A bill advanced by a New Jersey Senate committee would
allow striking workers to collect unemployment insurance benefits during a
labor dispute.
The legislation would bring some financial relief to the
thousands of Verizon workers in New Jersey who've been on strike since April
13, said Eric Richard with the state AFL-CIO.
"Go on that line and talk to these folks about how
their families are moving forward without health care," he said Tuesday
during a committee hearing. "Find out how they're moving forward being
unable to pay their mortgages."
Seth Hahn is legislative director for the Communications
Workers of America, a union that represents a thousand Verizon call center
workers in New Jersey.
"Every biweekly pay period, they put into the
unemployment insurance fund," said Seth Hahn, legislative director for the
Communications Workers of America, a union that represents a thousand Verizon
call center workers in New Jersey. "It is exactly for time like these when
they have been pushed by their employer, that they need it."
Michael Egenton with the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce
said allowing strikers to tap into the unemployment insurance fund would be a
concern for the business community.
"We now have solvency back into the UI fund. So what
does that do now to the UI fund? How long can a worker be out for and
collect?" he said. "It really changes the rules of engagement."
The measure faces an uncertain future. No version of it
has been introduced in the Assembly.
Similar laws are already in effect in New York and
Alaska.
Source: Newsworks
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