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Please help the Jobless workers
The House introduced a bill on yesterday to retroactivate unemployment benefits.
Click on the link to send an email to your congressional rep. Please pass the link so congress can get as many emails telling them to pass the bill BEFORE the holiday recess! Thanks! http://www.nelp.org/page/speakout/July4recess |
Done, although I know if anybody is going to try to turn this around it would be John Dingell. They are estimated it would be a 1/4 of a billion dollar hit to Michigan's already very hurt economy. You might as well just shut the state down and move us as refugees elsewhere or something.
And, quite frankly, if my ex-husband loses his unemployment benefits at this point, he will definitely lose his house and I could very well lose mine too. |
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I wish you luck, but when should unemployment benefits finally be cut off? This is deficit spending on folks who have been unemployed for (in some cases) 99 weeks.
My understanding of unemployment (and I've never taken unemployment, so this is based on very limited knowledge) is that you have to show evidence of at least three job applications per week. If that's true and you've applied for over 300 jobs and not made progress, maybe the problem isn't the job market. At some point, this free money has to dry up. |
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I will say this though it needs to be done in shifts. Folks that haven't been working for a long time will and I really hate to say this, be cut off. I know Michigan is hard hit, but it may be time to move. It isn't any accident that the census shows Dallas-Fort Worth having the largest population increase. Sometimes you gotta leave and start over. |
I've been on unemployment since April of last year. I'm smart, experienced, educated, hard working, have a great resume and great references. Finally, after 15 months of being on unemployment compensation, I got a job offer and I should be starting next Tuesday. The job offer comes none too soon, because my compensation expired the last week of May. I've been living on a meager savings since then, that as of this week, is exhausted. We will have to borrow money until I start getting paychecks.
Kevin, it varies state to state. However, in Ohio, we have to contact 2 potential employers per week. That doesn't mean apply for, though. It can mean follow up with, call, e-mail, inquire about the status, etc. And yes, you have to keep evidence (I keep a journal, and save anything electronically). I would have been SOL a long time ago if applying for 3 jobs a week were the case. I have a BS in environmental science, I've had 8 interviews since I was laid off, and 2 second interviews that did not lead to offers. Things are incredibly competative right now. I apply for jobs in my field, with little luck getting an interview (too much experience, not enough experience, too many job aplicants, etc). I apply for jobs in areas I have zero experience in, and I'm told I won't be hired because I don't have experience or a related degree. I apply for jobs bartending, waiting tables, working at Target, and I'm told I have too much experience. A friend of mine (who is a manager at a grocery store) explained it this way - They won't hire someone like me because: A. They don't want to hire someone who will leave the job as soon as they get a "real" job offer. They don't want to waste time training me when I won't stay. B. They don't want to hire someone they see as being "smarter" than them. The positions I have listed in my resume are intimidating. Were it not for the amazing timing of this new job, I would be royally screwed. We'd lose our little starter house, my husbands car, and would probably have to move in with family. And asking for help like that is not something I look forward to. Asking for a loan from my in-laws to pay the bills, get food and pay for gas until I get paid is hard enough. I took this job with no questions asked, even though it will mean my children will be with a babysitter for over 14 hours for 4 days a week, I will have a 1 hour 20 minute commute each day, and we will evetually have to relocate. Everything sucks right now. I still need help. Yep, I know it won't last forever, but it is a kick in the nuts that I no longer get any compensation, but people who were laid off a week before me are still getting assistance, because they made the deadline that I missed by a week. I won't beleive I actually have the job until I'm there working. I still feel like they will call and rescind the offer. |
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Thanks! But I'm still very anxious. It feels almost too good to be true, that's why I don't think it'll feel real until I'm actually there.
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Preach Irish. I've been saved by my school loans and internships thus far, but I'm running into the same issues with people not wanting to hire me because I'll have my MA soon. I have one second interview Friday and I'm hoping it works out because I'm desperate and broke and don't qualify for unemployment.
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All that said, I disagree with the statement "if you have applied for 300 jobs and still don't have one... " in a market where there are 400 applicants for every ONE job. We're talking about an area where the unemployment is 1 in 6. |
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If people are applying for jobs that they know they are overqualified for, they need to submit a resume` that does not reflect their overqualification. They need to essentially "play the part" and not speak or behave (I'm not talking about "dumbing down") in an overqualified manner. Wendy's will not hire someone with a PhD regardless of how broke and desperate that person is.
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