Personal Finance

More unemployment aid may be coming. Many are still waiting on the last round

Key Points
  • President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress are trying to pass a $1.9 trillion Covid relief package. It would extend unemployment benefits and raise them by $300 a week, among other things.
  • Yet many workers haven't yet gotten benefits from the $900 billion pandemic measure signed by former President Donald Trump in December.
  • Delays have occurred in California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana and Virginia, for example.
Mark Makela | Getty Images News | Getty Images

President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats are hoping to pass $1.9 trillion of additional pandemic relief, including extra jobless benefits.

Still, many unemployed workers haven't yet gotten benefit payments from the last stimulus package, which former President Trump signed more than a month ago.

States like California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana and Virginia haven't issued that assistance to some groups of workers, according to their respective unemployment agencies.

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The $900 billion relief measure, passed in late December, extended unemployment benefits for 11 weeks and raised pay by $300 a week.  

Many states have been issuing that aid to workers in phases, as they tweak their systems to account for various pieces of the legislation.

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As a result, some groups have waited longer than others.

"The complexity of some of the additional specifications are challenging to program and will be an increased burden, not only on our [unemployment insurance] staff, but to claimants, as well," Mark Butler, Georgia's labor commissioner, said in January.

Some of those updates are ongoing, the Georgia Department of Labor said in a tweet Tuesday.

Biden's plan would extend unemployment benefits through September and raise pay by $400 a week.

Exhausted unemployment benefits

Delays seem most common for workers who'd been collecting benefits since the early spring and "exhausted" their aid — meaning they hit the maximum number of weeks allowed under the CARES Act.

That federal law limited the duration of aid through two temporary programs: Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which pays benefits to the self-employed and others who don't qualify for typical state assistance; and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which offered extra weeks of state benefits to the long-term unemployed.

It appears re-starting their benefits has taken longer than for other workers who hadn't yet hit their maximum weeks.

Colorado, for example, began issuing aid to workers Monday — with the exception of workers who'd exhausted PUA and PEUC benefits.

The date for that "Phase 2 rollout" hasn't yet been determined, according to a post on the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment website.

Californians who'd exhausted benefits face a similar situation, according to a spokesperson for the Employment Development Department, who didn't offer a timeline for system updates.

Virginia and Hawaii started paying those who'd exhausted PUA benefits, but not those who ran out of PEUC benefits for the long-term unemployed.

Hawaii will soon start paying those benefits, said William Kunstman, a spokesman for the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations. He didn't offer a specific timeline.

Virginia officials originally planned to issue the payments Jan. 29. However, "the implementation date has changed," according to its Employment Commission website. A spokesperson didn't immediately return a request for comment.

The $900 billion pandemic aid package created additional requirements for some workers to continue receiving aid. For example, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance recipients must submit documents to prove their self-employment. (The timeframe differs for new applicants and those who'd been collecting.)

Indiana officials will begin paying PUA benefits once those requirements are resolved. Those "vouchers" were made available to workers in the state starting Jan. 29, according to the Department of Workforce Development.

"The additional requirements must be integrated before eligible payments can be released," Butler said of Georgia.

They include increased identification verification requirements, a new mechanism for employers to report job refusals and failures to return to work by employees, and additional fraud detection measures, he said.