The Idaho Department of Labor is reinforcing its 12-week
limit on the period during which laid-off workers will be considered likely to
be called back to their jobs. This so-called job-attached status, usually the
result of seasonal shutdowns in various industries, relieves workers from
looking for new jobs to remain eligible for unemployment benefits.
“We will no longer have exceptions to this rule,” Benefits
Bureau Chief Josh McKenna said. “This is part of our continued effort to focus
on claimants as job seekers.”
The decision follows a department analysis that found an
excessive number of claimants failing to make the required two job contacts a
week to continue receiving unemployment benefits. Since January, the department
has denied weekly benefits to 231 claimants for failing to conduct the required
work search. During the first three months of 2011, denials for failure to
conduct work search totaled 158.
With Idaho’s
job market showing continued signs of recovery-the number of non-farm jobs in
January and February was two percent higher than a year earlier-opportunities
for employment are expanding, McKenna said.
Reinforcing the 12-week limit on job-attached status
eliminates the difficulty-and often inequity-of assessing seasonal conditions
that vary significantly from one region of the state to another, and the
intensified emphasis on returning claimants to work protects the state’s
Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund, which went broke in 2009 because of the
increased demand for benefits during the recession.
“We aren’t saying that these folks can’t go back to their
prior employer, but rather they need to look for and find work during the time
they are off,” McKenna said. “It may be in an occupation opposite their normal
industry-for example, a landscaper goes to work at the local ski resort. There
are available jobs out there right now.”
Idaho’s
12-week limit on job-attached status is greater than four of the border
states-Utah at 10 weeks, Washington
at eight, Nevada at six and Oregon
at four.
“This is a nationwide trend,” McKenna said. “These are our
expectations and they need to look for work to be eligible for benefits.
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