Fix coming for 75K residents not receiving jobless benefits
State officials said Friday they should have a fix within a week to a technological snag that prevented about 75,000 residents from getting the unemployment benefits they’re owed.
Labor Commissioner Rob Asaro-Angelo said the state hopes to finish reprogramming its computers by Feb. 12 to accommodate a federal law signed by President Trump in December that extended jobless benefits for another 11 weeks.
While some states have already corrected the problem, New Jersey joins a group of states still struggling to implement the change.
“Everyone in our department feels for every single person, for any reason like they’re unemployed or in a bad economic situation,” he said. “We’re public servants. That’s why we do what we do: to help people.”
Asaro-Angelo added that no other applicants should experience this problem.
Officials warn against Super Bowl watch parties
Face masking might be a penalty in the NFL, but state officials said it’ll be critical for anyone attending a Super Bowl watch party this weekend.
Gov. Murphy also urged residents not to huddle with friends but rather observe physical distancing during the game.
“Just as 2020 wasn’t the year for a huge Thanksgiving or Christmas, 2021 is not the year for a massive Super Bowl blowout,” he said.
Murphy encouraged residents to watch the Super Bowl with only members of their immediate family. But he reminded those planning to get together to observe a few rules to avoid spreading coronavirus: maintain physical distance, wear a mask, and observe the indoor gathering limit of 10 people.
The Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers square off in Super Bowl LV this Sunday at 6:30 p.m.
Govs. Murphy, Cuomo call for need-based state coronavirus aid
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo — both Democrats — called on the federal government to send coronavirus aid to states based on how badly those states were hit by the pandemic.
New Jersey and New York were among the first states to report coronavirus cases in the spring, when the pandemic surged in the Northeast. The two states have also seen among the highest number of deaths per capita.
Murphy and Cuomo made the plea during a joint press conference Friday morning.
“We were clobbered with you and Connecticut — and [Governor] Ned Lamont’s done a great job there — and the metro New York region,” Murphy said. “That must be taken into account.”
The pair also called on the Biden administration to repeal the $10,000 cap on state and local tax deductions, which was signed into law by President Trump and hits residents in high-tax states like New Jersey and New York the hardest.