NJ Workers Involved in Labor Disputes Now Qualify for Increased Access to State Unemployment Benefits


On April 24, 2023, just ten days after Rutgers University faculty ended their week-long strike, Governor Murphy signed bill A4772/S3215 providing workers with increased access to unemployment insurance benefits during labor disputes. The provisions of the bill include:

The bill takes effect immediately and provides retroactive benefits to any claims filed on or after January 1, 2022.

New Jersey is only one of a few states that provide unemployment benefits to employees that go on strike.

In neighboring New York, while workers have historically been entitled to unemployment benefits while on strike, they previously had to wait a total of eight weeks before collecting benefits. As of February 6, 2020, Governor Cuomo passed legislation decreasing this waiting period to only 14 days. Employees subject to a lockout or who have been permanently replaced are entitled to unemployment benefits even earlier. Other States are considering legislation similar to the New Jersey legislation.


[1] The law provides that the labor dispute need not be authorized or sanctioned by the workers collective bargaining representative in order for the worker to qualify for access to unemployment insurance benefits.


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National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 150