Saturday, August 1, 2009

Exhausting safety net of unemployment benefits

Exhausting safety net of unemployment benefits

By year's end, as many as 1.5 million jobless will see their checks stop.

By ERIK ECKHOLM, New York Times

Last update: August 1, 2009 - 6:35 PM

Over the coming months, as many as 1.5 million jobless Americans will exhaust their unemployment insurance benefits, ending what for some has been a last bulwark against foreclosures and destitution.

Because of emergency extensions already enacted by Congress, laid-off workers in nearly half the states can collect benefits for as long as 79 weeks, the longest period since the unemployment insurance program was created in the 1930s. But unemployment in this recession has proved to be especially tenacious, and a wave of job-seekers is using up even the prolonged aid.

Tens of thousands of workers have already used up their benefits, and the numbers are expected to soar in the months to come, reaching half a million by the end of September and 1.5 million by the end of the year, according to projections by the National Employment Law Project, a private research group.

Unemployment insurance is a lifeline for 9 million Americans, with payments averaging just more than $300 per week, varying by state and work history.

While many recipients find new jobs before exhausting their benefits, large numbers in the current recession have been unable to find work for a year or more.

Calls are rising for Congress to pass another extension this fall, possibly adding 13 more weeks of coverage in states that have especially high unemployment. As of June, the national jobless rate was 9.5 percent; it was 15.2 percent in Michigan. Even if the recession begins to ease, economists say, jobs will remain scarce for some time to come.

"If more help is not on the way, by September a huge wave of workers will start running out of their critical extended benefits, and many will have nothing left to get by on even as work keeps getting harder to find," said Maurice Emsellem, a policy director of the employment law project.

For many desperate job seekers, any extension is a blessing. Pamela Lampley of Dillon, S.C., said she sat outside the post office last month and cried because "it was the first Wednesday in quite some time that I've gone to the mailbox and left without an unemployment check." The jobless rate in her state is 12.1 percent.

Lampley, 40, who is married and has three children, lost her job as a human-resources officer in January 2008, and had been receiving $351 a week, which covered groceries and gas. Even so, she and her husband, who still has work as a machinist, were sinking into debt. Now, still poorer, she feels devastated because they cannot buy their son a laptop computer to take to college and she cannot give her 9-year-old son money for the movies.

In Ohio, where unemployment is 11.1 percent, Cathy Nixon, 39, a mother of four teenagers from Lorain, has been out of work for much of the time since June 2007, and her benefits -- $313 a week -- run out in September. Nixon is already fighting foreclosure and said she feared that when the benefits end, "we'll be homeless."

Minnesota on the long list

Ordinarily, employers pay into a state insurance fund, and workers who lose jobs draw benefits for as long as 26 weeks. During recessions, Congress has often paid for extended coverage -- an extra 13 or even 20 weeks.

Last year, as the recession deepened, Congress provided 33 extra weeks of benefits. And this year, President Obama's stimulus plan offered an additional 20 weeks in states where unemployment surpassed 8 percent, if they adopted new federally recommended rules governing these extra weeks. (South Carolina did not make the changes, and benefits there are running out more quickly.)

Currently, people can draw benefits for up to 79 weeks in 24 states, including Minnesota, and from 46 to 72 weeks in others.

The stimulus law also, through the end of the year, provided an extra $25 a week to all recipients, exempted a portion of benefits from federal income tax and subsidized COBRA health payments for the unemployed.

Another extension on horizon

Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., chairman of the House Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support, said that he would introduce a bill in September to provide 13 more weeks of coverage in states that have unemployment rates of 9 percent or higher. "Legislators will line up quickly when they start getting calls from desperate constituents," he said in a telephone interview.

The cost would be $40 billion to $70 billion, but the expense would be temporary, McDermott said.

Some business groups remain skeptical. Douglas Holmes, president of UWC, a group in Washington that represents businesses concerning unemployment issues, said that there were early glimmers of economic progress and that it was premature to extend benefits again. The money might be better spent, Holmes said, by creating jobs and training people to move into emerging industries.

Traditionally, many economists have been leery of prolonged unemployment benefits, because they can reduce the incentive to seek work. But that should not be a concern now, because jobs remain so scarce, said Lawrence Katz, a labor economist at Harvard.

For every job that becomes available, about six people are looking, Katz said. "Unemployment insurance gives income to families who are really suffering and can't find work even if they are hustling to look."

With the economy still listing, he added, a temporary extension can provide a quick fiscal stimulus. And, Katz said, when people exhaust unemployment and health insurance, many end up applying for disability benefits, which become a large, unending drain on the Treasury.

Lampley, whose benefits ended, described the tough job market. She used to make nearly $15 an hour and has unsuccessfully sought office and clerical work at $8 an hour.

And Nixon said that she had interviewed endlessly for jobs in real estate and office work, and that even her teenagers could not find fast-food jobs because laid-off adults were filling them.

"I can't find a job," she said, "and you can't survive if you don't work."

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