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Even as unemployment remains at an 80-year high, Congress is considering letting the extra $600 a week in jobless benefits expire at the end of July.
The sprawling $2 trillion CARES Act provides an extra $600 a week to every unemployment recipient who lost work due to the coronavirus. ... Your weekly unemployment payments are about to shrink ...
With time running out on $600 weekly benefits, Republicans have had difficulty agreeing on a new proposal. A stopgap bill may be needed, officials say. As $600-a-week benefit nears end, White ...
The extra $600 per week in unemployment benefits is set to expire at the end of July. Lawmakers still have not agreed on what to do about it. The $600 boost in unemployment benefits expires soon.
The confusion of the language led some states to list July 31 as the end date of the benefits, when it's actually a few days earlier. Extra $600 in unemployment benefits could expire before July ...
It also includes increased funding for schools, higher learning institutions, and hospitals. The HEALS Act would fund supplemental unemployment benefits at $200 per week, a reduction compared to the CARES Act's benefit of $600 per week. [11] [12] However, the bill provides a payroll tax credit to businesses equal to 50% of COVID expenses. [13] [14]
The HEALS Act includes increased funding for schools and higher learning institutions, as well as hospitals. The HEALS Act would not provide additional funding for state and local governments short on tax revenue due to shutdowns and business closures, and would also reduce expanded unemployment benefits from $600 per week to $200. [9] [10]
Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC), an additional $600 per week for those receiving unemployment benefits, in addition to the amount allotted by the specific state. The additional amount was available from the date the CARES Act was enacted (March 27, 2020) through July 26, 2020.