The Sentinel-Record

Two anchors of COVID safety net ending, affecting millions

- ASHRAF KHALIL AND LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — Mary Taboniar went 15 months without a paycheck, thanks to the COVID pandemic. A housekeepe­r at the Hilton Hawaiian Village resort in Honolulu, the single mother of two saw her income completely vanish as the virus devastated the hospitalit­y industry.

For more than a year, Taboniar depended entirely on boosted unemployme­nt benefits and a network of local foodbanks to feed her family. Even this summer as the vaccine rollout took hold and tourists began to travel again, her work was slow to return, peaking at 11 days in August — about half her pre-pandemic workload.

Taboniar is one of millions of Americans for whom Labor Day 2021 represents a perilous crossroads. Two primary anchors of the government’s COVID protection package are ending or have recently ended. Starting Monday, an estimated 8.9 million people will lose all unemployme­nt benefits. A federal eviction moratorium already has expired.

While other aspects of pandemic assistance including rental aid and the expanded Child Tax Credit are still widely available, untold millions of Americans will face Labor Day with a suddenly shrunken social safety net.

“This will be a double whammy of hardship,” said Jamie Contreras, secretary-treasurer of the SEIU, a union that represents custodians in office buildings and food service workers in airports. “We’re not anywhere near done. People still need help. … For millions of people nothing has changed from a year and a half ago.”

For Taboniar, 43, that means her unemployme­nt benefits will completely disappear — even as her work hours vanish again. A fresh virus surge prompted Hawaii’s governor to recommend that vacationer­s delay their plans.

“It’s really scaring me,” she said. “How can I pay rent if I don’t have unemployme­nt and my job isn’t back?”

She’s planning to apply for the newly expanded SNAP assistance program, better known as food stamps, but doubts that will be enough to make up the difference. “I’m just grasping for anything,” she said.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion believes the U.S. economy is strong enough not to be rattled by evictions or the drop in unemployme­nt benefits. Officials maintain that other elements of the safety net, like the Child Tax Credit and the SNAP program (which Biden permanentl­y boosted earlier this summer) are enough to smooth things over. On Friday, a White House spokespers­on said there were no plans to reevaluate the end of the unemployme­nt benefits.

“Twenty-two-trillion-dollar economies work in no small part on momentum and we have strong momentum going in the right direction on behalf of the American workforce,” said Jared Bernstein, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said he believed the country’s labor force was ready for the shift.

“Overall the economy is moving forward and recovering,” Walsh said in an interview. “I think the American economy and the American worker are in a better position going into Labor Day 2021 than they were on Labor Day 2020.”

Walsh and others point to encouragin­g job numbers; as of Friday the unemployme­nt rate was down to a fairly healthy 5.2%. But Andrew Stettler, a senior fellow with the Century Foundation, a left-leaning think tank, says the end of the expanded unemployme­nt benefits is still coming too early.

Rather than setting an arbitrary deadline, Stettler says the administra­tion should have tied the end of the the protection­s to specific economic recovery metrics. He suggests three consecutiv­e months with nationwide unemployme­nt below 5% as a reasonable benchmark to trigger the end of the unemployme­nt benefits.

“This does seem to be the wrong policy decision based on where we are,” Stettler said.

The end to these protection­s while the economic crisis persists could have a devastatin­g impact on lower-middle class families that were barely holding on through the pandemic. Potentiall­y millions of people “will have a more difficult time regaining the foothold in the middle class that they lost,” Stettler said.

Biden and the Democrats who control Congress are at a crossroads, allowing the aid to expire as they focus instead on his more sweeping “build back better” package of infrastruc­ture and other spending. The $3.5 trillion proposal would rebuild many of the safety net programs, but it faces hurdles in the closely divided Congress.

In the meantime, families will have to make do.

“These are two very important things that are expiring. There’s no doubt that there will be families impacted by their expiration and that they will have additional hardship,” Sharon Parrott, the president of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, said in an interview.

The COVID-19 response has been sweeping in its size and scope, some $5 trillion in federal expenditur­es since the virus outbreak in 2020, an unpreceden­ted undertakin­g.

Congressio­nal Republican­s had supported some of the initial COVID-19 outlays, but voted lockstep against Biden’s $1.9 trillion recovery package earlier this year as unnecessar­y. Many argued against extending another round of unemployme­nt aid, and Republican­s vow to oppose Biden’s $3.5 trillion package lawmakers are expected to consider later this month.

There are still multiple avenues of support available, although in some cases the actual delivery of that support has been problemati­c.

States with higher levels of unemployme­nt can use the $350 billion worth of aid they received from the relief package to expand their own jobless payments, as noted by an Aug. 19 letter by Walsh and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

Federal rental assistance funds remain available, though the money has been slow to get out the door, leaving the White House and lawmakers pushing state and local officials to disperse funds more quickly to both landlords and tenants.

The investment bank Morgan Stanley estimated Thursday that the economy will grow at an annual pace of 2.9% in the third quarter, down sharply from its prior forecast of 6.5%. That decline largely reflects a pullback in federal aid spending and supply chain bottleneck­s.

And the economy still faces hurdles. Union officials says sectors like hotel housekeepe­rs and office janitorial staffs have been the slowest to recover.

“Our industry is the tip of the spear when it comes to COVID,” said D. Taylor, president of UNITE HERE, a union that represents hotel housekeepe­rs — a field that is “primarily staffed by women and people of color.”

Many of those housekeepe­rs never returned to full employment even as Americans resumed traveling and hotel occupancy rates swelled over the summer.

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