Rep. Kirby proposes the following amendment (LC-4710.DG0012H):
Amend the bill, as and if amended, by striking SECTION 1 and inserting:
SECTION X. Section 41-35-50 of the S.C. Code is amended to read:Section 41-35-50. The maximum potential benefits of any insured worker in a benefit year are the lesser of:
(1) twenty times his weekly benefit amount;
(2) one-third of his wages for insured work paid during his base period.
If the resulting amount is not a multiple of one dollar, the amount must be reduced to the next lower multiple of one dollar, except that no insured worker may receive benefits in a benefit year unless, subsequent to the beginning of the next preceding benefit year during which he received benefits, he performed "insured work" as defined in Section 41-27-300 and earned wages in the employ of a single employer in an amount equal to not less than eight times the weekly benefit amount established for the individual in the preceding benefit year.(A) The number of weeks an individual is allowed to receive unemployment benefits depends on the seasonally adjusted statewide unemployment rate that applies to the six-month reference period that includes the effective date of the claim. One six-month reference period begins on January first and one six-month reference period begins on July first. For the reference period that begins January first, the average of the seasonally adjusted unemployment rates for the State for the preceding months of July, August, and September apply. For the reference period that begins July first, the average of the seasonally adjusted unemployment rates for the State for the preceding months of January, February, and March apply. The Department of Employment and Workforce must use the most recent seasonally adjusted unemployment rate determined by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and not the rate as revised in the annual benchmark.
(B) The total benefits paid to an individual equals the individual's weekly benefit amount allowed under Section 41-35-40 multiplied by twelve weeks if the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate is less than five percent, or multiplied by twenty weeks if the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate is greater than five percent.