Cara Simpson holds up the unemployment overpayment notice she received from the state. Advocates rallied in Downtown Pittsburgh Tuesday, Nov. 29, calling on the next governor to make changes to the state's unemployment compensation system
Kate is covering the impact of COVID-19 on the economy.
She covered poverty, social services and affordable housing at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette for nearly five years; prior to that she spent several years in the paper’s Harrisburg bureau covering the legislature, governor, and state government.
She was part of the P-G staff that won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting on the mass shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh. She has won numerous state and local awards for her reporting and was honored with a 2020 Keystone Media Award for her beat reporting on poverty.
She also previously reported for several newspapers in Ohio and covered the steel industry for a trade publication.
Kate Giammarise / 90.5 WESA
Cara Simpson holds up the unemployment overpayment notice she received from the state. Advocates rallied in Downtown Pittsburgh Tuesday, Nov. 29, calling on the next governor to make changes to the state's unemployment compensation system
Pennsylvania’s next governor should increase the transparency and accessibility of the state’s Unemployment Compensation system, ensure prompt payment of benefits, beef up staffing in state call centers and make other changes to help unemployed workers collect timely assistance, according to a report released today from a left-leaning policy organization and an advocacy group for the unemployed.
Advocates rallied outside the governor’s Pittsburgh office downtown Tuesday to call attention to the report, titled, “An Unemployment Insurance Agenda for Pennsylvania’s Next Governor.”
Governor-elect Josh Shapiro, a Democrat from Montgomery County, will take office in January.
“Pennsylvania’s administrative system for delivering unemployment insurance benefits is broken,” said Stephen Herzenberg, executive director of the Harrisburg-based Keystone Research Center. “That system had been stressed over decades by the elimination of in-person unemployment compensation officers, cutbacks at call centers and the shift of applications for unemployment insurance to dysfunctional online systems. The pandemic laid bare this vulnerability and leaves Pennsylvania now ranked near the bottom for timely delivery of benefits.”
Others at the event spoke from personal experience.
“It’s a failed system,” said Bob Snyder, speaking on behalf of union members in the United Steelworkers Local 14034. Snyder said members are laid off regularly and many have been dealing with problems collecting unemployment benefits that are owed to them.
Require reports on the status of benefits claimed in the pandemic
Restore in-person services and hire sufficient staff for call centers
The document released by the Keystone Research Center and Mon Valley Unemployed Committee also makes recommendations to expand the number of people eligible for unemployment assistance and raise the amount of benefits the unemployed can collect.
State Rep. Sara Innamorato, D-Lawrenceville, was one of several local Democratic state House members at the event. She said she and other legislators were swamped with calls from laid-off individuals during the pandemic who struggled to collect unemployment benefits.
“Each and every one of these workers, they are worthy of a publicly funded operational unemployment compensation system that works when they need it. And we have this opportunity now to right the wrongs of the past,” she said.
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