Las Vegas Review-Journal

GOP: EXTENSION WAS A TEMPORARY FIX

- Karoun@lasvegassu­n.com / 202-365-0015 / @karoun

personally with unemployed workers, there wouldn’t be any question at all about the need to extend the federal (unemployme­nt insurance) program,” Ways and Means ranking member Sander Levin said at a hearing last week. Not all Republican­s are convinced. Ways and Means Committee Republican­s stressed that expansion of the emergency unemployme­nt insurance program was intended to be a temporary patch in response to the recession and should be allowed to expire.

That’s a view that at least one Republican in the Nevada delegation, Rep. Mark Amodei, has expressed in the past.

But when push came to shove, he voted with the rest of the state’s delegation to extend benefits.

Amodei couldn’t be reached for comment, but Nevada’s other Republican­s in Congress say their support for extending unemployme­nt benefits will depend on the terms of the extension.

“Sen. (Dean) Heller has supported extending unemployme­nt benefits in the past,” his spokeswoma­n Chandler Smith said, adding that Heller “will closely examine any resulting legislatio­n that affects these programs in light of what is best for Nevada.”

In the House, Rep. Joe Heck, R-Nev., is expected to sign on to a Republican-drafted letter calling on party leaders in the House to extend benefits before they begin to expire this month.

“He would support some type of extension,” Heck spokesman Greg Lemon said Thursday.

Should Congress fail to extend the program, unemployme­nt benefits would begin to expire for recipients reaching the end of their tier eligibilit­y.

There are four tiers of emergency unemployme­nt insurance available for Nevadans who exhaust the 26 weeks that are guaranteed to all qualifying jobless workers.

Tier 1 brings an additional 14 weeks of unemployme­nt benefits, as does Tier 2, provided the state in which one is filing has an unemployme­nt rate of 6 percent or higher. Jobless workers in states with an unemployme­nt rate higher than 7 percent are eligible for a third tier that brings an extra nine weeks of coverage, while individual­s filing in states with a 9 percent unemployme­nt rate or higher can qualify for an extra 10 weeks.

The maximum number of weeks in which one jobless worker can collect unemployme­nt insurance is 73.

In Nevada, 302,539 people have received emergency unemployme­nt benefits since the beginning of 2008, according to Department of Labor statistics. The department also estimates that if additional tiers of benefits are allowed to expire, a total of 60,300 people will be affected over the next year.

“Christmast­ime is no time for Congress to tell more than 1 million of these Americans that they have lost their unemployme­nt insurance,” President Barack Obama said in an economic policy speech Wednesday, noting that “is what will happen if Congress does not act before they leave on their holiday vacation.”

White House officials, in their state-by-state report Thursday, also argue the expiration of emergency unemployme­nt benefits may come at a cost to the Nevada economy.

Because unemployme­nt dollars are almost always spent on necessary goods and services, the multiplier effect of those dollars is relatively high, and the loss of them could bring the loss of jobs. The White House estimates that in Nevada, cessation of the extra tiers of insurance would cost the state 2,953 jobs, due to the resulting economic crunch.

Time on the congressio­nal calendar is running short, however. With that in mind, Democrats want to press a demand that carries a hard deadline: They plan to force Republican­s to tie a decision on unemployme­nt insurance to the ongoing budgeting process.

The House and Senate budget committees have until Friday to agree on budget guidelines for 2014, under the terms of the shutdown-ending deal Congress approved in October.

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