligible worker only needed to have worked in Minnesota for the required amount of time to be eligible, and there is no residency requirement.

State officials believe that about 667,000 workers will split the $500-million-dollar bonus pool, resulting in each receiving approximately $750. However, if fewer workers apply for the bonus, the pool will be split among eligible workers who have applied, and they could receive up to $1,500 per person. Employees who apply and are denied the bonus can appeal within 15 days of the denial notice, and the appeal decision will be final.

Barbara Jean D’Aquila is an attorney with Fisher Phillips in Minneapolis. © 2022 Fisher Phillips. All rights reserved. Reposted with permission.

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