WAC 296-17-35201
Recordkeeping and retention. Washington law (RCW 51.48.030) requires every employer to
make, keep, and preserve records which are adequate to
facilitate the determination of premiums due to the state for
workers' compensation insurance for their covered workers. In
the administration of Title 51 RCW, the department of labor
and industries has deemed the records and information required
in the various subsections of this section to be essential in
the determination of premiums due to the state fund. The
records so specified and required, shall be provided at the
time of audit to any authorized representative of the
department who has requested them.
Failure to produce the requested records within thirty
days of the request, or within an agreed upon time period
shall constitute prima facie evidence of noncompliance with
this rule and shall invoke the statutory bar to challenge
found in RCW 51.48.030 and/or 51.48.040.
(1) Employment records. Every employer shall with
respect to each worker, make, keep, and preserve original
records containing all of the following information for three
full calendar years following the calendar year in which
employment occurred:
(a) The name of each worker;
(b) The Social Security number of each worker;
(c) The beginning date of employment for each worker and,
if applicable, the separation date of employment of each such
worker;
(d) The basis upon which wages are paid to each worker;
(e) The number of units earned or produced for each
worker paid on a piecework basis;
(f) The risk classification applicable to each worker
whenever the worker hours of any one employee are being
divided between two or more classifications;
(g) The number of actual hours worked (WAC 296-17-31002)
by each worker, unless another basis of computing hours worked
is prescribed in WAC 296-17-31021;
(h) A summary time record for each worker showing the
calendar day or days of the week work was performed and the
actual number of hours worked each work day;
(i) The workers' total gross pay period earnings;
(j) The specific sums withheld from the earnings of each
worker, and the purpose of each sum withheld;
(k) The net pay earned by each such worker.
(2) Business, financial records, and record retention. Every employer is required to keep and preserve all original
employment time records for three full calendar years
following the calendar year in which employment occurred. The
three-year period is specified in WAC 296-17-352 as the
composite period from the date any such premium became due.
Employers who pay their workers by check are required to
keep and preserve all check registers and bank statements. Employers who pay their workers by cash are required to keep
and preserve records of these cash transactions which provide
a detailed record of wages paid to each worker.
(3) Recordkeeping - Estimated premium computation. Any
employer required by this section to make, keep, and preserve
records containing the information as specified in subsections
(1) and (2) of this section, who fails to make, keep, and
preserve such records, shall for the purpose of premium
calculation assume worker hours using the average hourly wage
rate for each classification, and also will be subject to
penalties prescribed in subsection (4) of this section. The
records compiled by the department shall be the basis for
determining the average hourly wage rate: Provided, That the
average hourly wage rate shall be no less than the state
minimum wage existing at the time such assumed hours are
worked. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section,
workers employed in a work activity center subject to
Classification 7309 shall be reported on the basis of the
average hourly wage.
(4) Failure to maintain records - Penalties. Any
employer required by this section to make, keep, and preserve
records containing the information as specified in subsections
(1) and (2) of this section, who fails to make, keep, and
preserve such record, shall be liable, subject to RCW 51.48.030, to a penalty in the amount of two hundred fifty
dollars for each such offense. Failure to make, keep, and
preserve records containing the information as specified in
subsections (1) and (2) of this section, for a single employee
shall constitute one offense, for two employees two offenses,
and so forth.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 51.04.020, 51.16.035, and 51.12.120. 03-23-025, § 296-17-35201, filed 11/12/03,
effective 1/1/04. Statutory Authority: RCW 51.16.035. 99-18-068, § 296-17-35201, filed 8/31/99, effective 10/1/99. Statutory Authority: RCW 51.04.020. 95-08-052, §
296-17-35201, filed 4/3/95, effective 7/1/95.]