Miami Herald

Floridians getting unemployme­nt benefits will soon have to prove they are looking for work

- BY JIM TURNER

Gov. Ron DeSantis expects late this month to reinstate a requiremen­t that people in the unemployme­nt system submit weekly “work search” updates.

Referring to some businesses saying they are unable to find new employees as they regroup from the COVID-19 pandemic, DeSantis said Wednesday that unemployme­nt claimants will likely have to start showing how they looked for work once an executive order waiving a worksearch requiremen­t ends May 29.

“We suspended that last year at this time because, quite frankly, there weren’t jobs,” DeSantis said during an appearance at the Satellite Beach Police Department.

Florida’s unemployme­nt rate stood at 4.7% in March, representi­ng 475,000 people out of work in a workforce of 10.17 million. The state Department of Economic Opportunit­y will release an April report on May 21.

The rate was 13.8% in

April 2020 after the pandemic forced businesses to shut down or dramatical­ly scale back.

“I think now we’re in just a different situation, you have a surplus of jobs, particular­ly in restaurant, lodging, hospitalit­y, that people want to hire,” DeSantis said. “I mean, you see the signs all over the place. Look, that’s a good problem to have. But we also just want to make sure, like, look, if you’re really unemployed, can’t get a job, that’s one thing. But making sure that you’re doing your due diligence to look for work, and making sure those incentives align, better.”

Without the waiver, Florida, which has some of the lowest unemployme­nt benefits in the nation, requires people on unemployme­nt to reach out to five prospectiv­e employers each week.

The Florida Senate approved a bill (SB 1906) last month that would have increased maximum weekly payments from $275 to $375, added more weeks in which benefits would be available and changed the work-search requiremen­t. The proposal called for the number of job searches to drop to three a week for most people and to two a week for people living in counties with fewer than 75,000 residents.

But DeSantis voiced opposition to the increase in weekly payments, and the House did not take up the Senate bill.

A concern of House Republican­s was that increased benefits could lead to businesses being required to pay more money into the state’s unemployme­nt compensati­on trust fund. Similar reasoning was used when benefits were cut in 2011 to blunt a major increase in unemployme­nt taxes on businesses.

On Wednesday, DeSantis continued to criticize the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about COVID-19 precaution­s that have idled the cruise-ship industry in Florida. Also, he said some restaurant­s are closing one day a week because they don’t have enough employees.

DeSantis somewhat dismissed the premise of a question about whether people were taking advantage of changes in the unemployme­nt system. While Florida offers low state benefits, many unemployed people also have been eligible for federal jobless aid.

“I don’t think it’s manipulati­on. You know, whatever the benefits are, people are availing themselves of it. That’s not their fault,” DeSantis said.

Since March 15, 2020, the state has paid out nearly $27.2 billion in state and federal relief to 2.39 million unemployme­nt claimants. The federal government has accounted for $21.5 billion of the money.

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