Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Extended federal benefits end for some residents

- By Sarah Mansur Illinoissm­ansur@capitol newsillino­is.com

SPRINGFIEL­D — Benefits for some unemployed state residents provided under an aid program targeting mostly self-employed and gig workers will be capped at 50 weeks instead of 57, the state announced Wednesday.

The shortened period for benefits under the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program was triggered by a decline in the state’s unemployme­nt rate.

The PUA program, which was first establishe­d by Congress last March, offers benefits to independen­t contractor­s, self-employed individual­s, gig workers and others not covered by traditiona­l state unemployme­nt insurance.

After Congress renewed the program in December, eligible individual­s could receive up to 57 weeks of PUA benefits. The law passed in December, the Continued Assistance Act, also extended regular state unemployme­nt insurance benefits by seven weeks.

Both those seven-week benefit extensions have ended, according to a state news release. This means individual­s eligible for PUA will receive up to 50 weeks of benefits, and those eligible for extended regular state unemployme­nt insurance benefits will receive up to 13 weeks of benefits.

Roughly 40,000 individual­s have been notified that they have exhausted their 50 weeks of PUA, according to Rebecca Cisco, a spokespers­on for the Illinois Department of Employment Security.

“IDES will continue to notify PUA claimants as they approach the 50-week limit. And, of course, the Department is closely monitoring activity at the federal level in the event new legislatio­n includes extensions or changes to the PUA program,” Cisco wrote in an email.

Individual­s who qualify for PUA but have not yet received some of their benefits will only be eligible for benefits through April 10, Acting IDES Director Kristin Richards said in response to a question during a virtual joint committee hearing Wednesday.

Richards said the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics determined that the average unemployme­nt rate for October, November and December fell below 8%.

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