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Unemployment benefits: Who gets left out?

Posted Nov 25 2008, 06:16 PM by Karen Datko
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Unemployment benefits have been extended and that's good news for laid-off workers, right? But did you know that many people who've lost their job aren't eligible to collect?

In fact, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich writes at his blog that "most people who lose their job these days don't qualify for any unemployment benefits at all."

And, we'll add, it's often low-wage and female workers who get left out.

The Center for American Progress Action Fund reports: "Under current law only an average of 37% of unemployed workers actually collect benefits at all, with low-wage, part-time, and female workers particularly harmed by outdated state eligibility rules."

Who can collect is determined state by state, and is often based on laws written in the days when the husband was the breadwinner, and worked one steady job until he retired.

Reich writes at another blog, "Even though those realities have changed, the rules haven't. In most states, you're eligible for unemployment insurance only if you've lost a full-time job that you've had for quite a while. This leaves out just about everyone who's lost one or more part-time jobs. And also excludes any full-time worker who had been at the job less than a year before they got canned."

The Unemployment Insurance Modernization Act, passed by the U.S. House, would address some of these issues.

Whether or not it becomes law, those who lose their jobs should find out immediately if they qualify for benefits. Even if you were part time, you might be eligible in your state. The Associated Press answers a lot of questions about how to apply.

Other information from the Center for American Progress:

  • The average worker who qualifies for this safety net gets $293 a week. The lowest maximum benefit is $230, in Mississippi. Nine states have a maximum payment in excess of $500 a week.
  • In June, 45.5% of mortgage delinquencies reported by Freddie Mac were due to unemployment or lost income.
  • During the current economic downturn, 22.3% of unemployed workers -- 2.26 million people -- have been searching for work for more than six months.

On the other side of the coin, the conservative Heritage Foundation says extending unemployment benefits prolongs the time that people are out of work because they feel less pressure to find a new job.

Comments

 

Doug,

Check your math 1 trillion / 200 million is only $5000 each   not 5 million

di--comment?  no need to type a whole book.

oops, sorry decimal point in wrong place, but needless to say I'd rather have 5ooo then nothing. Still don't like bailing out companies that don't manage themselves properly. And especially don't like seeing bailout money going to executive bonuses.

EMILY, your posting isn't even grammatically correct.  You use words like stupid and lazy as if you're all too familiar with those words.  

I think it's time to cut the freeloaders off. Those who get welfare, unemployment money do to their laziness need to get off their azz and find a JOB !!!! I'm sick and tired of working my azz off for my family while these freeloaders sit back in colloect funds. It's time to change our system. It you don't work you don't get anymore free money....

God Bless

America

Bossman

Get off you duff and do something I say!  Everyone complains the government hasn't done this, this agency has not done that.  

Guess what...the only one who will always help you is you...sometimes a good neighbor might as well.

This is the mentality this country was built on!  It is time we get back to it.  This better happen soon because I'm tired of hard earned tax money going towards helping others (individuals and companies).

Oh how I can sypathize with so many of you! I am in Las Vegas and and have been desperately searching for work for over 10 months. I am incredibly grateful that I was able to qualify for $374 a week for 26 weeks and then the EIC for another 13. That unfortunately ran out the end of October.

I was able to get a part time holiday job for 8 hours a week at $8.50 an hour 2 weeks before my EIC was up. I claimed my wages weekly when I filed my EIC, but somewhere, somehow my records dont match what they say I received, so now on top of not having rent for December I am being investigated for unemployment fraud and I cant collect the most recent EIC II until I can prove myself innocent. If I am guilty, I was told I would have to pay back the years payout and would not be eligible for UE for 52 weeks.

I woudl work 4 part time jobs if I could find them - anything would be better than the hassle of dealing with the unemployment system and government workers that have little sympathy.

I'm educated, hard working and loyal and used to make $60,000. Never in a million years did I think that I could be unemployed and penniless with no options.

It doesnt matter who you are - be thankful for what you have and dont ever think this wont happen to you.

People in glass houses always throw stones.  For those people who think the unemployed are "lazy" just remember karma is a b*tch.  My husband has been laid off for almost a year.  Thankfully my job is relatively secure and we have always just lived on one income, but unemployment is not a goal one aspires to(especially if they have worked since they were 14).  He has been on countless interviews only to be told that the company has a hiring freeze or that they don't pay anywhere near what he was making, so they are sure he doesn't want to settle, blah blah blah.  The harsh reality is that he would take half his pay just to have a job, but no one gets it.  I bet the Mr. Sirvent was one of his interviewers...

John Sirvent, please send some money so I could actually live off you.  Right now I am living on the benefits which I get because I was paying unemployment insurance premiums.

For any of you that work at temporary agencies, you can apply for unemployment benefits. If your assignment ends, that same day you have to call and ask for more work.  I would suggest you call using a cell phone, so you have documented proof that you called them within 24 hours that your assignment ended, and you asked for more work. It is the agency's job to log into their computer that you have called stating that you are available for work.  Also right down on a piece of paper whom you talked to and what time you talked to them. Also, call the agency everyday to see if any new job assignments came in. Once you have applied for unemployment benefits, the person that determines eligibility will call the agency, and ask if you called seeking for additional work and there was none available.  I really hope this blog helps someone working at a temporary agency.

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