Sec. 3. Assistance to States
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Payments shall be made to a State in an amount equal to 100 percent of the amount of unemployment compensation paid under the provisions of the State law to affected individuals in each State in which a major disaster was declared with respect to that State or any area within that State under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Assistance Relief and Emergency Assistance Act by reason of Hurricane Sandy in 2012. There are appropriated, out of moneys in the Treasury not otherwise obligated, such sums as may be necessary for purposes of carrying out this section, and such sums shall not be required to be repaid.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of the Treasury shall transfer from the General Fund of the Treasury to— the extended unemployment compensation account (as established by section 905 of the Social Security Act ( 42 U.S.C. 1105 )) such sums as the Secretary of Labor estimates to be necessary to make payments to States for the unemployment compensation identified in paragraph (1); and the employment security administration account (as established by section 901 of the Social Security Act ( 42 U.S.C. 1101 )) such sums as the Secretary of Labor estimates to be necessary for purposes of assisting States in meeting the costs of administering this section.
Payments made to a State under this section shall be made by way of advance or reimbursement. No payments shall be made to a State under this section for unemployment compensation paid by the State to an affected individual, if the State is advanced or reimbursed for the costs of such unemployment compensation under other provisions of Federal law. Payments to a State under subsection
(a)shall be available for unemployment compensation payable with respect to weeks of unemployment— beginning on or after October 28, 2012; and ending on or before July 28, 2013. In this section, the following definitions shall apply: The terms State and State law have the meanings given those terms in section 205 of the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970 ( 26 U.S.C. 3304 note). The term affected individual means an individual eligible for unemployment compensation under State law, whose unemployment is a direct result (as described in section 625.5(c) of title 20, Code of Federal Regulations) of the major disaster that was declared with respect to that State or any area within that State under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Assistance Relief and Emergency Assistance Act by reason of Hurricane Sandy in 2012. It is the sense of the Senate that— upon receiving a reimbursement or advance under this section, a State should, if State law allows— reverse or waive any charges to employer accounts related to unemployment compensation paid to affected individuals for which the reimbursement or advance is provided; or in the case of a State or local governmental entity, non-profit organization, Indian tribe, or other employer, which elected to reimburse the State for unemployment compensation paid to affected individuals in lieu of paying taxes based on charges to its employer account, reimburse such employer for such costs; and in the case of an affected individual in a State who, in relation to their initial week of unemployment during the applicable period under subsection (b), received a waiting period credit instead of an unemployment compensation payment— the State, if State law allows, should provide for retroactive payment of unemployment compensation for such week; and the State may receive reimbursement under this section for such retroactive payment.
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