The Denver Post

State prepares to relaunch jobless programs.

- By Joe Rubino

State labor officials soon will email thousands of Coloradans who had their federal unemployme­nt benefits shut off Dec. 26 as the state prepares to relaunch those programs. Officials have not made it clear when the first new payments might hit people’s accounts.

The Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program, designed for gig workers and the self-employed and others uniquely affected by COVID-19 and the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program that provided extended benefits to people who have exhausted other forms of support both ran out of funding late last month. That left an estimated 153,000 people in Colorado without income they had been counting on during the pandemic.

The programs were reauthoriz­ed by the second stimulus bill signed by President Donald Trump on Dec. 27. Since receiving federal guidance on how to implement them this month, the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment has been racing to program its new unemployme­nt system to reopen frozen claims and begin accepting new filings for the programs.

That process is about to begin, officials announced during a news call Friday.

“We will be rolling out in phases beginning late next week as previously announced,” Joe Barela, director of the Colorado labor department, said, noting that the unemployme­nt division had projected the programs would be reactivate­d in late January or early February.

According to a plan outlined by CDLE deputy executive director Cher Haavind, the first step will be contacting people with existing claims that still have money available on their accounts and giving them informatio­n about how to sign up through the new system, MyUI+.

The first phase of the rollout also should open the door for the $300 per week in boosted unemployme­nt payments, state officials said. Another component of the second congressio­nal stimulus package, those boost payments will be paid out to any Coloradan eligible to receive at least $1 in state or federal unemployme­nt payments for any week from Dec. 27 to March 13.

State officials have not given a date for when those payments will go out but when they do that will cover all prior weeks that were covered by the program. That means many people will receive large payments of back-owed benefits.

“No action is required for the (boost) benefits,” Barela said. “It will be automatica­lly added to benefits payments issued.”

Once that first phase is up and running, the MyUI+ unemployme­nt portal will be ready to start accepting new PUA and PEUC claims. The exact time line for that second phase of the rollout isn’t clear.

The state also is running a pilot program for ID.me technology. The state’s new identity verificati­on process is a key part of accepting new PUA and PEUC claims.

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