After a valid claim year is established, the department will calculate the weekly benefit amount using the following process:
Example 1: For this example, the state's average weekly wage is $1,400. An employee's average weekly wage is $600. Since this amount is less than half of the state's average weekly wage, the employee receives 90% of their weekly wage. The weekly benefit is $540.
Example 2: For this example, the state's average weekly wage is $1,400. An employee's average weekly wage is $950. Since this number is more than half of the state's average weekly wage, calculate the values for subsection (3)(a) and (b) of this section, then add them together. The first number is equal to 90% of half the state's average weekly wage. Half of $1,400 is $700, and 90% of this number makes the first number $630. The second number is equal to 50% of the amount of the employee's average weekly wage that is higher than half the state's average weekly wage. The amount of the employee's average weekly wage that is higher than half the state's average weekly wage is $250 ($950 - $700). 50% of this amount makes the second number $125. Add the two numbers together. The weekly benefit is $755.
Example 3: An employee has a weekly benefit amount determined to be $1,000. The employee worked 20 hours each week in the qualifying period. The employee is now full-time and salaried, causing the department to consider that employee's typical workweek hours to be 40. The employee can claim 40 hours on each weekly claim. No proration would occur because the hours claimed compared to the typical workweek hours are the same. As a result, the employee would receive 100% of their weekly benefit amount.
Wash. Admin. Code § 192-610-051