November 18, 2025

Last Chance for Staffing Employment and Sales Data—ASA Quarterly Survey Closes Friday

Don’t miss your chance to get the staffing and recruiting data you need. The association’s quarterly Staffing Employment and Sales Survey for the third quarter of 2025 will be open only through this Friday, Nov. 21.

After completing the survey, you will be able to access an exclusive online report archive, which includes benchmarks for the number of direct hire searches and permanent placements, sector-specific gross margin trends, and payroll and productivity metrics by company size. Register to take the survey at americanstaffing.net/quarterly-survey, and complete the survey this week to get the staffing industry information you’re looking for.

U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis Working on New Economic Data Calendar Post-Shutdown
ADP National Employment Report Pulse: Job Growth Sluggish but New Hires on the Upswing
Forecasters Expect Slightly Higher GDP Growth in 2025 and 2026
U.S. Hires 50,000 Federal Workers Under Trump, Boosting Immigration Roles
Walgreens Cuts Pay for Hourly Store Workers After $10 Billion Buyout
Brittany Bull Panuccio Begins Tenure as EEOC Commissioner
The Right to Talk Pay: What Employers Need to Know Under the NLRA
What Employers Need to Know About Reductions in Force Due to AI Integration
Illinois AG Reaches $275,000 Settlement With Staffing Firm for Use of No-Poach Agreement
Recent $515,000 Settlement Highlights the Cost of Improper Time-Keeping Practices
Illinois Provides the Strongest Criminal Conviction Protections in the Country
New York City Expands Scheduling and Workplace Protections for Service and Delivery Workers
Construction Spending Rises in August
Monster: Nearly All U.S. Workers Say Their Wages Haven’t Kept Up With the Cost of Living

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California Employers Avoid Benefit Cost Rate Offset…For Now

Toby Malara (11/18/25)

California employers avoided a drastic increase in their federal unemployment tax rate for 2026 when the U.S. Department of Labor granted the state’s application for a benefit cost ratio (BCR) reduction waiver earlier this month. However, this does not mean that California employers are out of the woods yet, as it is difficult to see how California can pay off its federal unemployment loans of almost $21 billion anytime soon.

Under federal law, employers are charged a 6% tax rate on the $7,000 tax base per employee. When a state is in good standing with the federal unemployment insurance regulations, employers in the state receive a credit of 5.4% (“FUTA credit”), thereby reducing the rate to 0.6%—meaning that employers pay $42 in federal unemployment taxes for each employee. However, if a state falls out of good standing, the FUTA credit is reduced by 0.3% each year, and FUTA credit reductions continue until the federal loans are paid back.

Next year will mark the fourth consecutive year California’s FUTA credit is reduced. This means that California employers’ federal unemployment tax rate now sits at 1.8%, which will result in California employers paying $126 per employee in federal unemployment taxes. Given the amount of the state’s outstanding federal loans, it could have been much worse. If DOL did not grant a waiver to the state, California employers would have seen their federal UI tax rate increase to 5.2%, resulting in a charge of $364 per employee.

If California does not pay off its federal loans before Nov. 10, 2026, employers will see the FUTA credit rate reduced by another 0.3%, which would raise their tax rate to 2.1% for 2027, resulting in a tax of $147 per employee. Also, the state would have to apply again for a BCR reduction waiver, and there is no guarantee California would receive it again, especially if it does not take steps to show it is trying to pay off the loans.

New York and Connecticut both paid off their outstanding federal UI loans this year to restore the original FUTA credit to employers. California businesses, organized labor, and legislators must get together to draft a plan that pays off these loans, or the state’s economy will continue to feel the effects of this increased tax on employment.

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ASA Webinar Today on Advocating for Yourself—Complimentary to Members

Don’t miss the ASA webinar “Getting Comfortable Being Uncomfortable Webinar Series, Part Four: Asking for a Promotion.” It takes place today from 2 to 3 p.m. Eastern time. In the final session of this four-part series presented by the ASA women in leadership interest group, get insights on how to have uncomfortable conversations around career advancement and hear from women who have empowered themselves and others around them to seek career growth opportunities.

The ASA women in leadership interest group is sponsored by ASA corporate partners Advance Partners, Bullhorn, and ClearlyRated, and by AdaMarie, Avionté, Marsh McLennan Agency, Mee Derby, Sense, and T2 Insurance Solutions.

All ASA webinars are complimentary for ASA members, and most qualify for continuing education hours toward ASA certification renewal. To learn more and to register, visit americanstaffing.net.

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Staffing Today is published by the American Staffing Association, with news abstracts copyrighted in 2026 by SmithBucklin of Chicago, IL, and all other content copyrighted in 2026 by ASA. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.

About ASA

The American Staffing Association is the voice of the U.S. staffing, recruiting, and workforce solutions industry. Learn more at americanstaffing.net.

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