.R.4277 - Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full Employment and Training
Act of 2012

To establish the National Full Employment Trust Fund to create
employment opportunities for the unemployed


Official Summary
3/28/2012--Introduced.Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full Employment
and Training Act of 2012 - Directs the Secretary of Labor to establish
a Full Employment National Trust Fund with two separate accounts for:
(1) Employment Opportunity Grants to states, local governments, and
Indian tribes for job-creating activities in communities whose economy
is not at a level of full employment; and
(2) Workforce Investment programs. Establishes arbitration procedures
for resolution of disputes for grant recipients. Requires the
Secretary of Labor to post a whistleblower hotline on the Department
of Labor's website for the public to report noncompliance with the
Act's requirements. Directs the Secretary to convene a national
employment conference to bring together leaders of small, medium, and
large businesses, labor, government, and other parties to discuss
employment, with particular attention to structural unemployment and
the plight of disadvantaged youth. Amends the Workforce Investment Act
of 1998 to revise member composition requirements for state and local
workforce investment boards to include at least 25% of the chief
executive officers of minority-serving, community-based organizations.
Amends the Internal Revenue Code to impose a tax on certain covered
securities transactions, payable by trading facilities or purchasers
that deal in such transactions. Requires a transferor with respect to
any outbound securities transaction to deduct and withhold a tax equal
to the tax imposed on covered securities transactions


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Friday, April 27, 2012
Rep. John Conyers Reintroduces Federal Bill to Create "Living Wage
Jobs for All!" (HR 4277)
HR 4277, a revised version of HR 870, was introduced by Rep. John
Conyers (D-MI) on March 28.    This transformative federal legislation
would create a national public service jobs program to complement job
creation efforts in the private and nonprofit sectors.

Most notably, the bill "aims to provide a job to any American that
seeks work, and to ultimately, create a full employment society."

To achieve that goal, Rep. Conyers and other supporters in the House
would put some real dollars on the table to create new jobs for
unemployed Americans.  HR 4277 creates a national "Full Employment and
Training Trust Fund," funded by a small Financial Transactions Tax on
stock, bond and derivatives transactions.  This would create a major
new national funding source large enough to create 2.5 to 4 million
jobs in the first two years of the program.  The bill would also
provide much additional funding to support innovative job training
programs, such as one-stop career centers, YouthBuild and Job Corps,
among others.

Noting that the Congress had previously committed itself to a national
policy of full employment, through bills passed in 1946 and 1978, HR
4277 takes square aim at the terrible human impacts of the current
high levels of unemployment.   According to the legislative finding
section of the bill:

"...Persisting unemployment and underemployment have devastating
financial consequences, resulting in the loss of income and spending
power for families, and interfering with their ability to save and
accumulate assets for a secure family life and retirement. High levels
of unemployment and inadequate consumer demand also contribute to poor
conditions for retail businesses, manufacturers and many other firms
to grow and prosper.  In the real estate sector, the Congress finds
that continuing high levels of unemployment contribute to
foreclosures, evictions, and commercial vacancies, undermining the
quality of neighborhood and community life, and hampering prospects
for economic recovery and national prosperity..."

"It is the purpose of the Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full
Employment and Training Act to expedite progress to fulfill the right
to useful work at living wages for all persons seeking employment, as
promptly as possible and at the earliest practicable date by
establishing a Full Employment Trust Fund to fund and operate a
national program of public service employment and to provide
additional labor market opportunities to complement those offered by
the existing private, public, and nonprofit sectors."

52 members of the House of Representatives had cosponsored HR 870, the
previous version of this legislation, and all or most of them are
expected to endorse the revised bill as well.

The Put America to Work Campaign is reaching out to organizations and
individuals across the country to build grassroots support for a
national jobs program, and seek additional cosponsors and Senate
sponsors to create a right to a living wage job for everyone who wants
to work.

Link to full text of HR 4277
Link to Bill Summary

Endorse HR 4277 or sign up to get more information

>From the Bill Summary provided by Rep. Conyers office:


H.R. 4427, “The Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full Employment and Training Act”
REPRESENTATIVE JOHN CONYERS, JR.

Summary

Representative Conyers has introduced legislation that is tailored to
fit our current economic realities, but which also embodies the spirit
of the original Humphrey-Hawkins “Full Employment and Balanced Growth
Act:” the “21st Century Full Employment and Training Act of 2012.”
The Act aims to provide a job to any American that seeks work and to,
ultimately, create a full employment society.

·     The Act establishes of a “Full Employment and Training Trust
Fund” with two separate accounts.  These two accounts will direct
funding to job creation and training programs.

·     If, at the beginning of each fiscal year, the Secretary
determines that unemployment exists in the country’s labor force, 90
percent of the funds in each account will be automatically disbursed.

·     67 percent of all revenues deposited into the trust fund will
accrue in the job creation grant program account and 33 percent of the
total funds will accrue in the job training account.

Dual Job Creation Focus: Direct Jobs Grants and WIA Training Programs

·     The first trust fund account will direct funds to a new
innovative direct jobs program.  Funds will be distributed by formula
through the Department of Labor to larger cities, and to states to be
passed through to smaller localities and rural areas.

o   The program would allocate funds based on the CDBG formula
modified to consider unemployment data. Local elected officials who
are closest to our communities and needs on the ground would work with
community groups and labor leaders to identify critical projects and
connect workers to projects right away.
o   Jobs could be located in the public sector, community-based
not-for-profit organizations, and small businesses that provide
community benefits.
o   The Program adopts an approach to ensure immediate job creation
and also allow for a longer term planning process that involves
community input and a focus on education and career development.
o   The program will be open to unemployed individuals who are seeking work
o   Full-time positions will be available for up to 40 hours per week,
for at least 12 months. They will pay comparable or prevailing wages,
as well as benefits.  Appropriate safeguards and strong
anti-displacement protections will help to prevent substitution and
ensure that workers are placed in new positions.

·     The second trust fund will distribute funds to job training
programs covered under the Workforce Investment Act.

o   These funds will fund innovative job training resources including
one-stop career centers, Youth Build, and the Job Corps.

Revenue: Taxing Wall Street Speculation to Pay for Main Street Jobs

·     Revenue for the trust fund will be raised through a tax on Wall
Street financial speculation, i.e. on stock and bond transactions.
The financial transactions tax will cover:

o   Stock transactions (tax rate will be 1/4 of 1 percent--0.25%),
o   Futures contracts to buy or sell a specified commodity of
standardized quality at a certain date in the future, at a market
determined price (tax rate will be 0.02%),
o   Swaps between two firms on certain benefits of one party's
financial instrument for those of the other party's financial
instrument (tax rate will be 0.02%)
o   Credit default swaps where a contract is swapped through a series
of payments in exchange for a payoff if a credit instrument (typically
a bond or loan) goes into default (fails to pay) (tax rate will be
0.02%),
o   And options, which are contracts between a buyer and a seller that
gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or to sell a
particular asset on or before the option's expiration time, at an
agreed price (at the rate of the underlying asset).+
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