Economic growth strong enough to close temporary unemployment
insurance program
Long-term
unemployed should visit IllinoisJobLink.com
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[May 07, 2012]
CHICAGO -- Falling unemployment rates
and steady economic growth mean an extended unemployment insurance
program ends this month, the Illinois Department of Employment
Security said last week. The expiring federal program affects
individuals who have collected benefits for more than 79 weeks.
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The Extended Benefit program, or EB, ends Saturday because specific
economic factors set forth by federal officials were met, such as
the falling unemployment rate. Illinois EB claimants will be
notified via mail and email. Final payments will be issued during
the two weeks following May 12. No further unemployment program
exists for those who exhaust benefits in the extended program.
"Today's news demonstrates the significant progress our economy has
made, but there are still those struggling to find work," IDES
Director Jay Rowell said in the May 2 announcement. "I encourage
anyone who is unemployed or underemployed to visit
IllinoisJobLink.com, where they will find more than 90,000 job
openings."
Illinois JobLink allows businesses to create want ads that
require specific skills and to search resumes using keywords such as
salary, educational attainment and location. Individuals can create
multiple resumes using keywords to emphasize skills that target
specific jobs in different industries. The cross-matching approach
increases success and reduces costs for both parties. This no-cost
job board is on par with private efforts that can cost employers
hundreds of dollars for each job advertisement.
Illinois has added 142,100 jobs since January 2010, when job
growth returned after nearly two years of consecutive monthly
declines. The January 2010 unemployment rate peaked at 11.4 percent
and has trended downward since. The March rate, the latest
available, was 8.8 percent. For EB to remain active, the
unemployment rate's three-month moving average must be at least 10
percent higher than in the corresponding period in any one of the
last three years. EB has been paid since March 2009.
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Up to 99 weeks of unemployment insurance benefits had been
potentially available. EB represents the final 20 weeks. The other
79 weeks are divided between regular benefits, which are funded by
Illinois businesses, and Emergency Unemployment Compensation Tiers
I, II, III and IV, which are funded by the federal government. The
EUC program will end Dec. 29, according to current federal law. The
EUC tiers were enacted at various times under Presidents Bush and
Obama.
[Text from
Illinois
Department of Employment Security
file received from
the
Illinois Office of
Communication and Information]
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