[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 20, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 20CFR325.1]

[Page 540-542]
 
                      TITLE 20--EMPLOYEES' BENEFITS
 
                  CHAPTER II--RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD
 
PART 325_REGISTRATION FOR RAILROAD UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS--Table of 
Contents
 
Sec. 325.1  General.




Sec.
325.1 General.
325.2 Procedure for registering for unemployment benefits.
325.3 Application for unemployment benefits and employment service.
325.4 Claim for unemployment benefits.
325.5 Death of employee.
325.6 Verification procedures.

    Authority: 45 U.S.C. 362(i) and 362(l).

    Source: 54 FR 24551, June 8, 1989, unless otherwise noted.


    (a) Day of unemployment. A ``day of unemployment'' is a calendar day 
on which an employee, although ready and willing to work, is unemployed, 
and on which no remuneration is payable and for which the employee has 
registered, as required by this part. The amount of compensable days of 
unemployment shall be computed in accordance with this section.
    (b) Registration period. Except for registration periods in extended 
unemployment benefit periods, a ``registration period'' means a period 
of 14 consecutive days beginning with the first day for which an 
employee registers following:
    (1) His or her last day of work, or
    (2) The last day of the employee's last preceding registration 
period, and with respect to which the employee properly files a claim 
for benefits on such form and in such manner as the Board prescribes.
    (c) General waiting period. Benefits are payable to any qualified 
employee for each day of unemployment in excess of seven during his or 
her first registration period in a period of continuing unemployment if 
such period of continuing unemployment is his or her initial period of 
continuing unemployment beginning in the benefit year, and then for each 
day of unemployment in excess of four during any subsequent registration 
period within the same period of continuing unemployment. A strike 
waiting period, described in paragraph (d) of this section, will satisfy 
a general waiting period with respect to a benefit year.

[[Page 541]]

    (d) Strike waiting period. If a qualified employee has a period of 
continuing unemployment that includes days of unemployment due to a 
stoppage of work because of a strike in the establishment, premises, or 
enterprise at which he or she was last employed, no benefits are payable 
for his or her first 14 days of unemployment due to such stoppage of 
work. For subsequent days of unemployment due to the same stoppage of 
work, benefits are payable for days of unemployment in excess of four in 
each subsequent registration period within the period of continuing 
unemployment. If such period of continuing unemployment ends because the 
employee has exhausted his or her benefits as provided for under part 
336 of this chapter, but the stoppage of work continues, benefits are 
payable for days of unemployment in excess of seven in the employee's 
first registration period in a new period of continuing unemployment 
based upon the same stoppage of work and for days of unemployment in 
excess of four in subsequent registration periods in the same period of 
continuing unemployment.
    (e) Period of continuing unemployment. A ``period of continuing 
unemployment'' means a single registration period that includes more 
than four days of unemployment or a series of consecutive periods each 
of which includes more than four days of unemployment, or a series of 
successive registration periods, each of which includes more than four 
days of unemployment, if each succeeding registration period begins 
within 15 days after the last day of the immediately preceding 
registration period. An employee's period of continuing unemployment 
ends on the last day of a benefit year in which he or she exhausts 
rights to unemployment benefits as provided for in part 336 of this 
chapter.
    (f) Computation of compensable days. (1) Example 1. An employee has 
an initial period of continuing unemployment from June 14 through July 
25 and is unemployed on all days in that period. The employee's first 
registration period covers June 14 to June 27, and his subsequent 
registration periods cover June 28 to July 11 and July 12 to July 25. 
Under paragraph (c) of this section, a one-week waiting period applies 
to his first registration period and the employee is therefore paid 
benefits for days of unemployment in excess of seven in that period. The 
employee is then paid benefits for days of unemployment in excess of 
four in each of the two ensuing registration periods. [Note: if this 
employee's period of continuing unemployment had been the result of a 
strike in the establishment, premises, or enterprise at which the 
employee was last employed, then under paragraph (d) of this section, no 
benefits would be payable for the period June 14 to June 27, and 
benefits would then be payable for days of unemployment in excess of 
four in each of the ensuing registration periods.]
    (2) Example 2. Same facts as in example 1, but the employee is 
unemployed again beginning August 18. Since August 18 is more than 15 
days after July 25, the end of his last registration period, the 
employee begins a new period of continuing unemployment. The employee's 
first registration period in the new period of continuing unemployment 
covers August 18 to August 31. The employee is paid benefits for days of 
unemployment in excess of seven in that registration period because that 
period is the employee's first registration period in a new period of 
continuing unemployment commencing in the benefit year beginning July 1, 
and he or she did not previously have a waiting period in any 
registration period earlier in that benefit year. The employee's next 
registration period covers September 1 to September 14, and the employee 
returned to work on September 12. In that registration period, the 
employee has 11 days of unemployment and is therefore paid benefits for 
days of unemployment in excess of four.
    (3) Example 3. Same facts as in examples 1 and 2, but the employee 
then has a new period of continuing unemployment beginning November 1 in 
the same benefit year. November 1 to November 14 is the employee's first 
registration period in that period of continuing unemployment. The 
employee is paid benefits for days of unemployment in excess of four in 
that registration period and for days of unemployment in excess of four 
in any subsequent registration period in the same

[[Page 542]]

benefit year because earlier in the benefit year the employee had a 
registration period, August 18 to August 31, in which he or she 
satisfied the waiting period.
    (g) Remuneration exceeds base year compensation. (1) No benefits are 
payable to any otherwise eligible employee for any day of unemployment 
in a registration period where the total amount of remuneration, as 
defined in part 322 of this chapter, payable to the employee during a 
registration period exceeds the amount of the base year monthly 
compensation base. For this purpose an employee is considered to have 
received the amount he would have earned except for the fact that he 
declined suitable work available to him or her during the registration 
period.
    (2) Days of unemployment which are not compensable by virtue of 
paragraph (g)(1) of this section shall nevertheless be counted as days 
of unemployment for purposes of determining whether the general waiting 
period, as described in paragraph (c) of this section, has been 
satisfied, and for purposes of determining a period of continuing 
unemployment.
    (h) Pay for time lost. An employee may claim unemployment benefits 
in accordance with this part even though he or she is also pursuing a 
claim for pay for time lost or other remuneration. If such pay is 
awarded to the employee with respect to any day for which the Board has 
paid him or her unemployment benefits, the Board will recover the amount 
of unemployment benefits that was paid for any day or days for which he 
or she was awarded pay for time lost. See part 322 of this chapter. It 
is the employee's responsibility to tell the Board that he or she has 
filed or intends to file a claim for time lost.

[54 FR 24551, June 8, 1989, as amended at 65 FR 19647, Apr. 12, 2000]