Maine Code § 26-1082

Powers and duties
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1. Powers and duties of the commissioner. Except as otherwise provided, it is the duty of the
commissioner to administer this chapter, through an organization to be known as the Bureau of
Unemployment Compensation. The commissioner may employ persons, make expenditures, require
reports, make investigations and take other actions the commissioner determines necessary or suitable
to that end. The commissioner is responsible and possesses the necessary authority for the operation
and management of the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation. The commissioner shall determine
methods of operational procedures in accordance with the provisions of this chapter. The commissioner
may adopt rules in accordance with Title 5, chapter 375 to achieve this purpose. The commissioner

shall make recommendations for amendments to this chapter that the commissioner determines proper.
When the commissioner believes that a change in contribution or benefit rates is necessary to protect
the solvency of the fund, the commissioner shall promptly inform the Governor and the Legislature and
make recommendations with respect to the change in rates.
[PL 2025, c. 235, §7 (AMD).]
2. Powers and duties. In addition to other powers and duties provided in this chapter, the
commission may require reports, make investigations and undertake other activities necessary to carry
out the duties of the commission. Each member of the commission is entitled to access to any
information, memoranda, reports or statistical data that is in the possession of or that has been prepared
by a division of the Department of Labor and that relates to the administration of this chapter.
[PL 2021, c. 456, §9 (AMD).]
3. Publication. The Commissioner of Labor shall cause to be printed for distribution to the public
the text of this chapter, the commission's regulations, the commissioner's annual reports to the Governor
and any other material the commissioner or the commission considers relevant and suitable, and shall
furnish the same to any person upon application.
The commissioner shall cause to be printed a comprehensive set of Department of Labor internal rules,
policies, regulations, memoranda, instructions and other forms used in determining eligibility, payment
of benefits and similar issues. The compilation must be indexed conveniently to facilitate its use by
the public and easily accessible to the public.
The commissioner shall annually publish data on the content and usage of the fund for not less than the
preceding 10 years, including financing, benefit costs, experience rating and contribution rates as
applicable. Legislative changes enacted after December 31, 2010 that have an impact on the content
or usage of the fund must be disclosed separately for not less than the 5 years after enactment of the
change.
[PL 2011, c. 212, §1 (AMD).]
4. Personnel. Subject to other provisions of this chapter, the commissioner is authorized to appoint
and prescribe the duties and powers of, and fix the compensation of, such officers, accountants,
attorneys, experts and other persons as may be necessary in the performance of the commissioner's
duties, subject to the Civil Service Law. The commissioner may delegate to any person so appointed
such power and authority as is reasonable and proper for the effective administration of this chapter
and may in the commissioner's discretion bond any person handling moneys or signing checks under
this chapter. On request of the commissioner, the Attorney General shall represent the department, the
commission and the State in any court action relating to this chapter or to its administration and
enforcement. Special counsel may be retained by the commissioner in accordance with Title 5, section
196, and the special counsel's service and expenses must be paid from the funds provided for the
administration of this chapter. The commissioner may not employ or pay any person who is an officer
or committee member of any political party organization.
[RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §86 (COR).]
4-A. Division of Administrative Hearings.
[PL 2025, c. 388, Pt. PPP, §4 (RP).]
5. Advisory council.
[PL 2001, c. 352, §13 (RP).]
6. Employment stabilization. The Commissioner of Labor may take all appropriate steps to
reduce and prevent unemployment; to encourage and assist in the adoption of practical methods of
vocational training, retraining and vocational guidance; to investigate, recommend, advise and assist in
the establishment and operation, by municipalities, counties, school districts and the State, of reserves
for public works to be used in times of business depression and unemployment; to promote the

reemployment of unemployed workers throughout the State in every other way that may be feasible;
and to these ends to carry on and publish the results of investigations and research studies.
[PL 2001, c. 352, §14 (AMD).]
7. Records and reports. Each employing unit shall keep true and accurate work records,
containing such information as the commissioner may prescribe. These records must be open to
inspection and be subject to being copied by the commissioner or the commissioner's authorized
representatives at any reasonable time and as often as may be necessary. The commissioner may require
from any employing unit any sworn or unsworn reports, with respect to persons employed by it, that
the commissioner considers necessary for the effective administration of this chapter. Information thus
obtained or obtained from any individual pursuant to the administration of this chapter, except to the
extent necessary for proper presentation of a claim, must be held confidential and may not be published
or opened to public inspection, other than to public employees in the performance of their public duties
or to any agent of an agency that is under contract with a state or local child-support agency, or to any
agent of an agency that is under contract or subcontract with the state employment and job training
agency, pursuant to safeguards established by the commissioner, in any manner revealing the
individual's or employing unit's identity, but the department shall, upon request, provide to any party
to an adjudicatory proceeding information from the records relating to the proceeding. Final decisions
of adjudicatory proceedings are available to the public after the names and addresses of claimants and
employers are deleted from the decisions. Records, with any necessary authentication of those records,
required in the prosecution of any criminal action brought by another state for misrepresentation to
obtain benefits under the law of this State must be made available to the agency administering the
employment security law of any such state for the purpose of such prosecution.
A. A person who violates this subsection commits a Class E crime. [PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. O, §4
(NEW); PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. X, §2 (AFF).]
B. An agent of an agency that is under contract with a state or local child-support agency, or an
agent of an agency that is under contract or subcontract with the state employment and job training
agency who discloses any information that is confidential pursuant to this subsection, other than
disclosure authorized by this subsection, commits a Class E crime. [PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. O, §4
(NEW); PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. X, §2 (AFF).]
Violation of this subsection is a strict liability crime as defined in Title 17-A, section 34, subsection
4-A.
[PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. O, §4 (AMD); PL 2003, c. 452, Pt. X, §2 (AFF).]
8. Oaths and witnesses.
[PL 2025, c. 388, Pt. PPP, §5 (RP).]
9. Subpoenas.
[PL 1977, c. 694, §471 (RP).]
9-A. Refusal to appear.
[PL 2025, c. 388, Pt. PPP, §6 (RP).]
10. Protection against self-incrimination.
[PL 2025, c. 388, Pt. PPP, §7 (RP).]
11. State-federal cooperation. In the administration of this chapter, the commissioner shall
cooperate to the fullest extent consistent with this chapter with the Department of Labor; shall make
such reports, in such form and containing such information as the Secretary of Labor may from time to
time require, and shall comply with such provisions as the Secretary of Labor may from time to time
find necessary to assure the correctness and verification of such reports; and shall comply with the
regulations of the Secretary of Labor governing the expenditure of such sums as may be allotted and
paid to this State under Title III of the Social Security Act for the purpose of assisting in the

administration of this chapter. Upon request therefor, the commissioner shall furnish to any agency of
the United States, charged with the administration of public works or assistance through public
employment, the name, address, ordinary occupation and employment status of each recipient of
benefits and such recipient's rights to further benefits under this chapter. The commissioner may make
the state's records relating to the administration of this chapter available to the Railroad Retirement
Board and may furnish the Railroad Retirement Board, at the expense of such board, such copies thereof
as the Railroad Retirement Board deems necessary for its purposes. The commissioner may afford
reasonable cooperation with every agency of the United States charged with the administration of any
unemployment insurance law or employment security law.
[PL 1977, c. 675, §10 (AMD).]
12. Reciprocal benefit arrangements. The commissioner shall participate in any arrangements
with the appropriate agencies of other states or the Federal Government for the payment of benefits on
the basis of combining an individual's wages and employment covered under this chapter and that
individual's wages and employment covered under the unemployment compensation or employment
security laws of other states that are approved by the United States Secretary of Labor in consultation
with the state unemployment compensation agencies as reasonably calculated to assure the prompt and
full payment of compensation in such situations and that include provisions for applying the base period
of a single state law to a claim involving the combining of an individual's wages and employment
covered under 2 or more state unemployment compensation laws, and avoiding the duplicate use of
wages and employment by reason of such combining. The commissioner shall reimburse such state or
federal agency for such benefits as may be paid by that agency upon the basis of wages received in
employment subject to this chapter or shall receive from such state or federal agency such amounts as
may be paid from the fund upon the basis of wages received in employment subject to the laws of such
state or of the Federal Government.
The commissioner is authorized to enter into reciprocal agreements with the appropriate agencies of
other states or the Federal Government adjusting the collection and payment of contributions by
employers with respect to services of individuals not performed wholly within the jurisdiction of this
State whereby such services may be agreed upon to be considered for all purposes, if the commissioner
so desires, as wholly within, or wholly without, the jurisdiction of this State, notwithstanding any
provisions of section 1043, subsection 11.
The commissioner is authorized to make such investigations, secure and transmit such information,
make available such services and facilities and exercise such of the other powers provided herein with
respect to the administration of this chapter as the commissioner considers necessary or appropriate to
facilitate the administration of any unemployment compensation, employment security or public
employment service law, and in like manner to accept and utilize information, services and facilities
made available to this State by any agency charged with the administration of any such other
unemployment compensation, employment security or public employment service law. To the extent
permissible under the laws and Constitution of the United States, the commissioner is authorized to
enter into or cooperate in arrangements whereby facilities and services provided under this chapter and
facilities and services provided under the unemployment compensation or employment security laws
of any foreign government may be utilized for the taking of claims and the payment of benefits under
this chapter, or under a similar law of such government. The commissioner, by agreement with another
state or the Federal Government, as provided under Section 303(g) of the federal Social Security Act,
may recover any overpayment of benefits paid to any individual under the laws of this State or of
another state or under an unemployment benefit program of the Federal Government. Any
overpayments subject to this subsection may be deducted from any future benefits payable to the
individual under the laws of this State or of another state or under an unemployment program of the
Federal Government.

In any case in which under this subsection a claimant is liable to repay any amount to the agency of
another state, such amounts may be collected without interest by civil action in the name of the
commissioner acting as agent for such agency.
[PL 2019, c. 343, Pt. RRR, §1 (AMD).]
13. Filing payroll reports; penalty. The commissioner may prescribe rules for the filing of
payroll reports for the employing units in the State. Each employing unit shall submit a quarterly
payroll report by electronic submission or on forms prescribed by the bureau. These quarterly reports
are due in the office of the bureau, or of any duly constituted agent of the bureau, on or before the last
day of the month following the close of the calendar quarter for which the reports relate. The failure
on the part of any employing unit to file the payroll reports within this time frame renders the employing
unit liable for a penalty of $25 or 10% of the tax due, whichever is greater.
In the case of executive, administrative and professional employees, and outside sales representatives,
as defined in Part 541 of the Rules and Regulations promulgated under the federal Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938, as amended as of June 30, 1971, the commissioner, upon the request of an employer of
those individuals, may approve an alternative method for obtaining from that employer necessary wage
information relative to those employees.
[PL 2021, c. 456, §10 (AMD).]
13-A. Certificate of records of payroll reports as evidence. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law or rule of evidence, for purposes of any prosecution or action to enforce Title 39-A,
section 324, a certificate signed by the Director of Unemployment Compensation or a representative of
the commissioner duly authorized by the commissioner stating what the payroll report records show
must be received in any court in this State as prima facie evidence of any fact stated in the certificate
or the records attached to the certificate.
[PL 1991, c. 885, Pt. E, §37 (AMD); PL 1991, c. 885, Pt. E, §47 (AFF).]
14. Determination of employer or employment; appeal.
A. The Director of Unemployment Compensation or a representative of the commissioner duly
authorized by the commissioner to do so shall determine whether an employing unit is an employer
and whether services performed for or in connection with the business of the employing unit
constitute employment and shall give written notice of the determination to the employing unit.
Unless the employing unit, within 30 calendar days after notification was mailed to its last known
address, files an appeal from that determination to the Division of Administrative Hearings, the
determination is final. [PL 2017, c. 284, Pt. AAAAA, §1 (AMD).]
B. After a determination has been made under paragraph A, the Director of Unemployment
Compensation or a representative of the commissioner may within one year reconsider the
determination in the light of additional evidence and make a redetermination and shall give written
notice of the redetermination to the employing unit. Unless the employing unit, within 30 calendar
days after notification was mailed to its last known address, files an appeal from that
redetermination to the Division of Administrative Hearings, the redetermination is final. [PL 2017,
c. 284, Pt. AAAAA, §1 (AMD).]
C. [PL 2017, c. 284, Pt. AAAAA, §2 (RP).]
D. The employer or the commissioner may appeal a decision of the Division of Administrative
Hearings to the commission, which may affirm, modify or reverse the decision upon review of the
record. The commission may hold further hearings or may remand the case to the Division of
Administrative Hearings for the taking of additional evidence. The commission shall notify the
parties to the proceeding of its findings of fact and decision, and such decision is subject to appeal
pursuant to Title 5, section 11001 et seq. In the absence of appeal therefrom, the determination of
the commission, together with the record of the proceeding under this subsection, is admissible in
any subsequent material proceeding under this chapter, and if supported by evidence, and in the

absence of fraud, is conclusive, except as to errors of law, upon any employing unit that was a
party to the proceeding under this subsection. [PL 2017, c. 284, Pt. AAAAA, §3 (AMD).]
E. [PL 1977, c. 694, §473 (RP).]
[PL 2017, c. 284, Pt. AAAAA, §§1-3 (AMD).]

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