Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Republican­s planning to cut jobless benefits

Bills aimed at putting more people to work

- Patrick Marley

MADISON - Republican lawmakers said Tuesday they plan to pass legislatio­n by next month that in the short term would nearly halve the amount of time people could receive unemployme­nt benefits.

Other bills they plan to pass would put in place more drug testing and work requiremen­ts for unemployme­nt benefits and food stamps, cut off unemployme­nt benefits for those who don’t show up for job interviews and suspend people’s access to public health insurance if they turn down job offers.

Republican­s said their efforts were aimed at getting more people off of public benefits and into the workforce just as businesses are clamoring for workers.

“No person has ever become prosperous and independen­t on welfare checks,” Senate President Chris Kapenga of Delafield said at a news conference at the state Capitol.

Republican­s have large majorities in the Senate and Assembly and plan to pass their plans by the end of February, according to Assembly Speaker Pro Tem Tyler August of Lake Geneva.

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has taken a dim view of many of their plans and could veto them.

Evers spokeswoma­n Britt Cudaback did not say how Evers would respond to the GOP efforts but noted the governor last year announced he was using federal aid to help get people into the workforce.

“Gov. Evers is investing $130 million to find innovative, community-based solutions to confront our state’s workforce challenges head-on, so it’s great to hear Republican­s now recognize the importance of these efforts,” she said by email.

One bill would base how long people could receive unemployme­nt benefits on the state’s recent unemployme­nt rate.

Now, those who lose their jobs qualify for regular unemployme­nt benefits for 26 weeks. Under the bill, that level of benefits would be available only when the unemployme­nt rate is above 9%.

When the unemployme­nt rate is 3.5% or lower — as it is now — regular benefits would be available for 14 weeks.

Evers spokeswoma­n Britt Cudaback did not say how Evers would respond to the GOP efforts but noted the governor last year announced he was using federal aid to help get people into the workforce.

Under another bill, those who don’t show up for job interviews could lose their unemployme­nt benefits. They could also lose their benefits if they declined a job interview or did not respond to a request for a job interview.

Another bill seeks to jump-start a provision in state law that is supposed to require some people to take drug tests to qualify for unemployme­nt benefits. The provision has not gone into effect because the Evers administra­tion has not adopted formal rules on the drug-testing program. The legislatio­n would force the administra­tion to take that step.

In a similar vein, another bill is meant to ensure the administra­tion enacts work requiremen­ts and drug testing requiremen­ts for some people to qualify for FoodShare benefits.

To receive unemployme­nt benefits, claimants under current law must perform work searches. Under one bill, the state Department of Workforce Developmen­t would have to conduct audits for at least half of those searches to make sure they’re really happening.

That bill would also require the state to maintain longer hours at its unemployme­nt call centers when call volumes are three times higher than normal, as happened in 2020 during a massive backlog of unemployme­nt claims because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In an attempt to reduce fraud, the measure would also require the state to run the names of benefits claimants through databases of death records and prison records.

Other bills are focused on Medicaid programs like BadgerCare Plus, which provides health insurance to low-income people.

One would suspend BadgerCare benefits for six months to those who refuse to take a job in an effort to keep their benefits.

Another would require the state Department of Health Services to check the Medicaid eligibilit­y of people in the program every six months. Those who do not report informatio­n that could affect their eligibilit­y could lose their benefits for six months under the legislatio­n.

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