Civil and Human Rights Coalition Calls for a ‘Clean Extension’ of Unemployment Benefits, Payroll Tax Cut

With the financial security of millions of unemployed Americans on the
line, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights is calling on
Congress to renew a payroll tax cut and extend emergency unemployment
benefits for 12 months without adding unnecessary and harmful
provisions.

The recent vote in the House of Representatives on a Republican bill would have, among other things, encouraged states to require drug testing of anyone seeking unemployment benefits.

In a letter to House members, Wade Henderson, president and CEO of The Leadership Conference, and Nancy Zirkin, executive vice president of The Leadership Conference,  said the drug testing language is “[p]articularly shameful” and called it “un-American to treat the poor, people of color, single parents, and young adults – all of whom are disproportionately unemployed in this economy – as criminals.”

The focus now shifts to the Senate, where Democrats are in the majority but still must secure Republican votes to reach the 60 needed to end debate and move the bill to a final vote.

More
than six million Americans are facing the potential loss of a financial
lifeline if Congress fails to pass an extension of emergency unemployment benefits which expires on
December 31.

Congress
has extended long-term unemployment benefits nine times since 2008. However, conservative
groups such as the Heritage Foundation have been urging Congress not to renew
the extension,
with some making the argument that the benefits are too
generous and keep people from seeking work. And some Republicans in Congress
have been raising the issue of costs, demanding that an extension be offset
by spending cuts elsewhere.

But as the National Employment Law Project (NELP) and others have pointed out, extended unemployment benefits are playing a vital role in boosting the economy and have kept
millions of people from falling into poverty
. NELP also notes that Congress
has never let emergency unemployment benefits expire while the unemployment
rate was above 7.2 percent. The national unemployment rate was 8.6 percent in November.