Florida ends year with tens of thousands of workers still receiving unemployment assistance

Rob Wile

At least 168,000 Florida workers were still receiving unemployment assistance as 2020 came to a close, data released Thursday show — a measure of the extreme economic toll the pandemic continues to produce.

By comparison, just 36,000 workers were receiving benefits this same time last year.

For the week that ended Dec. 26, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday, Florida saw 23,053 new claims for regular jobless benefits and 17,006 new claims for federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA), the program for workers, like Uber drivers, not eligible for regular state unemployment. Another 125,325 workers were already receiving benefits heading into that week.

The total figure of workers still receiving benefits in the state is not known, because Florida reports neither the number of ongoing PUA claims — the only U.S. state to not do so — nor the number of ongoing claims for the federal Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) program, which extends unemployment assistance eligibility for an additional 13 weeks. The only other state to not report the latter figure is Georgia.

In an October email to the Miami Herald, a spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity said those unreported figures were not a priority, but that they intended to publish them in the future. A spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Year-end statistics show nearly 2.2 million individuals, or approximately one out of every five Florida workers, has received unemployment benefits during the pandemic.

On Sunday, President Donald Trump signed a bill that will see unemployment filers gain an additional $300 in federal assistance. The bill also extends the PUA and PEUC programs until at least March. And it set up a new program, Mixed Earner Unemployment Compensation assistance, that provides an additional $100 for workers, like gig workers, who may have received both 1099 and W-2 work forms from employers.

On Tuesday, the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity said it was awaiting guidance from the U.S. Department of Labor before it would make the changes laid out in the new congressional bill.

In a note to clients Dec. 23, Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at research group Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the labor market has continued to deteriorate heading into the end of the year as coronavirus cases continue to surge.

“We hope [consumer] spending will stabilize in January and then begin to creep higher in February, but the current picture is quite bleak,” he said.