New hire classification
NeedCoffee
595 Posts
Sorry in advance for the long post.
Here's a little background. Last year we had a very high number of EEs quit within 30 days of hire, despite intensive screening, background checks, mgmt training, etc. We are in a HUGE growth phase, which has also resulted in slightly increased turnover and not so great retention numbers for lower-level positions. Due to the high number of terminations, our UI tax has increased, which prompted this situation.
By boss has asked me to develop a plan where new hires are not considered employees until after 60 days of "employment." A colleague told him this was possible, and he has charged me with implementing it. Soooooooooooooo.....
Here are my questions:
(1) Do any of you wise forumites have such a practice at your company? Pros/Cons?
(2) Can we do this? I would think that employees are considered just that - employees - as soon as you hire them, after all, you'll be paying employment taxes on them. I'm thinking that there's still no way around this issue, at least for UI tax purposes.
(3) If we can do this, will any of you be willing to share language you use for this purpose? I have tried doing some internet searching, but cannot seem to find what I'm looking for.
(4) I feel like I'm missing something here - there's no reason this should be so difficult! I've been out sick for about a week - is this the medication talking?? #-o
If anyone can help me, it's you guys, so thanks in advance for your replies!
Here's a little background. Last year we had a very high number of EEs quit within 30 days of hire, despite intensive screening, background checks, mgmt training, etc. We are in a HUGE growth phase, which has also resulted in slightly increased turnover and not so great retention numbers for lower-level positions. Due to the high number of terminations, our UI tax has increased, which prompted this situation.
By boss has asked me to develop a plan where new hires are not considered employees until after 60 days of "employment." A colleague told him this was possible, and he has charged me with implementing it. Soooooooooooooo.....
Here are my questions:
(1) Do any of you wise forumites have such a practice at your company? Pros/Cons?
(2) Can we do this? I would think that employees are considered just that - employees - as soon as you hire them, after all, you'll be paying employment taxes on them. I'm thinking that there's still no way around this issue, at least for UI tax purposes.
(3) If we can do this, will any of you be willing to share language you use for this purpose? I have tried doing some internet searching, but cannot seem to find what I'm looking for.
(4) I feel like I'm missing something here - there's no reason this should be so difficult! I've been out sick for about a week - is this the medication talking?? #-o
If anyone can help me, it's you guys, so thanks in advance for your replies!
Comments
What I don't know is whether that is an option available to certain employers (we are nonprofit), restricted to certain states (may not be available in yours), or whether the benefits outweigh the risks. From my understanding, there is no levelized effect to pay the invoices from the state, so if we have a particularly expensive quarter, we have no choice but to pay for the quarter when the invoice comes due. One of the benefits, then, is that if we have lost no unemployment challenges, we have no bill to pay.
Hope that helps. Have you checked with your state's unemployment legislation or Dpt of Labor/Workforce Innovation group?
best wishes