State unemployment funds are running low

Published: Sept. 9, 2008 at 1:40 PM

WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (UPI) -- New York, California, Ohio and Michigan are among states that may need to turn to the U.S. government to shore up unemployment benefit funds, officials said.

States are required to maintain a reserve of a year's worth of benefits at recession levels, USA Today reported Tuesday. But the trust funds in 32 states are below that level, many having never recovered from the 2001 downturn, the newspaper said.

As the unemployment rate rose to a five-year high at 6.1 percent in August, "we're going to see many more states facing insolvency than in the past," said Deputy Director of the National Employment Law Project Andrew Stettner.

The payments won't cease, said Loree Levy of the California Employment Development Department. The federal government is mandated to loan states money when the funds fall short.

"People will get their benefits. It's just a matter of where the money will come from," Levy told USA Today.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Roethlisberger to miss Ravens game (34 min)
Brain study points to jet lag help (48 min)
Masseuse reaches out and touches someone (56 min)
COL FB: Virginia Tech 42, Virginia 13 (59 min)
Hotels hope cyber-shoppers will check in
Sheep shoppers caught on camera
COL FB: Florida 37, Florida State 10
fark
Drunk drivers eclipsed as greatest threat on roads by iPod zombie cyclists
Every year parents struggle with which toys to buy their kids for Christmas. Well, here's fifteen...
Old & busted: Bloggers steal from MSM. New hotness: Bloggers report actual news while MSM covers...
The Teflon Son: John Gotti Jr. not convicted again
New England's last military air base shuts down. In case anyone from the Soviet Union is reading...
Photoshop this building under wraps