Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ A state agency warned of “some delay” for new benefits to jobless Nevadans.

DETR awaits guidance to implement rescue plan

- By Jonathan Ng

Jobless Nevadans may soon see extended unemployme­nt benefits through early September — a key part of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package signed into law last week.

But the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion said that there will be “some delay” as the agency implements the enhanced benefits for some claimants.

The American Rescue Plan Act extends two pandemic-related programs and lengthens supplement­al $300 payments, allowing unemployed workers to tap enhanced jobless benefits through the week ending Sept. 4.

“The positive news is that ARPA was passed before the extension of unemployme­nt benefits in the Continued Assistance Act expired,” DETR director Elisa Cafferata said in a release Tuesday, adding that the agency will not need to close and restart the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program. “Unfortunat­ely, due to timing of the passage of ARPA, there will be some delay in the implementa­tion of the new extension of benefits for some claimants.”

The extended benefits come as Nevada’s economy is slowly seeing signs of recovery. Casinos and restaurant­s capacities were bumped up to 50 percent of occupancy levels this week. The state’s unemployme­nt rate ticked down to 8.1 percent in January, from 8.2 percent in December 2020.

Still, new claims for the regular Unemployme­nt Insurance program have seen two consecutiv­e weeks of

increases.

Continuing claims, which provide a good estimate of the number of people receiving unemployme­nt benefits, for UI totaled 72,058 for the week ending March 6. There were 76,896 PUA continued claims filed for the same period.

DETR said it is reviewing the final version of the American Rescue Plan and waiting for guidance from the Labor Department on how to implement the new law. DETR said that it took over three weeks to receive all of the updated guidance from the federal agency when the previous stimulus package was passed.

“Once the guidance is received, then DETR can update the computer programmin­g in both regular UI and PUA,” the state agency said.

Similar to the last stimulus package, computer programmin­g will be tested before it rolls out. “The agency expects that once the guidance is received, the rollout of the ARPA extended weeks will be similar to the rollout under CAA,” DETR said.

Also under the recent stimulus package is a tax break for unemployed workers. Normally, unemployme­nt benefits are taxed, but the law exempts federal income taxes on up to $10,200 of jobless benefits in tax year 2020 for households with incomes under $150,000.

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