El Dorado News-Times

States strain to carry out Trump order on unemployme­nt aid

- By Alan Suderman, Aamer Madhani and Christophe­r Rugaber

RICHMOND, Virginia — Governors and state labor department officials were scrambling Monday to determine whether they could implement President Donald Trump’s executive order to partially extend unemployme­nt assistance payments to millions of Americans struggling to find work in the pandemic-scarred economy.

Trump’s order allocates $44 billion in federal dollars from FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund to boost unemployme­nt aid for the jobless and calls on states to kick in roughly $15 billion. The Trump administra­tion says states can pull from federal coronaviru­s relief funds already distribute­d to states earlier in the crisis.

But some states have already fully allocated that money for other critical needs.

Trump’s actions on unemployme­nt insurance and other relief aid were another expansive flexing of presidenti­al authority that could usurp Congress’s power to approve federal spending.

The order extends additional unemployme­nt payments of $400 a week to help cushion the economic fallout of the pandemic.

Congress had approved payments of $600 a week at the outset of the outbreak, but those benefits expired Aug. 1 and Congress has been unable to agree on an extension.

Many Republican­s have expressed concern that a $600 weekly benefit, on top of existing state benefits, gives people an incentive to stay unemployed. The White House described the $400 level as an appropriat­e compromise, and top administra­tion officials including Vice President Mike Pence on Monday urged governors in a private call to pressure Democratic lawmakers to come to a deal.

But Democrats have dismissed Trump’s executive order as a hollow political gesture — not to mention legally questionab­le — that could ultimately leave millions of Americans without much-needed aid. Several governors said their states simply couldn’t afford to chip in a quarter of the cost, even with the relief money previously approved by Congress.

That share would cost California $700 million a week, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday. The state has already allocated 75% of the money that came from an earlier congressio­nal package.

“There is no money sitting in the piggy bank,” Newsom said. “It simply does not exist.”

As Democrats grumbled that Trump’s executive order was unworkable, top administra­tion officials contended that Trump was taking action while House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority

Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., were sitting on the sidelines — even though the president has not taken any active role in the negotiatio­ns.

Trump also took to Twitter on Monday to ridicule Sen. Ben Sasse, calling him a “RINO” — a Republican in name only — after the Nebraska Republican called Trump’s use of executive orders “unconstitu­tional slop.”

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, meanwhile, asserted that the orders were “entirely within the executive capacity of the president” and pointed to statutes she said supports the legal justificat­ion to reallocate funding in times of emergency.

Some state officials, both Democrats and Republican­s, said Trump’s order could prove to be difficult to implement for technical reasons.

In Virginia, secretary of finance Aubrey Layne said that timing of the distributi­on of funds could be an issue. He noted FEMA often takes several months

to reimburse emergency costs due to a hurricane, but have reimbursed personal protective equipment-related costs in several weeks.

Andrew Stettner, senior fellow at The Century Foundation and an expert on unemployme­nt aid, said that it could take several weeks for jobless claimants to see the enhanced benefit given the states’ difficulti­es in updating their unemployme­nt systems.

“No one’s getting a payment from this in August. If they’re lucky, they’ll get it in September,” he said.

The $44 billion that the Trump administra­tion has set aside for the unemployme­nt aid would run out in five or six weeks, Stettner added.

State unemployme­nt agencies struggled badly this spring and summer under the crush of tens of millions of applicatio­ns, and in most cases took weeks to implement the extra $600 payment after it was first approved.

For many jobless Americans, the enhanced benefit has been the difference-maker in keeping their heads above water financiall­y.

“If I did not have (the $600), I probably would not have been able to make it the past two months,” said Rosa Howell-Thornhill, 62, a freelance audio technician from South Orange, New Jersey, who has seen work opportunit­ies dry up.

In Ohio, the benefit might not take effect for weeks as officials sort out guidance from the U.S. Department of Labor for implementi­ng it, said Dan Tierney, a spokesman for Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican. Tierney said software changes may be required for the state’s unemployme­nt compensati­on computer system.

Many states also questioned whether they could afford the additional $100 per week in the face of sharply reduced tax revenue.

McEnany told reporters that the statute requires 25% of the unemployme­nt benefit be provided by states. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin reiterated the 25% requiremen­t in a White House call with governors Monday, but also sought to assure governors that the Trump administra­tion would find a way to cover money that states allocate for unemployme­nt through future legislatio­n.

“We realize that some of you want to use those funds for other things,” said Mnuchin, according to audio of the call obtained by The Associated Press. “And as part of legislatio­n, if you do use those funds for UI, we will agree to make you whole.”

In North Carolina, officials questioned whether it was sound policy to use FEMA funds set aside for natural disasters like hurricanes and tornadoes at a moment when forecaster­s are predicting a busy hurricane season.

 ?? (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) ?? President Donald Trump prepares to sign four executive orders during a news conference Saturday at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. Seizing the power of his podium and his pen, Trump on Saturday moved to bypass the nation’s elected lawmakers as he claimed the authority to defer payroll taxes and extend an expired unemployme­nt benefit after negotiatio­ns with Congress on a new coronaviru­s rescue package collapsed.
(AP Photo/Susan Walsh) President Donald Trump prepares to sign four executive orders during a news conference Saturday at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. Seizing the power of his podium and his pen, Trump on Saturday moved to bypass the nation’s elected lawmakers as he claimed the authority to defer payroll taxes and extend an expired unemployme­nt benefit after negotiatio­ns with Congress on a new coronaviru­s rescue package collapsed.

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