The Inside Job

How $25 Extra in Unemployment Benefits is Hurting Some

By Liz Wolgemuth

Posted: June 15, 2009

This is an ugly example of the law of unintended consequences. Georgia resident Mark Milota was laid off in November and began collecting unemployment benefits. After the stimulus was passed, he started to receive an extra $25 a week--or about $100 extra each month--in benefits. Sounds good. But Milota last month discovered that the extra income made him ineligible for the $300 a month in food stamps he was previously receiving--his monthly income is now $21 over the limit for food stamp eligibility.  Essentially, Milota's getting $200 less in assistance than before the stimulus.

As is always the case with these kinds of stories, Milota is not alone. In fact, lawmakers were apparently aware of this possible outcome, but the necessity of a swiftly passed stimulus was overwhelming, the AP reports:

Lawmakers crafting the stimulus knew this would become a problem, said Stacy Dean, director of food assistance policy at Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank. They could have headed it off by raising the income tax or declaring that the $25 stimulus checks would not affect food stamp eligibility. Both were expensive options that could have forced states to reprogram their computer systems.

But more importantly, hashing out those details would have taken time.

"People were aware of this but, as you recall, the stimulus was moving along and then it was passed in about a day," Dean said. "There was not a lot of policy discussion on this."

Some studies show  unemployment benefits and food stamps are among the most effective economic stimuli, because they put money in the hands of individuals who will spend it immediately. In that respect, one should hope the number of individuals whose net government assistance actually drops as a result of the extra $25 in benefits is a very small one indeed.

ginger

Obama's stimulus payment is joke! I am too ineligible for foodstamps due to obama's stimulus on my gross ( before taxes) What a sneaky little fellow you are obamba You pulled the wool over our eyes but people are getting to the person

you really are.

ginger of FL @ Nov 09, 2009 18:26:38 PM

What Was He Thinking

Hurry up and get this money out there regardless of who it hurts?! If I knew he'd be as lazy and half ass do a job I'd never put him in there. What good is this stupid stimulus if you give me $100 and I have to sacrifice $300 for a net loss of $200?? What kind of math is that? Did he flunk algebra? Oh, he's taking us back to the motherland. From what I've read, that's what they do there. I'm staying in this screwed up country just long enough for one more election if I can help it. If this doesn't improve, my vote is one less he'll have and i've NEVER missed an election since my 18th birthday NOT EVEN PRIMARIES!!

Terri of PA @ Nov 02, 2009 18:35:34 PM

Weekly $25 may not affect your Medi-Cal SOC

Check with your county and refer to this letter: CDHS Letter 09-29 April 2009 (http://www.dhcs.ca.gov/services/medi-cal/eligibility/Documents/c09-22.pdf). "The purpose of this letter is to inform counties that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Division B, Title II, Section 2002 (h) provides for a Federal Stimulus increase to both regular and extended nemployment Benefits by $25 a week.The increases will begin with the week of February 22, 2009, for both new and existing claims. The monthly equivalent to the $25 weekly increase shall be exempt income

and, as such, shall not be considered for purposes of determining Medi-Cal eligibility or share-of-cost (SOC).

Lisa Maiuro of CA @ Oct 24, 2009 22:23:19 PM

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You're taking a break from your job-hunting and job-hopping ways and have decided to stay put in your current position. Liz Wolgemuth’s careers blog will show you how to make the very best of your job, each day.

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