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This opinion column was written by Elizabeth New with Washington Policy Center.
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Create a program that taxes workers and employers to pay people a replacement wage when they take time off work,
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and you can bet it will become popular.
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But popularity is not the same thing as sound policy, and this program's growing costs and distortions
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are harming many of the very workers it claims to help.
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People can use paid family and medical leave, or PFML, benefits to take time off work
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for their own or others medical needs, or to welcome a new family member.
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In loving paid leave to death, the Washington Observer reports that PFML claims have doubled in just four years,
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and that the program is expected to be insolvent by 2030 if nothing changes about the way the tax is collected
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or the way money is distributed.
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A legislative report describes the program's money problem this way.
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The PFML account is projected to experience ongoing periodic deficits through 2028,
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with a consistent deficit starting in 2029 into the future.
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The Observer article outlines two ways majority party lawmakers are considering keeping the program alive
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and able to pay benefits in the generous way it has been.
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One is to have higher income people pay even more into the fund.
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The other is raising the tax's rate cap above 1.2%, which would mean every worker pays more.
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In the 2025 legislative session, lawmakers proposed increasing the tax rate cap to 2%.
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The proposal stalled, but it remains top of mind for PFML supportive legislators.
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That would mean $2 of every $100 in earnings would go to fund PFML,
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and in a fiscal note filed this session for a bill related to how the payroll tax rate is calculated,
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the Employment Security Department estimated the rate would have to rise to 2.08% by 2035
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to meet program needs in the absence of a rate cap.
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So even that 2% proposal would not suffice.
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That bill sent it bill 5292 passed,
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and it did retain a 1.2% rate cap as I urged in testimony several times,
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but I worry it sets up an easier path to a future rate cap increase.
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In 2019, the rate started at just 0.4%.
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Today, the payroll tax is 1.13% of wages, nearly reaching the cap,
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and reports show that this will happen in 2027.
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Workers should prepare for another pay decrease in January, courtesy of the state.
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Part of the reason PFML is financially strained is high use.
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Another part is the program's design,
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relatively low eligibility thresholds, and continued expansions.
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PFML allows workers to qualify after a relatively modest work contribution.
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A 2021 expansion also allowed benefits to be used for an unusually broad class of family members,
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including someone who simply has an expectation of relying on the worker for care,
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whether they live together or not.
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My research shows that a lot of the money leaving the PFML fund goes to repeat use,
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people receiving payouts more than once.
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It also shows that high-income workers use the program more than twice as often
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as those in the lowest wage group in fiscal year 2025.
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Better fixes than another pay decrease for workers.
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PFML should be repealed.
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It is a perk provided by fellow workers,
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not a taxpayer-provided safety net for people in need.
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Wages taken from lower-income workers,
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many of whom need every dollar they earn to make ends meet,
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are often handed to people with greater means.
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That is not a program Washington State's leaders should brag about.
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The policy is harming many of the W-2 workers forced to fund it.
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If lawmakers insist on keeping this misguided program,
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they should look for benefit-side solutions,
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instead of increasing the payroll tax on workers even further.
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This session, four bills introduced by Senator Curtis King,
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Republican of Yakima, would have done just that.
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Unfortunately, they did not receive hearings or consideration.
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One would have limited the repeat use I wrote about earlier.
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Another would have reduced the number of weeks a worker could receive replacement wages
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while away from work.
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Senate Ways and Means Ranking Member Senator Chris Gildon,
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Republican of Pialup, also rightly suggested
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eliminating a labor-friendly loophole that allows state employees
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to collect vacation pay while on PFML.
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In addition to sending money to people with more resources
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than many of those required to fund the benefits,
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loose oversight of the program is resulting in reports of misuse.
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Talk among workers about trying to recoup some of what the state
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is taking from their wages is also growing,
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which suggests misuse may become more common.
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ESD says Washington's average annual wage was $95,160 a year in 2024.
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The math shows that a worker earning that amount
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will have $768.09 taken from earnings in 2026 to fund PFML,
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while the employer will pay another $307 on that worker's behalf.
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That is $1,075 in just one year for benefits many workers don't use.
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Supporters call PFML a social insurance program,
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but this social program has many lower wage workers
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subsidizing higher income families.
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It is time to let it go.
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Workers should be allowed to keep more of their wages for their own needs,
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the two PFML prioritizes, and many others it does not.
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Elizabeth New is the director of the Centers for Healthcare and Worker Rights
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at the Washington Policy Center.
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She is a Clark County resident.