The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jobless facing delays in pay as relief bill stalls

Georgia labor offifficia­ls await federal guidelines before dispensing aid.

- By Michael E. Kanell michael. kanell@ ajc. com

Hundreds of thousands of Georgians losing their jobless benefits this week will likely wait a while to receive help from the federal relief package Congress has passed.

None of the help can flow yet, with fresh delays after the president balked Tuesday at signing the bipartisan legislatio­n.

Delays will be painful for many who have been jobless since early in the pandemic, but Georgia’s Department of Labor just doesn’t have the informatio­n it needs to st art passing money to claimants, said spokeswoma­n Kersha Cartwright.

“Every department of labor across the nation is waiting for guidelines,” she added.

The bill extends federal unemployme­nt benefifits by 11 weeks. It also provides a $ 300- a- week subsidy through March 14 to anyone receiving unemployme­nt benefits, including gig workers and self- employed, who didn’t ordinarily qualify for jobless benefifits. The measure also adds a new $ 100- a- week payment to workers who have both wage and self- employment income under certain guidelines.

“These new enhancemen­ts could take months,” Cartwright said. “Some of the provisions

should be able to be implemente­d fairly quickly, but most of the new additions in the bill are going to take a substantia­l amount of time.”

The bill also funds direct payments of $ 600 to individual­s, but that program would be handled by t he Treasury Department. President Donald Trump on Tuesday called for $ 2,000 direct payments, an increase that Democrats support.

A host of federal programs were created by the CARES Act in March as the pandemic took hold. About 12 million Americans, including more than 300,000 Georgians, have been receiving payments that will expire Saturday — the day after Christmas. An estimated 85,000 Georgians have already exhausted their eligibilit­y.

With unemployme­nt still high and the coronaviru­s still spreading, Congress this week hashed out a $ 900 billion package that extends benefits and sends one- time payments to most Americans.

While not explicitly threatenin­g a veto, Trump l ate Tuesday angrily criticized the bill as “a disgrace” and called on Congress to recast it, including removing a number of provisions.

Congress might rework the bill. And if Trump vetoes the bill, Congress can override that objection. Either way, it means a longer gap in benefit payments for Georgians.

Claimants can look to food stamps and some charities to plug holes in their budgets, and they would eventually be paid what they were owed, said Caitlin Highland, spokeswoma­n for the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, a liberal think tank. “Of course, that doesn’t mean delays are fine—families need this money now.”

In June, Earl Mccarthy, 46, of College Park, lost his job in sales for a luxury senior living community and he’s been looking for work since.

“I had a couple interviews, but nothing has panned out,” he said. “The competitio­n is fierce.”

His wife had been teaching but is immunocomp­romised and unable to work because of the coronaviru­s. Without the benefits, they couldn’t stay afloat, Mccarthy said. “I can get by for maybe three months, but that is really stretching it.”

The COVID- 19 relief bill includes aid for households with their rent and childcare, help for schools, airports, and the U.S. Postal Service.

Small businesses also got help, including more forgivable loans and permission to take deductions for expenses covered by many loans under the pandemic program, said Nathan Humphrey, Georgia director for the National Federation of Independen­t Business.

Small businesses — which employ the majority of Georgians — are walking a tightrope, he said.

A recent NFIB survey showed one of every four small businesses think they will die if business doesn’t get better soon, Humphrey said. “These guys are cash flow dependent. They don’t have a lot saved up. Most have two or three weeks reserve and when that’s gone, that’s it.”

The bill’s provisions were less generous than the massive CARES Act. Some economists urged larger payments to individual­s, a longer extension of benefits and robust aid to state and local government­s, which employ 588,400 people in Georgia, according to data compiled by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank.

Damage to public payrolls will ripple through a community, said economist Heidi Shierholz of the Economic Policy Institute. “You start laying off firefighte­rs and teachers and they spend less and that hurts your local businesses.”

Many households are struggling with expenses, falling behind on rent payments and scrimping on food, according to the Census Bureau’s surveys. But the COVID- 19 vaccines are rolling out and the relief bill could keep many people from catastroph­e for a few months.

“Many people are already making terrible choices because of the cuts to their income,” Shierholz said. “But this is a bridge, even if it’s a wobbly bridge.”

 ?? CHRISTINA MATACOTTA/ FOR THE AJC ?? Sharon Corpening, an organizer for Unemployed Action, speaks during a demonstrat­ion of unemployed workers last week, calling for Congress to extend pandemicre­lated benefits.
CHRISTINA MATACOTTA/ FOR THE AJC Sharon Corpening, an organizer for Unemployed Action, speaks during a demonstrat­ion of unemployed workers last week, calling for Congress to extend pandemicre­lated benefits.

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