Asbury Park Press

Idea proposed to help with jobless benefits

Many workers face barrier in Jersey

- Daniel Munoz NorthJerse­y.com USA TODAY NETWORK – NEW JERSEY Email: munozd@northjerse­y.com; Twitter: @danielmuno­z100

Despite improvemen­ts in the state’s beleaguere­d unemployme­nt system, over 700,000 New Jerseyans still face barriers to jobless benefits, a new report says.

Now the activist group Make the Road New Jersey — emphasizin­g the results of that report — is putting forward several solutions it says could close that gap. The organizati­on hosted a rally Wednesday at Military Park in Newark’s business district.

One proposal is the Job Bridge program, which would extend unemployme­nt benefits to 737,400 workers who “face barriers to unemployme­nt at any moment,” the report says. The Job Bridge program, as proposed, would create a new “public benefit fund,” available to workers not covered by traditiona­l unemployme­nt, so that there would be “universal benefits for all unemployed workers.”

“Unemployme­nt draws no distinctio­n among workers, yet our current unemployme­nt insurance system leaves far too many behind,” said Nicole Rodriguez, president of the progressiv­e think tank New Jersey Policy Perspectiv­e.

The report says those workers include:

139,400 freelancer­s and self-employed people.

16,600 job transition­ers.

200,700 who are monetarily ineligible.

5,600 returning citizens (those formerly incarcerat­ed).

310,100 undocument­ed workers. 6,000 unemployed caregivers returning to work.

13,500 entering the workforce from education.

45,500 UI-eligible workers not accessing benefits.

“Everyone in New Jersey, whether you’re a farm worker in Bridgeton or a gig driver in Jersey City, should have access to good jobs, and that also means having access to unemployme­nt insurance during periods of joblessnes­s,” said Sara Cullinane, who heads Make the Road New Jersey.

The program would be funded through an unspecifie­d tax on corporatio­ns, Cullinane said.

Gov. Phil Murphy has proposed a

2.5% “corporate transit fee” that would hit New Jersey’s highest-earning corporatio­ns to help financiall­y strapped NJ Transit, though it has met considerab­le pushback from business trade groups and associatio­ns.

Who has been affected

In one case study, the report talks of Carina, whose last name is not given. She worked as a gig driver for a “multinatio­nal corporatio­n” but was let go after speaking up about working conditions, the report says.

Although she would have been eligible for unemployme­nt assistance thanks to expanded programs during the pandemic, that was no longer the case because those programs lapsed.

In another case study, a food server named Carla was let go from her place of employment.

Despite having DACA protected status, she lost that after being unable to afford her renewal fee. Due to her immigratio­n status, she no longer qualified for unemployme­nt and could not afford food, medicine or utilities.

“It’s very stressful when you don’t have access to unemployme­nt and it makes it harder to focus on finding a new job,” she said.

Under the Job Bridge proposal, those receiving regular unemployme­nt benefits would get a supplement­al payment on top of their existing jobless benefits.

Benefits navigation

The Job Bridge proposal also calls for a “Benefits Navigator Program,” which would provide grants to community organizati­ons and labor unions to help workers file for their Job Bridge benefits or regular unemployme­nt benefits.

Job Bridge would also work to educate program participan­ts on their rights in the workplace.

Programs in other states

Colorado runs the Benefit Record Fund, set up for undocument­ed individual­s ineligible for traditiona­l unemployme­nt. Applicatio­ns for the program opened early last month.

It is funded by “some of the dollars already paid by employers on behalf of undocument­ed workers,” says the Colorado state website.

New York has a $2.1 billion Excluded Workers Fund for undocument­ed immigrants who are not eligible for traditiona­l unemployme­nt benefits.

 ?? PHOTOS BY TARIQ ZEHAWI/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM ?? Labor activists and unions gathered for a May Day rally at Military Park in Newark on Wednesday. They are calling for the expansion of New Jersey’s unemployme­nt benefits.
PHOTOS BY TARIQ ZEHAWI/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM Labor activists and unions gathered for a May Day rally at Military Park in Newark on Wednesday. They are calling for the expansion of New Jersey’s unemployme­nt benefits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States