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Updated: August 25, 2020

Lamont applies for Trump’s new unemployment plan, but help to CT jobless will be limited

Photo | CT Mirror/YEHYUN KIM Gov. Ned Lamont, right, talks to students in West Haven earlier this year.

Three weeks after the $600-a-week federal unemployment benefits expired, Gov. Ned Lamont said the state is applying for the program that replaced it.

But those who qualify for the new money would only receive half of what they were getting under the expired program – and it will take weeks for them to begin to get any help.

And benefits will be short-lived, lasting only for five weeks or so.

Frustrated with Congress’ inability to approve a new stimulus bill that would extend federal unemployment benefits, President Donald Trump used his authority to spend about $44 billion in Federal Emergency Management funds on the new program.

The president proposed giving those who lost their jobs due to the COVID-19 pandemic $400 a week, with $100 coming from the state’s coffers. But states complained they could not afford the extra money, strapped by an unprecedented number of state unemployment claims.

So the U.S. Labor Department determined that states could count the money they were already giving the unemployed as their contribution.

Plagued by an antiquated computer system, Connecticut was among the last states to roll out all three federal unemployment programs Congress approved for those who lost their jobs due to coronavirus. It’s unclear how long it will take to get this new program up and running. The U.S. Department of Labor has estimated it would take most states about three weeks.

As of Monday, 26 states had been approved by the U.S. Labor Department to participate in the new program.

Unlike the previous program, which delivered money to states to pay the federal “plus-up” in an open-ended manner, there is a limit on the amount of money the Trump administration can spend on the new federal unemployment program.

FEMA said in new guidance that it will initially only award states the benefits for three weeks to prevent the cash from running out before other states can apply. After that, the states will receive the federal $300 share of the payment on a “weekly basis” to ensure that “funding remains available,” FEMA said. The agency did not immediately confirm that Connecticut applied for the program.

There are estimates that the $44 billion FEMA has at its disposal for the program will only last about five weeks as the unemployment rate remains stubbornly high. New jobless claims jumped above 1 million in the second week of August.

“It is important to remember that this is only a temporary backstop,” Lamont said. “It’s imperative that the Trump administration reach an agreement with Congress on comprehensive legislation that provides stable and long-term funding to supplement weekly unemployment benefits.”

Lamont, however, had said he opposed continuing the $600-a-week federal benefit because it was too generous – and said it could discourage people from returning to work.

Meanwhile, Connecticut Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, at a joint press conference in Hartford on Monday, said they’d rather the $600-a-week enhanced benefits continue.

“To cut unemployment benefits right now is to end up with starving kids,” Murphy said. “I don’t know why you would want to cut unemployment benefits right now.”

According to a study by the National Bureau of Economic Research, after federal unemployment benefits ended on July 26, the average amount of weekly unemployment benefits Americans received fell to $257 from $812.

Congressional Democrats have indicated there is some wiggle room in negotiating the amount of federal unemployment benefits in the next stimulus package.

Blumenthal said the weekly benefit amount could drop, perhaps by $100, if a state were to fall below an 11% unemployment rate. But he also said “we should not be slashing unemployment at exactly the time consumers have stopped spending.”

Blumenthal and Murphy are urging Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to bring the U.S. Senate back into session to pass new stimulus legislation. Both the U.S. House and Senate are now scheduled to remain in recess until mid-September.

“My message to Mitch McConnell is, ‘Do your job,’” Blumenthal said.

Murphy said McConnell should in the very least allow votes on a GOP proposal, even though it would pare federal unemployment benefits to about $200 a week.

“He should bring it to the floor and let us amend it,” Murphy said. “The cost of doing nothing is catastrophic.”

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