(Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

By JOEL DRESANG
By JOEL DRESANG
Wisconsin unemployment insurance recipients running out of
benefits could qualify for up to 20 additional weeks of payments
under an extension approved Thursday by Congress.
After Senate approval Wednesday, the House of Representatives
moved swiftly on the bill, which not only stretches jobless benefits
but also provides tax credits for first-time homebuyers and certain
businesses. The White House said President Barack Obama would sign
the bill into law Friday morning.
The bill extends benefits by 14 weeks for all those who have
exhausted their federal aid or will do so by the end of the year.
Those living in states with unemployment rates 8.5% or higher will
get an additional six weeks.
Wisconsin's rate was 8.3% in September, but based on a three-
month average, Wisconsin would still qualify for the extra six
weeks. The national jobless rate in September was 9.8%. The Labor
Department reports on the October rate Friday.
The fourth extension passed by Congress in the past 18 months
would stretch assistance to a maximum of 99 weeks, well beyond the
extent of past government intervention, including up to 65 weeks of
benefits in the 1970s.
The latest congressional action comes as the prospects for the
out-of-work remain bleak despite signs of economic recovery. When
new job market figures are released Friday, economists expect they
will show tens of thousands of additional job losses.
The legislation also includes several tax credits designed to get
the economy back on track: It extends for seven months the $8,000
credit for first-time homebuyers that is set to expire this month
and expands that program with a $6,500 credit for purchases by
homeowners who have lived in their current residences at least five
years.
It also expands a law providing refunds for money-losing
businesses that paid taxes on profits during the past five years.
The cost for extending unemployment benefits is $2.4 billion, to
be paid for by extending an unemployment insurance payroll tax that
employers must pay.
"The families who receive these benefits will be putting money
right back into our local economy -- buying groceries and filling
their cars with gas," Democratic Congresswoman Gwen Moore, of
Milwaukee, said in a statement.
Moore cited research by the Congressional Budget Office and
Moody's suggesting that unemployment benefits are a cost-effective
stimulus, with every $1 to jobless families generating $1.63 in
local economic activity because the unemployed quickly spend money
on food and other basics.
According to Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development data,
a record 56,000 individuals exhausted their unemployment insurance
benefits statewide in August -- more than twice the number of
workers who ran out in August 2008. Weekly benefits can range up to
$388.
The House passed the bill 403-12. All the votes against the bill
were Republicans. And though GOP lawmakers overwhelmingly supported
it, several used the debate to criticize the Obama administration's
job creation policies.
"We are not simply in the jobless recovery. We are in the job
loss recovery," said Republican Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas.
On the Web For more information on unemployment insurance in
Wisconsin, go to www.dwd.state.wi.us/uiben/ The Associated Press
contributed to this report
Copyright 2009, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved. (Note:
This notice does not apply to those news items already copyrighted
and received through wire services or other media.)
(c) 2009 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.
A service of YellowBrix, Inc.