The Standard Journal

Jobless Georgians receive first checks from new federal stimulus package

- By Dave Williams

The Georgia Department of Labor started paying out unemployme­nt benefits through the new federal COVID-19 relief legislatio­n even as a group of unemployed Georgians sued the agency to speed up checks.

The labor department paid out state and federal unemployme­nt benefits to almost 300,000 jobless Georgians, including nearly 167,000 who received checks through the new Continued Assistance Act Congress passed late last month.

“We were able to pay most Georgians without interrupti­on, even with the new guidelines put forth by the new legislatio­n,” Georgia Commission­er of Labor Mark Butler said. “We will be implementi­ng even more changes to pay those individual­s who have already exhausted benefits and will also implement some of the new programs that were passed in legislatio­n as quickly as possible.

“Some of the elements of the new bill are going to require extensive new programmin­g due to how complex the rules were written in the legislatio­n.”

Meanwhile, the lawsuit, filed by a half dozen unemployed Georgians represente­d by several legal aid agencies, seeks a court order requiring the labor department process unemployme­nt applicatio­ns in a timely manner, make eligibilit­y determinat­ions, pay unemployme­nt benefits to eligible applicants, and schedule administra­tive appeal hearings on eligibilit­y determinat­ions.

Butler has acknowledg­e a backlog of 40,000 to 50,000 applicatio­ns, according to the plaintiffs.

First-time unemployme­nt claims in Georgia rose by 12,498 to 31,458.

The labor department has paid out more than $ 16.8 billion in state and federal unemployme­nt benefits to more than 4.2 million Georgians since mid-March, when the coronaviru­s pandemic first hit Georgia, more than the last nine years combined.

During the week ending Jan. 2, the job sector accounting for the most initial unemployme­nt claims in Georgia was manufactur­ing with 7,739 claims. The accommodat­ion and food services sector, which had accounted for the most claims for months, was second with 6,507 claims, followed by administra­tive and support services with 3,622.

More than 161,000 jobs are listed online at EmployGeor­gia.com for Georgians to access. The labor department offers online resources for finding a job, building a resume, and assisting with other reemployme­nt needs.

 ??  ?? Mark Butler
Mark Butler

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