Oroville Mercury-Register

COVID unemployme­nt checks end, leaving Bay Area jobless high and dry

- By Marissa Kendall and Jesse Bedayn

As the federal government shuts down its COVID unemployme­nt programs, Marcel White faces a big problem — he still has no job to return to.

While restaurant­s, bars and other businesses are recovering, people remain wary of packing into convention halls for the type of events that drove White’s income. The 40-year-old audio-video technician who worked trade shows, concerts and corporate events in San Francisco, hasn’t had steady employment since the pandemic began, he said.

For the past year and a half, federal unemployme­nt benefits have helped keep people like White afloat amid the ruins of the COVID-ravaged economy. Those protection­s came to a crashing halt Saturday. That means White’s income will be cut nearly in half — leaving him $1,800 a month in state unemployme­nt benefits. His rent in Alameda is $1,750. Come November, his benefits will expire completely.

“At the end of the day, I just don’t know how people are going to survive,” White said.

Without the extra COVID boost supplied by the federal government — first $600 a week, and then $300 — California­ns are eligible for no more than $450 in weekly unemployme­nt. Gig workers, independen­t contractor­s, small business owners and parents staying home from work to care for children no longer qualify for any money. Even people not in those categories may see their benefits cease because they’ve suddenly been maxed out — California­ns now are eligible for just 26 weeks of benefits, down from 92 weeks under the federal program.

The number of California­ns seeking unemployme­nt benefits has finally started a slow decline — dropping for three straight weeks for the first time since October. But in Alameda County, 52,100 people remained out of a job in July — or 6.4% of the workforce, according to preliminar­y data from the state Employment Developmen­t Department. In Santa Clara County, it was 50,600, or 4.9%. In Contra Costa County, it was 36,500, or 6.7%.

“A lot of people are going to be hard-pressed to make ends meet and to find a job before their financial and personal situation becomes unstable,” said Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow with the Century Foundation think tank. “That’s the race that people are going to have against time.”

States can use federal COVID funding to extend unemployme­nt protection­s. But the $27 billion California received already has been allocated to other programs, according to H.D. Palmer, deputy director for external affairs for the state Department of Finance.

About two-thirds of California­ns can expect to receive $600 stimulus checks over the next several weeks. Eligible families with kids get an extra $500.

White has side-hustles to fall back on — he’s mining cryptocurr­ency and looking into freelance work. But not everyone is so lucky.

Adrianna Carranza, a 29-year-old barista at Peet’s Coffee in the Oakland Internatio­nal Airport, hasn’t worked since March 23, 2020. As the economy started to rebound, some of her co-workers were called back to work, but not her.

Carranza’s unemployme­nt payments stopped in April after issues with the state’s online portal prevented her from verifying her identity, and she hasn’t been able to reach anyone at the Employment Developmen­t Department to get them reinstated. So Carranza and her

partner, who works from home as a coder for a tech company, have been burning through their savings and racking up credit card debt to get by.

Their precarious situation makes her nervous. The couple has a 6-year-old daughter, and Carranza is pregnant. But the thought of getting called back to work in a busy airport with the Delta variant circulatin­g also worries her.

“I think it’s really scary going back, but having that financial instabilit­y means just saying, ‘OK well I have to do this, even if I get sick,’” she said.

Andrea, a Richmondba­sed Uber driver who didn’t want to give her last name because of privacy concerns, isn’t thrilled about going back to her old job, either. Before the pandemic, Andrea took care of her 4- and 6-year-old sons, both of whom are on the Autism spectrum, during the day while her partner worked. At night, she drove for Uber.

It wasn’t an ideal job. Andrea drove with a knife tucked under her leg for protection and kept a bucket in her car in case a drunk passenger had to vomit. She had to pay for gas and car repairs out of pocket, which means she made more on unemployme­nt than she did driving.

Now that her benefits have been cut off, she’s hoping to find work doing something else — but she’s not sure what.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen,” she said. “I’m anxious.”

In the restaurant industry, some employers hope that ending federal unemployme­nt benefits will make it easier to hire people. All the “horror stories” you hear about a worker shortage are true, said George Lahlouh, who coowns three bars and restaurant­s in San Jose — Paper Plane, Miniboss and Original Gravity Public House. Each job posting gets about 30% of the interest it would have pre-pandemic, he said. And when his staff follows up with applicants, only about half return their calls.

“It’s been pretty difficult,” he said. Lahlouh has started offering medical insurance to lure new employees and hired a recruitmen­t coordinato­r to help him fill vacancies.

But a recent study found that ending benefits spurs only a modest increase in employment, leaving most households without a job or benefits.

“There’s pretty good consensus at this point that reducing benefits doesn’t send people back to work in droves,” said Kyle Coombs, who researches unemployme­nt insurance at Columbia University and is the lead author of the study.

In June, 22 states ended their federal COVID unemployme­nt programs early. Two months later, only one in eight beneficiar­ies had returned to work, according to the study.

“I think it’s really scary going back, but having that financial instabilit­y means just saying, ‘OK well I have to do this, even if I get sick.’” — Adrianna Carranza

 ?? ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Audio video technician Marcel White is photograph­ed in his home in Alameda. White, who does video production for convention­s and other events is loosing his federal unemployme­nt benefits as the program is set to expire.
ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Audio video technician Marcel White is photograph­ed in his home in Alameda. White, who does video production for convention­s and other events is loosing his federal unemployme­nt benefits as the program is set to expire.

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