New York Codes, Rules and Regulations
Title 12 - DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Chapter V - Workers' Compensation
Subchapter H - Disability Benefits
Article 1 - Regulations Under Disability Benefits Law
Part 356 - Temporary Contributions (january 1-june 30, 1950)
Section 356.3 - Notice of payroll deductions

Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 12, March 20, 2024

(a) Each covered employer shall give notice to his employees, in the following form, that the temporary contributions of the employees under section 214 of the Workers' Compensation Law are to be deducted from wages:

NOTICE

TEMPORARY PAYROLL DEDUCTION JANUARY 1-JUNE 30, 1950 UNDER NEW

YORK STATE DISABILITY BENEFITS LAW

New York State Disability Benefits Law (chapter 600, Laws of 1949) provides that each employee of a covered employer shall make a contribution to establish a special fund, deposited with the New York State Commissioner of Taxation and Finance, for payment of weekly cash benefits to disabled unemployed workers during limited periods of temporary disability that start on and after July 1, 1950. The employer will deduct the contribution of his employees from wages paid during the first six months of 1950, and will pay an equal amount as the employer's own contribution in behalf of each of his employees. The contribution of each employee to this fund for the disabled unemployed is one tenth of one percent of the first $60 of his weekly wage, but his contribution will not be more than six cents a week or a maximum of $1.56 for the entire temporary six months contribution period. This temporary contribution will end on June 30, 1950. Further information about disability benefits to be provided under the law, and the permanent contributions for those benefits, will be given before July 1, 1950.

MARY DONLON

Chairman, Workers' Compensation Board, State of New York.

(b) Each covered employer shall post this notice and keep it posted conspicuously at all times during the period from January 1, 1950 to June 30, 1950, in and about the employer's place or places of business. Whenever necessary in order to bring notice to the attention of employees not regularly at the employer's place of business the covered employer shall insert like notice in the pay envelope or deliver it with wages paid for the first pay period of such employee after January 1, 1950.

(c) In addition to, but not in substitution for the foregoing, notice of the temporary contribution may also be given in employer publications having a general circulation among employees, through union publications, and in other ways.

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