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Arthur Delaney
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Unemployment Insurance Faces Changes Across The Nation

Posted: 04/ 6/2012 8:58 am Updated: 04/ 6/2012 10:55 am

Unemployment Benefits
In this March 7, 2012 file photo, job seekers stand in line during the Career Expo job fair in Portland, Ore.

When Sean Davis of Lunenburg, Mass. lost his Census job in October 2010, he figured he'd be able to claim unemployment insurance for 99 weeks. That's how long benefits lasted, according to the state government and every news report about unemployment at the time. Of course, he hoped he'd find a job way before 99 weeks had passed. So far, no luck.

He wouldn't hit the 99 week mark until this summer, but when he called the state unemployment office several days ago to file his weekly insurance claim, he found that the rules have changed and his benefits will be stopping very soon.

"They told me that they were no longer doing the 99 weeks because of the federal government action," Davis, 40, said in an interview.

All across America, unemployment insurance is changing, and in most cases, it's becoming more stingy. More than a dozen states this month will lose eligibility for the second of two federal unemployment programs, subtracting as many as 20 weeks of benefits from the amount previously available to the long-term jobless. The shortened compensation period represents a compromise between congressional Republicans, who wanted even fewer weeks of federal benefits, and Democrats, who wanted to preserve federal programs in their entirety for the rest of the year.

Furthermore, unemployment claimants receiving federal benefits -- which kick in after a worker uses up the standard 26 weeks of state benefits -- now face stricter rules requiring them to keep a paper trail of their job search, thanks to the compromise law Congress enacted in February.

And at the same time federal programs are changing, state lawmakers are making changes of their own. Arizona and South Carolina are currently mulling drug test bills, while Georgia recently slashed the duration of state benefits.

HuffPost readers: Got a story to tell about unemployment? Tell arthur@huffingtonpost.com. Please include your phone number if you're willing to be interviewed.

Worker advocates dislike the changes, but there is one thing they're happy about: new federal support for work-sharing programs, which help businesses reduce hours instead of laying people off. The payroll tax cut legislation Congress passed in February included nearly $500 million for work sharing, which the National Employment Law Project and the Center for Law and Social Policy hailed as a "breakthrough" for the policy, also known as short-time compensation.

"This landmark legislation represents an unprecedented opportunity for states to launch and expand work sharing programs and help fend off layoffs now and in the future," George Wentworth, a NELP senior staff attorney, said in a statement.

Instead of laying off 20 percent of their employees, for example, businesses participating in a work-sharing program could reduce everyone's hours by 20 percent, and workers would receive unemployment insurance dollars for the time they miss on the clock. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia offer short-time compensation programs, according to CLASP. The new law allows states to receive full federal reimbursement for compensation paid to workers.

For labor groups, the good news about work sharing is partially offset by bad news about shorter benefits in Georgia. Last week the Georgia General Assembly reduced the maximum duration of state benefits from the standard 26 weeks to 20 weeks, or as few as 14 weeks if the state unemployment rate falls to 6.5 percent (currently it's 9.1 percent). The changes will take effect in July. Georgia lawmakers modeled their legislation on benefit-slashing bills passed last year in Michigan and Florida.

Those cuts are a double whammy: Shorter state benefits will also mean shorter federal benefits, since the duration of federal extensions is based on the number of weeks available from states.

And federal benefits are already getting shorter on their own. In the February payroll tax cut deal, Congress preserved all federal unemployment programs for the rest of the year, but a state can't remain eligible for the second of the two programs -- known as Extended Benefits -- unless the state's unemployment rate is at least 10 percent higher than during a corresponding three-month period three years ago. Since unemployment rates across the country have slowly fallen since then, by October the program will have been phased out in the 30 states where it remains in effect. The maximum duration of benefits will fall to 73 weeks by the end of the year.

On April 7, the Extended Benefits program is ending in Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin (it has already ended in Michigan and Maine). According to a National Employment Law Project analysis of the arcane "trigger" system that determines whether a state is eligible for the program, Extended Benefits will stop on April 21 in Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, and Washington.

Sean Davis received a letter from the Massachusetts state government last week informing him that the week of April 7 would be the last one for Extended Benefits, "regardless of any remaining EB credit that you might have."

He had expected the benefits to last until summer. He said he's been looking for administrative work similar to what he was doing for the Census, but that most similar positions require a college degree that he doesn't have. He said he previously worked in warehouses.

"It's been a real pain," Davis said of his job search. "It just seems like half the jobs I'm looking for I would qualify for in terms experience want a higher level of education than I have."

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When Sean Davis of Lunenburg, Mass. lost his Census job in October 2010, he figured he'd be able to claim unemployment insurance for 99 weeks. That's how long benefits lasted, according to the state g...
When Sean Davis of Lunenburg, Mass. lost his Census job in October 2010, he figured he'd be able to claim unemployment insurance for 99 weeks. That's how long benefits lasted, according to the state g...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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slinkymom 10:57 AM on 04/06/2012
This is the problem right now. People who work in industries such as IT don't have much, if any, trouble finding work. My sisters and brother-in-law all work in IT and have not seen much in the way of lay offs and even when they do there are plenty of other jobs available. Then there is the construction industry, of which my husband - a civic engineer- and my brother - a pipe fitter - have worked in for  Read More...
02:03 PM on 04/12/2012
Job growth they say..Cut everyone off at the knees..More like they want to keep more money for themselves. They fudge the numbers with unemployment claims and everyone knows it.
No wonder the crime rate is sky high. People are going to start looking for other ways to make fast cash. Massachusetts is trying to make itself look like the rosy state..They're sitting back saying "Oh look how low our jobless rate is,,we're so cool..we're number one. Lets cut off EB and make it look like all those people found jobs" Right,,good job Deval..To bad you got re-elected into office again..Waste products called politicans.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
teachone
Knowledge is Power
12:01 PM on 04/09/2012
The businesses and the greedy filthy wealthy stockholders are spoiled, they want it all, two degrees and 20 yrs of experience or nothing and offer little to nothing in return for it! They are 100% at fault for todays high unemployment rate, their greed in slashng their workforces and making 1 person do 5 peoples jobs so they can get filthy weatlhy, their spoiled selfishness in refusing to cover the costs of educating and training their employees in this new global and technical economy and not paying them to do their jobs while learning, their laziness in refusing to train workers, they all need to be shut down and run out of this country for good!!! The U.S. needs to only allow highly ethical, honest and moral companies into this country who care about their workers....greed has overtake ethics in this country and those that live by that standard need to be disgraced and held accountable for it, they need to go back to church and get right with God too, as their money has become their God!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jstanavgguy
Proud member of the evil 1%
10:47 PM on 04/08/2012
Oh no!!!

People are actually going to be required to prove that they are really LOOKING for a job, so that they can keep receiving unemployment??? How horrible can they be???

This is a joke - albeit not a humorous one.
06:37 PM on 04/08/2012
the problem is to there's those that have a criminal record to that aren't finding jobs at all the job market is so picky it's not easy like back in the day to find a job
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jstanavgguy
Proud member of the evil 1%
10:47 PM on 04/08/2012
Back in the day?

Would that day be before the Democrats took over Congress?
06:14 AM on 04/07/2012
Unemployment in construction is 21.2%, I wish these guys would tell the truth. We all need to education ourself in this tough market only way is a degree or change your career.. search online for High Speed Universities for career advice
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01:40 PM on 04/08/2012
For profit education is a joke and meal ticket to the sick minded fools who got us into this hole.

Feed Community colleges - rebuild the infrastructure
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07:43 AM on 04/09/2012
Dems don't want you to try tooo hard though.. if you educate YOURSELF and earn a lot more money they won't have anything to run on LOL.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
01:38 AM on 04/07/2012
So what are these people supposed to do? They have time on their hands, Let's rise up and demand jobs! Let’s fix the infrastructure of the US!
08:58 AM on 04/07/2012
Instead of rising up and demanding, how about you rise up and go look for a job.
05:33 PM on 04/07/2012
I know ti's hard for you republinuts, but how about if you start acting like a human being?
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01:41 PM on 04/08/2012
I got news for you kid! Your lost in your Calvinistic soup! Wake up! There are no jobs worth a spit, if at all!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jstanavgguy
Proud member of the evil 1%
10:48 PM on 04/08/2012
'Demand jobs'???

And where, prey tell, are those jobs coming from?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
01:35 AM on 04/07/2012
So when the banks got their bail out or big oil get subsides...do the CEO have to take a drug test? Keep a record of any kind? What about money sent to Iraq or Afghanistan? Anyone there take a drug test? any interviews of where the money was going? did they keep records of where the money went? or does all of this only apply to poor and middle class American taxpayers?
10:49 AM on 04/07/2012
I'm sure a few were drug tested. they just don't release the results to hp so liberal w/e/e/n/i/e/s can review the data. its on you to prove they weren't. start making those calls.
11:55 AM on 04/07/2012
You sick republicans are the ones who need drug testing...just to find out if you're even human.....
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01:43 PM on 04/08/2012
Define Liberal and then Conservative!

You like you ilk, have no legs to stand on but you float like jet sam on FOX NEws and your Zealot machine that gets 400 billion year to preach ---or worthless (ID) science
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smd62071
the absence of knowledge there's misunderstanding
12:50 AM on 04/07/2012
The problem is that those who have never faced unemployment do not know what is involved when it comes to the paperwork and what it does to the individual. This means that the only ones qualified in dealing with unemployment are those who have had experience with being on it.
10:49 AM on 04/07/2012
most people have never collected a ue check.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smd62071
the absence of knowledge there's misunderstanding
11:06 AM on 04/07/2012
you are correct that most people have never collected an unemployment check, at the same time most people who have had to collect an unemployment check are not deadbeats like some would have us believe
03:55 PM on 04/08/2012
And few republicans have ever put in an honest day's work...so what's your point?????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
12:21 AM on 04/07/2012
I had to move to find work. I've never been unemployed very long. I simply don't understand being unemployed a whole year. Much less 3 years.

I live in Dallas TX and I know people who haven't worked for 3 years when they were only working in retail or a warehouse to begin with.

They sit at home until the money runs out because it's pretty much what they were making anyway.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
01:36 AM on 04/07/2012
Not everyone can move to another state or area for work....they have obligations where they live at now.
10:33 AM on 04/07/2012
yeah you can move if you need to. its either continue to suffer or improve your situation. its a choice.
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01:44 PM on 04/08/2012
Yeah right! like Work Man's comp the that GW slashed - people want to get 2/3 pay and starve ---- where do you people come from?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
09:38 PM on 04/08/2012
You need to comprehend my "ENTIRE" comment before responding. I do know people who have chosen to remain on unemployment. I live in Texas. I am fairly young. I have many friends. Some of them college educated and some of them not. The people I know who choose unemployment are those that were only making around $200 to $300 per week anyway working in a low wage job. It's not like they were engineers making $80 grand a year. Then I could understand they would lose it all. But a person still living at home or on section 8 loses nothing. they only gain.
12:15 AM on 04/07/2012
I love it when the President says there is more work to do. Then he hits the campaign trail.
11:58 AM on 04/07/2012
Wasn't it Bu$h who spent 72% of his time in office on vacation?????
01:21 PM on 04/07/2012
Since your insult was removed I'll reply to this. Nice, you are insulting the very people that you have your hand out to. The same thing Obama does.
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jstanavgguy
Proud member of the evil 1%
10:50 PM on 04/08/2012
um, nice try.

but that did not happen
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tnlcallen
11:57 PM on 04/06/2012
Oh no, you mean the government won't be giving me 2 years of free money. I feel so violated. I voted for Obama to get free stuff, and he hasn't delivered.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smd62071
the absence of knowledge there's misunderstanding
12:44 AM on 04/07/2012
It's not free, you actually have to try and find a job. with the final extension you have to prove you are looking for work to be able to claim, which means that the full time job while unemployed, is to find a job that actually takes you off the roles of the unemployment insurance
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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simian sez
Hands on your heads!
10:46 PM on 04/06/2012
Our representatives, both state and federal love to be creative when coming up with elaborate plans and programs that short shrift the average American worker and Americans in need...the poor, the unemployed, the poor of health, the elderly.
But fixing an economy that never should have broken on their watch had they been managing it correctly... for that we get nuthin'!
10:18 PM on 04/06/2012
Sorry to all of you that want endless benefits, we spent it all in the past 3 years, we are broke and the cut offs in free stuff is coming right after the election.

Tax Armageddon is coming. Not only are the Bush Tax cuts going to expire, and before you rush to voice approval consider:
The Marriage penalty will be back, raising taxes on working couples.
The Child Tax Credit will be reduced
Deductions and credits for education will be gone or much smaller.
Child Care credits for dependents will be reduced affecting working families.
This will account for only 37% of the Tax Armageddon tax increases.

24% will come from reduction of the exemption amount for the Alternative Minimum Tax, meaning that millions of more middle income taxpayers will pay AMT, a tax originally conceived to make slightly over 100 millionaires that did not pay tax.. pay tax. Now it affects those that make under $100,000 a year AGI, that live in high tax states, and have children, Not exactly your tax cheat..and when did paying state taxes and having children constitute a tax shelter.

The rest of the mess comes from a basket full of new taxes including the first year of collections for Obama care and the new tax on all financial transactions and stock sales.

Add to that tax increases for all the broke Blue State govts, and huge increases in gas and energy an it is over.
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11:36 PM on 04/06/2012
No... I'm sorry. Unemployment ISN'T the problem. The bigger problem is the abuse of the welfare system. Those who LIVE FOR GENERATIONS at the expense of tax payers. Not those who are working to find jobs in this horrible economy. People who are on unemployment WANT to go back to work!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tnlcallen
11:59 PM on 04/06/2012
Actually the guy in the article kind of proves you wrong. He started his statement with "I thought I had 99 weeks".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
12:23 AM on 04/07/2012
Not All people who are unemployed want to do back to work. Here in Dallas I personally know people who were laid off a warehouse job or retail job 3 years ago and they stopped looking because their check is what they were making anyway, just without the hassle.
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10:09 PM on 04/06/2012
Employers pulled back sharply on hiring last month, a reminder that the U.S. economy may not be growing fast enough to sustain robust job growth. The unemployment rate dipped, but mostly because more Americans stopped looking for work.

The Labor Department says the economy added 120,000 jobs in March, down from more than 200,000 in each of the previous three months.

The unemployment rate fell to 8.2%, the lowest since January 2009. The rate dropped because fewer people searched for jobs.

Read more: http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20120406/ECONOMY/120409928#ixzz1rJfxtkoX
09:09 PM on 04/06/2012
what this means is a quicker time back to work.
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Trepasky
Sanity is neither free nor easy
09:45 PM on 04/06/2012
I guess math doesn't affect your perspective.

Perhaps some day you will understand that 4 times as many seekers as available jobs will mean more suffering 'quicker' with shorter benefits during the worst jobs situation since the depression.
08:57 AM on 04/07/2012
are you and the sympathizers still using the 4 to1 bs? cause I gotta tell you that excuse doesn't pay bills or put money in your pocket.
12:39 PM on 04/07/2012
Thinking doesn't affect his persepctive either....
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simian sez
Hands on your heads!
10:50 PM on 04/06/2012
...for about the same hourly salary you got when you were working a part time job while in high school.
Get out the party hats!
08:45 AM on 04/07/2012
well if thats all you're worth and thats all some place wants to pay YOU...but of course you're not obligated to take it.