Unemployment benefits face delays for millions even with COVID-19 relief package

Even though Congress struck a COVID-19 stimulus deal late Sunday to extend badly needed financial relief to millions of jobless Americans, some could see their unemployment benefits lapse since it may take weeks for aid to reach them due to outdated state systems, experts say.

The lag could affect 12 million Americans who were set to lose their jobless aid the day after Christmas if Congress didn’t pass new legislation. The House and Senate are expected to debate and vote on the package Monday.

“We’re too far gone,” says Elizabeth Pancotti, a policy adviser at the pro-worker Employ America. “We would have needed a deal before Thanksgiving for there not to be a lapse in benefits.”

‘It’s a big scary mess’:12 million Americans to lose jobless aid after Christmas if Congress fails to act

How long will it take?

For those whose benefits were going to expire on Dec. 26, their regular benefits and extra $300 supplement could face delays for at least three weeks, or a maximum of six to eight weeks in some states, Pancotti estimates. 

“People will expect to see the extra $300 hit the first week of the year, but that’s not going to happen,” she says.

Why? It is because of difficulties in programming new benefits into the computer system during the holidays, according to Michele Evermore, senior researcher and policy analyst for the National Employment Law Project.

The longstanding neglect of state administrative systems has meant that state programs don’t have the resources and technology needed to add programs instantly, adds Evermore, who anticipates that it will take at least two to three weeks before states are up and running with the new aid.

“We’re just one week from expiration. Maybe a handful of states could pull off a miracle since they knew this was coming down the pipeline,” Evermore says. “But they can’t engage the system until it’s official.”

The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits rose again last week to 885,000, the highest weekly total since September.

What are the two programs?

In March, the CARES Act created two programs to help keep jobless workers afloat after the coronavirus pandemic battered the global economy and led to a historic wave of unemployment. The two programs were set to end on Dec. 26. 

The first was the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which provides aid to self-employed, temporary workers and gig workers. It had also included a $600 weekly supplement for jobless workers through late July.