Politics

Committee endorses bill to reduce Georgia's unemployment benefits

By Christopher Quinn
Feb 22, 2012

The payment of state unemployment benefits would drop from 26 weeks to a sliding scale of 12 to 20 weeks under a bill approved Tuesday by the state Senate Insurance and Labor Committee.

Senate Bill 447 would also delay distributing the first unemployment check by a week.

Supporters of the bill say the money saved and money raised by increasing unemployment insurance would pay about $736 million that the state owes the federal government for money it borrowed to pay unemployment benefits. The payoff could encourage companies to hire because they are facing extra federal charges per employee until the bill is paid.

The bill's sponsor, Sen. Fran Millar, R-Dunwoody, estimated that Georgia could pay off the debt and rebuild the unemployment fund to $1 billion by 2014.

Opponents of the bill question the wisdom of cutting unemployment benefits in the worst economy in a generation and pointed out that companies have been given billions of dollars in tax cuts, including an unemployment tax holiday from 2000 to 2003. Now, the bill's supporters want to balance the tally on Georgians' backs, they said.

"It's a vote that promises misery for Georgia families," said Sen. Nan Orrock, D-Atlanta.

Millar said it is not easy -- but is necessary -- to make the cuts.

The bill must pass out of the Senate Rules Committee before it can be debated on the floor. If it wins approval there, it would move to the state House for consideration.

About the Author

Christopher Quinn is a writer and editor who has worked for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution since 1999. He writes stories on Veterans Affairs, business including high-tech growth in metro Atlanta, Georgia's $72 billion farm economy, and he oversees assigning and editing news obituaries.

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