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Published: Sunday, Nov. 08, 2009 / Updated: Sunday, Nov. 08, 2009 02:47 PM

SC missing out on unemployment benefits money

The Associated Press

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- South Carolina is missing out on nearly $100 million in federal stimulus dollars for unemployment benefits, and it will be months before jobless residents see the money, if at all.

The Post and Courier of Charleston reported Sunday that the money is intended to cover more women and part-time and low-wage workers who currently don't qualify for unemployment checks.

In South Carolina, the changes could provide another nearly 17,000 jobless residents with benefits.

House Majority Leader Kenny Bingham, a Republican, said it hardly makes sense to add people to the dole that already is running a projected $1 billion deficit, money that state businesses will have to pay back at some point.

On the other side, legislators such as Democratic Rep. Joe Neal argue for civility and fairness. Employers make contributions for every worker on the payroll to the fund that pays out unemployment benefits, he noted.

"This is not a giveaway," Neal said. "These people have earned this protection. Hundreds of thousands of folks have lost their job through no fault of their own."

Congress tried to entice the states to update the 1930s-era social welfare program by including $7 billion in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act.

The Legislature could have made changes to get the money when it reconvened last month in a special two-day session to fix an oversight that had blocked other unemployment benefits, but lawmakers wouldn't agree to do so.

Bingham pledged recently that all the changes necessary to collect the additional federal cash will be up for consideration when the Legislature meets in January. The House is expected to take up legislation to overhaul the Employment Security Commission.

The commission has been under fire for its performance during the economic turmoil. It runs the unemployment trust fund, which has been out of cash since last year. The state has been borrowing money from the federal government to cut the unemployment checks.

Maurice Emsellem, policy co-director at the New York-based National Employment Law Project, said the state would have to change its law to get the money.

The Legislature would have to alter the way individuals' earnings are calculated in order to open up benefits to more of the unemployed who were earning the lowest salaries, Emsellem said.

The advocacy group projected that the $97.5 million available to South Carolina in the stimulus package would provide benefits for 16,665 unemployed residents for four years, Emsellem said.

After four years, the money would run out and the state would have to either repeal the law changes or start paying to provide the extra benefits. If South Carolina does not use the money, it remains in federal coffers, Emsellem said.

States have until October 2011 to apply for the cash.

Information from: The Post and Courier, http://www.postandcourier.com

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