Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) In
considering suitable work factors under ORS
657.190 and for purposes of
determining eligibility under 657.155(1)(c), the Director may require an
individual to actively seek the type of work the individual is most capable of
performing due to prior job experience and training except that:
(a) If an individual is unable to secure the
individual's customary type of work after contacting the potential employers in
their labor market or if the individual is unable to meet the requirements of
section (3) of this rule, the Director may require the individual to seek less
desirable but similar work or work of another type which the individual is
capable of performing by virtue of experience and training.
(b) If the type of work an individual is most
capable of performing does not exist in the labor market where the individual
is claiming benefits, the Director may require the individual to seek any work
that exists in the labor market for which the individual is suited by virtue of
experience and training.
(c) After
the individual has contacted the potential employers in the labor market where
benefits are being claimed and is still unable to obtain work as described in
(1)(a) and (b) of this section, the Director may require the individual to
further expand work-seeking activities.
(2) For the purposes of ORS
657.155(1)(c),
an individual shall be considered able to work in a particular week only if
physically and mentally capable of performing the work the individual is
actually is seeking during all of the week except:
(a) An occasional and temporary disability
for less than half of the week shall not result in a finding that the
individual is unable to work for that week; and
(b) An individual with a permanent or
long-term "physical or mental impairment" (as defined at
29
CFR 1630.2(h)) which
prevents the individual from working full time or during particular shifts
shall not be deemed unable to work solely on that basis so long as the
individual remains available for some work.
(3) For the purposes of ORS
657.155(1)(c),
an individual shall be considered available for work if, at a minimum, the
individual is:
(a) Willing to work full time,
part time, and accept temporary work opportunities, during all of the usual
hours and days of the week customary for the work being sought, unless such
part time or temporary opportunities would substantially interfere with return
to the individual's regular employment; and
(b) Capable of accepting and reporting for
any suitable work opportunities within the labor market in which work is being
sought, including temporary and part time opportunities; and
(c) Not imposing conditions which
substantially reduce the individual's opportunities to return to work at the
earliest possible time; and
(d)
Physically present in the normal labor market area as defined by section (6) of
this rule, every day of the week, unless:
(A)
The individual is actively seeking work outside his or her normal labor market
area; or
(B) The individual is
infrequently absent from the normal labor market area for reasons unrelated to
work search, for less than half of the week, and no opportunity to work or
referral to work was missed by such absence.
(e) However, an individual with a permanent
or long-term physical or mental impairment (as defined at
29
CFR 1630.2(h)) which
prevents the individual from working full time or during particular shifts
shall not be deemed unavailable for work solely on that basis so long as the
individual remains available for some work.
(f) For the purposes of ORS
657.155(1)(c),
an individual is not available for work in any week claimed if:
(A) The individual has an opportunity to
perform suitable work during the week and fails to accept or report for such
work.
(B) During the week, the
individual is incarcerated during any days or hours customary for the type of
work the individual is seeking.
(i)
"Incarcerated" means in custody at a city, county, state, or federal law
enforcement or correctional facility to include any "arrest" as defined in ORS
133.005 or a similar law in
another state or jurisdiction.
(ii)
When an individual is in an alternative sentencing facility operated pursuant
to a community corrections plan that individual will not be considered
unavailable for work solely because of their non-traditional custody.
Alternative sentencing is defined by the jurisdiction responsible for
supervision of the suspect or offender.
(iii) "Incarcerated" does not include a
"stop" as authorized under ORS
131.605 to
131.625.
(iv) "Incarcerated" does not mean being
involved in questioning by peace officers as part of an investigation where the
individual is free to leave and not charged with a crime.
(g) An individual will be
considered not available for work if the individual fails or refuses to seek
the type of work required by the Director pursuant to section (1) of this
rule.
(h) Providing the individual
is otherwise eligible for benefits pursuant to OAR
471-030-0036(3)(a) through
(g), a person who has been found to be
qualified for benefits under the provisions of ORS
657.176(2)(f) or
(g) or
657.176(9)(b)(A)
shall be considered available for work only during weeks in which the
individual is enrolled in and participating in a recognized drug or alcohol
treatment program if such participation was a condition in the determination to
allow benefits. This provision does not apply if the individual has
satisfactorily completed the course of treatment in accordance with the terms
and conditions of the recognized treatment program.
(A) An individual is participating when
engaged in a course of treatment through a recognized drug or alcohol
rehabilitation program;
(B) A
recognized drug or alcohol rehabilitation program is a program authorized and
licensed under the provisions of OAR chapter 415.
(i) An individual is not available for work
in any week claimed under ORS
657.155 if the individual
resides or spends the major portion of the week:
(A) In Canada unless the individual is
authorized to work in Canada;
(B)
In a country not included in the Compact of Free Association with the United
States of America; or
(C) outside
of the United States, District of Columbia or any territory or political
division that is directly overseen by the United States federal government;
except,
(i) If the individual is the spouse
or domestic partner of an individual stationed at a military base or embassy
located outside the United States;
(ii) Job opportunities exist on the military
base or embassy for family members of those stationed there;
(iii) The individual lives within a
reasonable commuting distance to job opportunities at the military base or
embassy; and
(iv) The individual is
willing to accept the conditions and terms of the available employment provided
they are not inconsistent with ORS
657.195.
(4) Notwithstanding the
provisions of OAR 471-030-0036(3),
an individual with a circumstance which restricts their availability such as,
but not limited to, lack of childcare, caring for an immediate family member or
another person in their household, lack of transportation, or attendance in
school or training to improve their job skills or long-term employment
opportunities, will not be deemed unavailable for work if:
(a) The work the individual is seeking or is
otherwise willing to seek is customarily performed during other days and hours
in the individual's normal labor market area as defined by OAR
471-030-0036(6);
and
(b) The individual is willing
and capable of working full time during other days and hours for which they
could reasonably expect employers to schedule them.
(5) This section addresses the requirements
for actively seeking work, as required under ORS
657.155(1)(c):
(a) Unless the individual is temporarily
unemployed, as described in section (b), or a member of a dispatching union, as
described in section (c), a federal employee as described in section (d), or
otherwise directed by the director or an authorized representative of the
Employment Department, they must conduct at least five work-seeking activities
per week. Two of the five work-seeking activities must be a direct contact with
an employer who might hire the individual.
(A) Work seeking activities include but are
not limited to registering for job placement services with the Employment
Department, attending job placement meetings sponsored by the Employment
Department, participating in a job club or networking group dedicated to job
placement, updating a resume, reviewing the newspaper or job placement web
sites without responding to a posted job opening, and making direct contact
with an employer.
(B) Direct
contact with an employer means making contact with an employer in person, by
phone, mail, or electronically to inquire about a job opening or applying for
job openings in the manner required by the hiring employer.
(b) For an individual who is
temporarily unemployed:
(A) They are
considered to be actively seeking work when they remain in contact with their
regular employer and are capable of accepting and reporting for any suitable
work with that employer;
(B) There
is a reasonable expectation that they will be returning to work for their
regular employer. The work the individual is returning to must be full time or
pay an amount that equals or exceeds their weekly benefit amount;
(C) The department will not consider the
individual to be temporarily unemployed if they were separated from their
employer for reasons other than a lack of work, the work the individual is
returning to is not with their most recent employer, or the length the
individual is unemployed is longer than the period described in subsection (D)
of this section; and
(D) The
department will consider that the period for which an individual is temporarily
unemployed:
(i) Begins the last date the
individual performed services for the employer. In the case of an individual
still working for the employer, it is the last date worked during the week in
which the individual had earnings less than their weekly benefit amount; and
(ii) Cannot be greater than four
weeks between the week the individual became temporarily unemployed and the
week the individual returns to work as described in subsection (B) of this
section.
(c)
For an individual who is a member in good standing of a union that does not
allow members to seek non-union work, such individual is actively seeking work
by remaining in contact with that union and being capable of accepting and
reporting for work when dispatched by that union if the union dispatches its
members for work. If the union does not allow its members to accept non-union
work but does not dispatch their members to available work, the individual must
meet the requirements of subsection (a) of this section.
(d) For an individual who is a federal
employee temporarily unemployed due to a government shutdown and expects to
resume work with their regular employer once the shutdown ends, they are
considered to be actively seeking work when they remain in contact with their
regular employer and are capable of accepting and reporting for any suitable
work with that employer.
(e) For an
individual who is filing a continued claim for the first week of an initial or
additional claim:
(A) If the individual worked
less than full time and remuneration paid or payable to the individual for
services performed during the week is less than the individual's weekly benefit
amount, each day the individual worked for the employer shall be considered a
direct employer contact.
(B) An
individual does not meet the requirements of this subsection if the individual
performed no work for an employer during the first week of an initial or
additional claim; therefore the individual must seek work consistent with
subsection (a) of this section.
(f) In determining whether to modify the
requirements in this section for an individual the Employment Department may
consider among other factors, length of unemployment, economic conditions in
the individual's labor market and prospective job openings, weather conditions
affecting occupations or industries, seasonal aspects of the individual's
regular occupation, expected date of return to work in regular occupation,
seniority status of individual, registration with a union hiring hall and
normal practices for obtaining the type of work which the individual is seeking
pursuant to section (1) of this rule. The department shall provide a written
copy of the work search requirements to the individual if the individual's work
search requirements are modified.
(6)
(a) An
individual's normal labor market shall be the geographic area surrounding the
individual's permanent residence within which employees in similar
circumstances are generally willing to commute to seek and accept the same type
of work at a comparable wage. The geographic area shall be defined by employees
of the Employment Department, based on criteria set forth in this
section;
(b) When an individual
seeks work through a union hiring hall, the individual's normal labor market
area for the work sought is the normal referral jurisdiction of the union, as
indicated by the applicable contract.
(7) Nothing in this rule shall prohibit an
individual who is a citizen, permanent legal resident, or otherwise legally
authorized to work in the United States from seeking work in other labor market
areas in any state or country.
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS
657.610 & ORS
657.100