The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

States warn GOP’S jobless benefit plan could mean delays

- By Geoff Mulvihill

A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronaviru­s shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.

Older computer systems that took weeks to set up for the initial federal unemployme­nt enhancemen­t would need to be reprogramm­ed again twice under the GOP plan.

In Florida, state Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from Orlando, said the state has not even gotten the original supplement­al benefit to everyone entitled to it.

“So the idea of changing the current process that has taken us months to put into place, that is still not even perfect, is a scary thought,” she said.

“These changes, whatever they end up being, are going to create more bureaucrat­ic layers for people to get the relief they need. Meanwhile we have bills to pay, we have to put food on the table, we have medical expenses and a lot of people are suffering.”

How to handle unemployme­nt is a fiercely contested part of the debate as Congress negotiates the latest relief legislatio­n.

Democrats want to bring back the federally funded $600-a-week unemployme­nt bonus that is expiring, saying it’s a way to keep families and the economy afloat in a time when there are far more people out of work than jobs available.

Republican­s argue the current amount is so high that it encourages people to remain on unemployme­nt. They want to reduce it in two steps: First, by cutting the benefit by two-thirds — to $200 a week through September. Then they want to switch that flat rate to a percentage in which the unemployed would receive benefits equal to no more than 70% of their previous incomes in November and December.

The debate isn’t only about the economy and ideology. It’s also about what’s doable technologi­cally, especially on software many states use that dates to the 1970s.

Some states took a month to figure out how to process the initial $600 a week benefit when it went into place this spring, leaving laid-off workers in the lurch as the numbers of unemployed skyrockete­d. Last week, more than 16 million Americans were receiving unemployme­nt benefits.

“Anything other than a flat rate would take time to program in our system because it would require individual income calculatio­ns for hundreds of thousands of Ohioans receiving unemployme­nt benefits,” Bret Crow, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and

Family Services, said in an email.

He said it wasn’t clear how long it might take to switch the system.

In Tennessee, the Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t says it would need “ample time” to make changes; just how much depends on what the policy is.

Washington was among the first states to implement the $600 benefit boost. But Mike Faulk, a spokesman for Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat, said large-scale changes would slow down benefit payments and “put a significan­t burden on state unemployme­nt agencies.”

The state’s employment security commission­er, Susan Levine, wrote the state’s congressio­nal delegation this month telling them, “Simply put, state unemployme­nt systems cannot flip a switch overnight on August 1, 2020, and will require a transition period.”

In Louisiana, Gov. John Bel Edwards said he doesn’t believe any states’ unemployme­nt systems could handle a variable federal benefit tied to a person’s previous earnings. He has encouraged Louisiana’s congressio­nal delegation to back a flat unemployme­nt benefit instead.

“If they go beyond that, I will tell you it will be very, very difficult to administer,” he said.

Democratic California Assemblyma­n David Chiu said the state is struggling to provide benefits on time as it is.

“I have no confidence they’ll be able to adjust,” he said. “To me, this is why I really hope that Congress will simply extend the $600 a week to make this as seamless as possible.”

Annelies Goger, a fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, a left-of-center public policy organizati­on, said even a change in the flatrate boost could be delayed because states need to wait for federal guidance before implementi­ng changes. Switching to a percentage of income would be even harder, she said.

For instance, it would be hard to gather the data needed to determine the previous incomes for people who were self-employed or were gig workers. Such workers are generally not eligible for unemployme­nt benefits, but they are under coronaviru­s relief legislatio­n.

And Goger said it would take a lot of resources to modify a program twice that is scheduled to end in December.

“Most states are still very overloaded with initial claims every week and are struggling to keep up with bottleneck­s in the adjudicati­on process and getting payments out accurately in a timely manner,” Groger said in an email.

“Any resources diverted from getting through those backlogs will delay getting relief to families that are struggling to pay rent and put food on the table.”

U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said on the Senate floor Monday that the fallout from both delays and benefit reductions could be significan­t.

He pointed to an analysis from the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute that found cutting the boost to $200 a week would result in 3.4 million more layoffs.

“The economy crashes, people are hurt, they get kicked out of their homes, they can’t feed their kids,” Schumer said. “The Republican proposal on unemployme­nt benefits, simply put, is unworkable. It will delay benefits for weeks if not months as we slide into a greater degree of recession.”

“These changes, whatever they end up being, are going to create more bureaucrat­ic layers for people to get the relief they need. Meanwhile we have bills to pay, we have to put food on the table, we have medical expenses and a lot of people are suffering.” — Florida state Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from Orlando

 ?? NATI HARNIK ?? FILE - In this July 15, 2020, file photo, job seekers exercise social distancing as they wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Neb. A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronaviru­s shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.
NATI HARNIK FILE - In this July 15, 2020, file photo, job seekers exercise social distancing as they wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Neb. A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronaviru­s shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.
 ?? MAX BECHERER ?? FILE - In this July 22, 2020, file photo, motorists take part in a caravan protest in front of Senator John Kennedy’s office at the Hale Boggs Federal Building asking for the extension of the $600 in unemployme­nt benefits to people out of work because of the coronaviru­s in New Orleans, La. A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronaviru­s shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.
MAX BECHERER FILE - In this July 22, 2020, file photo, motorists take part in a caravan protest in front of Senator John Kennedy’s office at the Hale Boggs Federal Building asking for the extension of the $600 in unemployme­nt benefits to people out of work because of the coronaviru­s in New Orleans, La. A Republican proposal to slash the $600 weekly benefit boost for those left jobless because of the coronaviru­s shutdown could result in weeks or even months of delayed payments in some states.

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