LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Wednesday asked Michigan lawmakers to reinstate certain employers’ ability to hire new workers who, while working, would still get a $300-a-week unemployment benefit into early September.
The governor this week has been touting the state’s “workshare” program as a return-to-work incentive as companies struggle to fill jobs amid the coronavirus pandemic. It provides partial jobless benefits when businesses bring back laid-off employees at reduced hours or they cut workers’ hours rather than let them go.
Whitmer, a Democrat, wants businesses that participate in the program to be able to hire employees who lost their job elsewhere — not just their former workers. They would be awarded a portion of their state unemployment benefit along with the federal $300 weekly pandemic benefit.
“Legislative action to expand the incentive means more opportunities for workers and more ways for business to attract and retain new and returning employees,” she said in a statement.
The Republican-led Legislature approved such an expansion in the fall, but it expired in March.
Under the workshare program, laid-off workers who return can see their hours and pay reduced by 15% to 45%. But they receive a corresponding 15% to 45% of their state jobless benefit plus the $300 federal benefit. Through Sept. 4, someone making $1,000 a week whose pay is cut by 30% would earn $1,108 a week when the business restarts.
- Posted June 18, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Whitmer: Reinstate incentive so companies can hire workers
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- Incarceration series includes female inmates but doesn’t tell full story
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Former DOJ official who alleged election fraud violated at least one ethics rule, ethics committee says
- Winston & Strawn will provide reduced-cost legal services for routine tasks under Winston Legal Solutions umbrella
- Should Justice Sotomayor retire? Chemerinsky, White House haven’t joined calls for her to step down
- Which BigLaw firms are increasing lateral associate hiring the most? One made legal headlines last year