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In the past week, the state call center has been receiving about 80,000 calls a day, up from 7,500 on average last month, said Dennis Evans, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, which oversees unemployment benefits.
"It's the volume of calls, it's the economy, it's the extended benefits -- all are increasing caseloads," he said.
The endless busy signals and computer-error messages have left many out-of-work Ohioans, already stressed by mounting bills and fruitless job searches, on the verge of snapping.
Originally posted by secretagent woooman
Guys, I hate to say it but the unemployment system is about to crash so I hope some of you have a parachute, there is no way some states will be able to keep paying those claims and Floida is one of them.
The state's unemployment-compensation fund is expected to spit out its last few dollars today or Monday, triggering a federal bailout to ensure that weekly benefits to jobless Ohioans continue.
Skyrocketing job losses and years of collecting less in unemployment taxes than the fund paid out in benefits are to blame, state officials said.
"There are just a crushing number of claims," said Bob Welsh, deputy director of Ohio's unemployment-compensation system.
The state paid claims to 248,000 jobless workers in the last week of December, a 63 percent increase from the same week a year earlier.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Ohio's unemployment compensation fund has been depleted, forcing the state to begin borrowing federal funds.
Officials say no disruptions in benefits are expected.
The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services said Monday the federal government has already approved $500 million to be borrowed by Ohio to pay benefits in January and February. The state has requested that it be able to use $50 million of that amount to pay benefits this week.
At the same time as the state's unemployment insurance fund is running low, California's unemployment rate is approaching a 15-year high, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. The jobless rate hit 8.4 percent in November, up from 8.2 percent in October.
Millions of telephone calls to unemployment insurance processing centers are not being answered and the operation's computer system is 30 years old. Similar problems are occurring in at least 10 other states.
....
California's unemployment insurance fund is paying out $30 million to $34 million per day in jobless benefits. Its balance went from about $500 million to $270 million during the week of Jan. 5, the newspaper said.
California is likely to need a federal loan to keep the system going.
"We need that information now. We need to have it in the next two weeks. If not, we will replace the commissioners," Sanford said Thursday.
His threat came after commission Executive Director Ted Halley said money to pay unemployment checks would run out as soon as Friday. Halley said the state needs $169 million to cover payments in January, February and March.