Don’t count on that extra $300 in unemployment benefits anytime soon

Finance

Events and entertainment workers gather in a protest to bring attention to their labor and unemployment on August 19 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

BRIDGET BENNETT/AFP via Getty Images)

Larry Kudlow, director of the U.S. National Economic Council, speaks during a press briefing at the White House on July 2.

Michael Reynolds/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Up to 8 weeks?

Firstly, unemployed workers must wait for their state to apply and be approved for the $300-a-week federal subsidy, which comes on top of existing state benefits.

Nineteen states had applied as of Thursday morning, according to Keith Turi, the assistant administrator of recovery at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is overseeing the aid program.

Eleven of them have gotten federal approval to offer three weeks of aid, totaling more than $2.4 billion, John Pallasch, assistant secretary for employment and training at the U.S. Labor Department said Thursday.

On Monday, Arizona became the lone state to start paying the $300 benefit to eligible workers, according to Brett Bezio, a spokesman for the state’s Department of Economic Security.

Officials in other approved states — Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Utah — suggested unemployed workers could be waiting much longer.

Utah, for example, expects to start paying the benefit within four weeks, according to Bethany Hyatt, a spokeswoman for the Utah Department of Workforce Services.

Colorado expects to start paying in mid-September.

There are a lot of moving parts here. And it’ll take us a few weeks to get it up and running.

Bill McCamley

cabinet secretary for New Mexico’s Department of Workforce Solutions

Indiana, which has applied for the assistance, plans to start disbursing funds in the next three to four weeks, according to the state’s unemployment website.

In Alaska, the timeline is longer still — about six to eight weeks from application approval, Cathy Munoz, deputy commissioner of the state’s Department of Labor and Workforce Development, said in an e-mail on Wednesday.

The state submitted its application yesterday, Munoz said.

“This stuff generally doesn’t happen at the flip of a light switch,” said Bill McCamley, cabinet secretary for New Mexico’s Department of Workforce Solutions.

“There are a lot of moving parts here,” McCamley said. “And it’ll take us a few weeks to get it up and running.”

Congress may, of course, reach a deal on financial relief in coming weeks. Provisions around a weekly unemployment boost would supersede Trump’s executive measure. 

Unemployed workers will receive the $300-a-week payments back to the week ended Aug. 1.

‘All over the map’

The $300 weekly federal boost isn’t technically unemployment insurance — it’s a new federal program with rules and requirements that state officials must decode.  

States are essentially building “a whole new system from scratch,” which must operate in parallel with their existing unemployment framework, McCamley said.

The lost wages program has some rules that don’t jibe with states’ current framework, he added.

For instance, unemployed workers getting less than $100 a week in state benefits don’t qualify for the aid. State systems must be programmed to account for that.

States are also used to interfacing with the U.S. Labor Department relative to unemployment benefits. Here, unemployment agencies are working with a new federal partner, FEMA, since the program funding is sourced from a federal disaster-relief fund, McCamley said.

“It will be all over the map,” Pallasch said of state timelines to pay the benefit.

Speed will depend on complexity of states’ unemployment systems and the breadth of their IT staff, he said. As a result, some states may take one or two weeks, while others take four, five or six, he said.

The federal government has offered IT assistance to help states implement the benefit more quickly, Pallasch said.

Meanwhile, it’s been about three weeks since unemployed workers stopped receiving a $600-a-week unemployment subsidy enacted by a federal relief law in March.

That’s left about 28 million workers collecting unemployment benefits with just their state allocation.

In June, workers got $308 a week, on average, according to Labor Department data. States like Louisiana and Mississippi paid less than $200, on average.

People who eventually get the $300-a-week unemployment boost likely won’t get it for long.

States are only guaranteed for three weeks of funding. After that, some may get more based on a week-by-week assessment of program funding, Turi said.

Officials expect states will get about four to five total weeks of funds.

“This program could run out of money immediately” after states make their first payments, said Ernie Tedeschi, an economist at Evercore ISI. “We could be right back to square one in this whole issue in early September.”

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