Idaho Gov. Butch Otter said action by Congress this week to extend federal unemployment benefits could turn the program into an open-ended federal entitlement, but said the 11,500 Idahoans eligible for weekly payments should get that help.
All four of Idaho’s members of Congress opposed the $34 billion, six-month unemployment extension because it didn’t include a way to pay for the program.
“We won’t let those who are unable to find work through no fault of their own suffer, but Congress would do well to listen to the Idaho delegation’s legitimate concerns about spending money they don’t have,” Otter said in an Idaho Department of Labor news release.
The extended federal unemployment benefits, originally part of the 2009 stimulus plan, expired at the end of May. The labor department said its payout to jobless Idahoans dropped up to $4 million a week because of the federal program lapsed.
Close to 43,000 people received payments in May, before the extended program expired. That number dropped to less than 27,000 last week.
Any unemployed Idahoan who was eligible to receive payments during the six-week lapse should receive that money from the state labor department eventually. The department said it could take a week to reprogram 30-year-old computers and several more days to identify all the people who should receive payments. The department is asking those people not to call in to request their payments, because it could swamp their phone system.
Read the Idaho Department of Labor’s news release at its website.





How much longer do we have to wait for computers to be updated. We the people did not choose losing our jobs. We need help as soon as possible. What happens when people start losing their homes and can not provide for our family. We need help now. The White House e-mailed me and Sentor Mike Simpson sent a letter too me. All I ask is to help the people that have worked so long not leave us in the dark. We need money to survive until we can all find a jobs.
Thank you for you’re time.
Government caused the economic depression and it seems logical to have government pay for it too.