Federal emergency unemployment ends for 90,000
EUC ends
Dec. 29; regular unemployment continues
IDES faces
20 percent budget cut in federal funds
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[December 20, 2012]
CHICAGO -- An estimated 90,000
people who worked in Illinois will no longer receive unemployment
insurance when the federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation
program ends Dec. 29, according to the Illinois Department of
Employment Security. The state's regular unemployment program
continues.
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Once the EUC program ends, an additional 2,800 individuals each week will
complete the regular state unemployment insurance program and not have access to
the federal EUC. Every $1 in unemployment insurance generates $1.63 in
economic activity because the dollars are quickly spent at neighborhood
businesses.
Further, IDES is federally funded, and funding is partly tied to the number
of people collecting unemployment. That number will fall because federal EUC
ends ($16 million cut), and there are fewer people collecting the state's
regular unemployment ($11 million cut). When combined with potential cuts from
the fiscal cliff ($17 million cut), the IDES budget could be cut $44 million
annually, or about 20 percent. These cuts come at a time when the number of
claims remains 38 percent higher than prior to the recession.
To live within its budget, IDES already has non-scheduled 216 intermittent
employees, consolidated eight offices and vacated 10 outpost locations shared
with partners. The federal cuts might necessitate further service reductions,
including additional office consolidations.
Illinois businesses pay into the Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund to provide
for the state's regular unemployment program, which lasts 25 weeks for
individuals who first claimed the benefit in 2012.
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After regular unemployment, individuals graduated to the federal EUC,
which was divided into Tiers I, II, III and IV. Collectively, those
provided up to 53 weeks of unemployment insurance. Congress enacted
the EUC tiers at various times under Presidents Bush and Obama. The
federally funded Extended Benefits program provided the final 20
weeks of support. EB expired earlier this year after specific
thresholds were met, including a falling unemployment rate. The EB
thresholds and the EUC ending date were written into federal law.
The unemployment rate identifies those who are out of work and
seeking employment. Individuals who exhaust benefits, or are
ineligible, still will be reflected in the unemployment rate if they
actively seek work.
[Text from
Illinois
Department of Employment Security
file received from
the
Illinois Office of
Communication and Information]
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