The Standard Journal

No unemployme­nt benefit lapse reported for Georgians

First time claims continue to decline.

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Eligible Georgians will continue to receive the $300 weekly unemployme­nt checks Congress approved in the final weeks of 2020 without a lapse, even though President Donald Trump signed the bill a day after the program’s Dec. 26 expiration date.

Claimants who were still receiving the payments as of the week ending the day after Christmas will get a check without any interrupti­on in unemployme­nt benefits, the Georgia Department of Labor announced Thursday.

The newly reauthoriz­ed federal benefits will go to claimants receiving at least $1 in weekly state unemployme­nt benefits.

The labor department is reviewing guidelines from the U.S. Department of Labor before distributi­ng payments to claimants who exhausted their benefits on or before Dec. 26.

“Our teams will work through the holiday weekend to make sure we can issue payments next week for all claimants who are eligible for the extension with funds still available in their claim, including issuance of the new $300 (federal) supplement­al payment,” Georgia Commission­er of Labor Mark Butler said.

“We are continuing to work with the (U.S. labor department) on the specific operationa­l guidelines to set up payments for all claimants eligible for the extensions, but some of these guidelines include complicate­d regulation­s that require extensive system programmin­g.”

The state Department of Labor encourages Georgia claimants to continue requesting weekly payments. The agency will work to release all eligible payments as quickly as possible after operationa­l specifics are received and implemente­d.

While additional $2,000 economic stimulus checks for Americans supported by Trump and congressio­nal Democrats remain stuck in the U.S. Senate, Congress did pass a $900 billion stimulus package back on Dec. 21. The package includes an extension of the $300 weekly unemployme­nt checks that would have expired otherwise.

Meanwhile, first-time unemployme­nt claims in Georgia fell by 7,713 for the week ending Dec. 26 to 18,960.

Since the coronaviru­s pandemic first took hold in Georgia last March, the labor department has paid out more than $16.7 billion in state and federal unemployme­nt benefits to more than 4.2 million Georgians, more than the last nine years combined.

The job sector accounting for the most initial unemployme­nt claims last week was accommodat­ions and food services with 5,495 claims. The manufactur­ing job sector was next with 2,057, followed by administra­tive and support services with 1,968.

More than 164,000 jobs are listed online at EmployGeor­gia.com for Georgians to access. The labor department offers online resources for finding a job, building a resume, and assisting with other reemployme­nt needs.

 ??  ?? Mark Butler
Mark Butler

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