Unemployment Benefits In Florida Running Out For Some
Save Email Print
Bookmark and Share
Posted: 11:16 PM Mar 1, 2010
Unemployment Benefits In Florida Running Out For Some
By the end of the month as many as 100-thousand Floridians could be kicked off the unemployment rolls. A program extending unemployment benefits to thousands of Floridians expired Sunday. If Congress acts this week the program could continue without a hiccup.
Reporter: Whitney Ray

Unemployment Benefit Troubles
Font Size:

By the end of the month as many as 100-thousand Floridians could be kicked off the unemployment rolls. A program extending unemployment benefits to thousands of Floridians expired Sunday. If Congress acts this week the program could continue without a hiccup.

All eyes are on the US Senate this week as lawmakers consider extending the enrollment period for Emergency Unemployment Compensation. The window closed on thousands of jobless Sunday. But, Robby Cunningham of the Florida Agency For Workforce Innovation says congress could vote to reopen enrollment.

“There are a couple of different scenarios we’re prepared for. Let’s say Congress passes an extension this week. It’s very likely our customers would feel no effect and experience no lapse in benefits.”

But if no action is taken an estimated 20-thouand Floridians every week would stop receiving checks. By June the number could reach 400-thousand. John Hall of the Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy says the state would loss millions.

“Consider the unemployment insurance benefits alone we’re talking 30.5 million dollars a week that aren’t in Florida’s economy.”

And for every unemployment dollar spent, economists say there’s a dollar 64 cent return in business growth. And, while Congress debates the pros and cons Florida lawmakers are considering two bills: one that would stifle a business tax increase aimed at paying claims and another that would pump 444 million dollars into the unemployment checking account.”

Lawmakers balked at the money last year because it allowed part-time employees and some people who quit to claim unemployment.

Democratic Senator Tony Hill of Jacksonville says go for the money.

“The people who are complaining about, well its going to cost the employer more money down the road and on and on and on,’ but it just makes no sense for us to leave 400 million dollars on the table.”

And as lawmakers debate, the unemployment rate continues to rise.

The state’s newest jobless figures will be released on March 10th; that’s when we could see an unemployment rate of 12 percent.