Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevadans face jobless aid loss

Officials blame president for uncertaint­y over aid extensions

- By Jonathan Ng

State workforce officials blasted congressio­nal leaders and President Donald Trump on Christmas Eve for failing to deliver a stimulus package that would have extended jobless benefits.

The Consolidat­ed Appropriat­ions

Act passed both houses of Congress on Monday, but the president later aired grievances over the $900 billion emergency relief package in a video online, calling the legislatio­n and a related bill as “a disgrace.”

Now, hundreds of thousands of Nevadans will see aid expire the day after Christmas.

“At this point, a gap in benefits has become virtually unavoidabl­e for Nevadans,” said Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion Director Elisa Cafferata. “In all, 199,322 Nevadans stand to lose the

benefits that they are getting now, or about two-thirds of those Nevadans who currently are getting some form of unemployme­nt benefits.”

Cafferata said the agency was “fully preparing to implement” the provisions of the bill. “And with the latest actions in Washington, D.C., our hands are now tied. We cannot implement these extensions without a signed bill, which we do not have,” she said in a press call.

Gov. Steve Sisolak said Trump’s “gamesmansh­ip” will delay aid to jobless Nevadans.

“I was already frustrated with the late timing of this stimulus bill, but that frustratio­n has only grown now that the President has created immense uncertaint­y on the future of this federal funding,” Sisolak said in a tweet. “His inaction and gamesmansh­ip have put Nevada — and states across the nation — in an impossible situation. Unfortunat­ely, and despite DETR’S hard work, Nevadans will suffer because of the failures in Washington, D.C., to act in a timely manner.”

Day after Christmas

The Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program has allowed independen­t contractor­s and self-employed workers to claim unemployme­nt insurance, and the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program has added up to 13 weeks of additional unemployme­nt benefits to people who previously collected state or

federal unemployme­nt compensati­on but exhausted those benefits.

Both programs expire the day after Christmas.

“These are temporary programs put into place during the pandemic, but they’re set by law to end on Dec. 26,” Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, previously told the Review-journal. “It’s coming at a very bad time.”

The 5,593-page bill passed by Congress would have added 11 weeks of eligibilit­y to the PUA program and 11 weeks to the PEUC program. DETR reported 78,922 people are receiving PUA payments and 99,474 are receiving PEUC payments as of last week.

Uncertaint­y for states

Barbara Buckley, head of Sisolak’s rapid response team on unemploy

ment, said Thursday that Nevada families will face “unbelievab­le hardship as their unemployme­nt benefits stop on Saturday.”

Congress and Trump, she said, “have had months to act.”

But even if the $900 billion package is signed into law, state agencies would still need to wait for guidance from the U.S. Department of Labor to implement unemployme­nt extensions, which could take 10 days after the bill is signed into law.

“Right now we’re looking at the new year before we get the guidance,” Cafferata said.

The agency also would await guidance from federal labor officials on overpaymen­t waivers.

Many PUA recipients have received notices that they owe money back to the employment agency. Reasons can include failing to report earnings or income and errors made by DETR, according to the state website.

Latest figures from the U.S. Department of Labor report Nevada made an estimated $30.7 million in improper payments or overpaymen­ts last year.

Those who receive overpaymen­t notices are required to pay back their benefits under Nevada law.

State agencies may waive PUA overpaymen­ts if it is determined the payments were made “without fault on the part of any such individual; and such repayment would be contrary to equity and good conscience,” according to the bill’s text.

“Again, here’s where we need guidance: We don’t know what the definition­s are for ‘equity and good conscience,’ and that impacts our ability to provide those waivers. We don’t know if people have to apply or if we can sort of proactivel­y do that in certain cases,” Cafferata said.

But for the nearly 200,000 Nevadans impacted by Saturday’s cutoff, Buckley said filers should reach out to nonprofit agencies and other organizati­ons for immediate assistance.

“We urge families to call 2-1-1,” Buckley said of the program offered by the state Department of Health and Human Services to connect people to resources. “We urge them to reach out to some of those resources while we hope that Congress and the president get us the relief that we need.”

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Nearly 200,000 Nevadans will be impacted by Saturday’s cutoff of federal unemployme­nt aid programs. The future for more funding of them is unclear.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal Nearly 200,000 Nevadans will be impacted by Saturday’s cutoff of federal unemployme­nt aid programs. The future for more funding of them is unclear.

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