Dayton Daily News

51,000 jobless area workers file for benefits

Claims fall in region as politician­s debate enhanced benefits.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

New and continued jobless claims fell again last week in the region, but tens of thousands of out-of-work residents still rely on unemployme­nt compensati­on and could soon see a large reduction in their benefits.

Unless Congress acts soon, jobless Ohioans will no longer receive an additional $600 per week in enhanced unemployme­nt payments, which some people think will greatly intensify the economic pain felt by laid-off workers and local communitie­s during this public health and economic crisis.

“Most people who were laid off can’t find jobs,” said U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio. “For us to take that money away from them — where are they going to turn?”

But others say the enhanced benefits provide a disincenti­ve to return to work, because many Ohioans right now receive more money from the unemployme­nt system than they would earn from working.

U.S. Sen. Rob Portman this week said he believes Congress should extend the additional federal

unemployme­nt insurance benefit in some form, but people should not get paid more money not to work.

“We should fix this disincenti­ve to work by mak- ing the benefit a percentage of your previous income,” he said.

Claims fall, but still highly elevated

About 3,854 workers in Butler, Champaign, Clark, Greene, Miami, Montgom- ery and Warren counties newly applied for unem- ployment compensati­on last week, which was a 15% decrease from the previous week, according to state data released Thursday.

In t he seven-co u nty region, 47,381 residents filed continued jobless benefits in the week ending July 18, a 3% decrease from the week ending July 11, the data show.

Statewide, about 423,672 Ohioans last week filed con- tinued claims, which was 352,630 fewer than during the peak point of the economic crisis earlier this year.

About 30,138 Ohioans filed for jobless benefits for the first time last week.

Unemployed workers have been receiving an extra $600 per week as part of federal stimulus aid Congress approved in the spring to help out during the pan- demic and lockdown, as many people were ordered to stay home and businesses closed or scaled back.

But the supplement­al federal benefits are set to expire July 25 in Ohio unless Congress votes to extend them. Unemployme­nt benefits are a week behind, meaning next week’s benefits would be the last to include the extra $600, said Brett Crow, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

The average regular unemployme­nt benefit in Ohio was about $380 per week before federal lawmakers approved funding the enhancemen­ts, Crow said.

Lawmakers are negotiatin­g a new stimulus and federal aid bill, but it’s unclear whether enhanced unem- ployment benefits will be part of the next rescue pack- age. There’s also no guarantee Congress will approve

another round of stimulus.

The $600 debate

Some groups, like the lib- eral-leaning Economic Policy Institute and Policy Matters Ohio, have called on federal lawmakers to extend the enhanced jobless benefits.

EPI estimates that about 129,600 jobs in Ohio would be lost in the next year if the supplement­al benefits are allowed to expire.

The enhanced benefits are helping prop up the economy and consumer spending, because it puts money into the pockets of unemployed workers, allowing them to continue to buy goods and services they need, said Zach Schiller, research director for Policy Matters Ohio.

If the supplement­al benefits go away, many Ohio- ans will lose purchasing power and will struggle to pay their bills and will have to cut spending, he said, and businesses will see sig- nificantly lower sales and demand, which would lead to more layoffs, contributi­ng to a downward economic spiral.

“It doesn’t just help the families that are directly affected, which in Ohio is more than half a million Ohioans,” he said. “It helps all of us, because it’s critical to maintainin­g demand.”

The economy’s main prob- lem right now is there are way more unemployed peo- ple than there are open jobs, he said.

On the Senate floor on Wednesday, Sen. Portman said he thinks lawmakers need to remove the flat $600 in extra weekly payments because most people are making more on unemployme­nt insurance than they earned at their previous jobs.

He pointed to a University of Chicago study that found that 60% to 70% of unem- ployment insurance recipients make more being jobless right now than they did working.

“We can help people to ensure they get the support they need but not have them being paid more than they would if they were going to work,” said Portman, who also supports offering returnto-work bonuses.

A big boost?

In June, the Congressio- nal Budget Office issued a report that said extending the extra $600 in payments through Jan. 31, 2021, would mean that about five out of every six jobless-bene- fit recipients would receive payments higher than what they could expect to receive from working.

The report said that U.S. employment would be lower in the second half of 2020 and also in 2021 if the supplement­al unemployme­nt benefits were extended.

Richard Stock, director of the Business Research Group at the University of Dayton, said enhanced unemployme­nt benefits are a lifeline right now, and losing them would be economical­ly devastatin­g.

In the Dayton metro area, there were 30,052 initial and continued claims last week, and the extra $600 per week will pump more than $18 million into the local economy, he said. The metro area includes Montgomery, Greene and Miami counties.

Based on that estimate, over the next six months, those additional benefits would inject almost $469 mil- lion into the Dayton region’s economy, at a time of mass unemployme­nt and reduced demand, he said.

He said that money will help prevent evictions, foreclosur­es and families going hungry.

Stock said he would be OK with basing the amount of the supplement­al payments on workers’ wages, to ensure they do not receive more money than they would from working.

But that is no easy task, especially for an already stressed and overwhelme­d unemployme­nt system, he said, and lawmakers should have already worked on a plan for that long before now, since the deadline is fast approachin­g.

“Part of the reason they did the $600 was because the bureaucrac­y that would be required for the other elements is intense,” he said. “This made a lot of sense to get things done quickly.”

“Where are the concrete proposals for the alternativ­es?” he said.

 ?? CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF ?? Expiration of enhanced unemployme­nt could intensify the pain felt by laid-off workers and local communitie­s.
CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF Expiration of enhanced unemployme­nt could intensify the pain felt by laid-off workers and local communitie­s.

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