Cloud Computing Cluster Infrastructure Grant Fund; performance agreement.
Expands and standardizes UIA disclosures to parties in workers' compensation disputes, aligning with federal rules and charging processing fees for requests.
Expands and standardizes UIA disclosures to parties in workers' compensation disputes, aligning with federal rules and charging processing fees for requests.
Status: VETOED by Governor (presented 1/7/2025; veto issued 1/17/2025).
Primary sponsor: Sen. John Cherry. Bill as enacted would have amended multiple sections of the Michigan Employment Security Act (1936 Ex Sess PA 1; MCL 421.11 et seq.) and repealed MCL 421.12a.
The bill sought to modernize and clarify how the Unemployment Insurance Agency (UIA) handles and discloses claimant and employer information. It would align UIA disclosure practices with federal confidentiality rules (20 C.F.R. Part 603), expand who may obtain UIA records in certain worker’s compensation and benefit contexts, set cost‑recovery rules for information requests, and exempt certain UIA investigative methods from FOIA. The bill also repealed a statutory provision (section 12a) relating to entitlement of certain program participants to workers’ disability compensation benefits.
SB 976 would have clarified and expanded authorized disclosures of UIA records (notably for parties challenging or seeking reductions to workers’ compensation awards), required UIA compliance with federal disclosure rules, instituted fees for information requests, and exempted UIA fraud‑detection methodology from FOIA — while repealing a provision linking certain program participation to workers’ disability compensation entitlement. Although legislators approved the bill, it was vetoed by the governor on January 17, 2025.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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