Local News

State borrows money for unemployment fund

The move was the first time in seven years the Employment Security Commission has had to get a federal loan to bolster its unemployment trust fund.

Posted Updated

RALEIGH, N.C. — The state Employment Security Commission borrowed $13 million from the federal government Thursday to help pay unemployment benefits.

The move was the first time in seven years the state has had to get a government loan to bolster its unemployment trust fund.

Nearly 400,000 North Carolinians were unemployed and seeking work in December – a record number. The number of unemployed jumped by 185,000 in 2008.

“We’re having some days where we pay out $26 million a day and those payouts will sometimes out pact collections,” said. David Clegg, deputy chairman of the state Employment Security Commission.

North Carolina's jobless rate was 8.7 percent in December, the highest rate in 25 years. About a third of the state's 100 counties reported at least 10 percent unemployment for that month, twice the number with double-digit unemployment in November.

“We’re paying benefits for about 400,000 and the wages in North Carolina are the highest in the southeast, which makes our benefit levels the highest in the southeast,” Clegg said.

The ESC has paid out $17 million in benefits over the past two days and will likely have to borrow more money next week, spokesman Larry Parker said.

People now receiving unemployment will not see any changes in their benefits, Clegg said.

Even in the recession, North Carolina’s labor force gets bigger every week. An estimated 500 people a day move to the state and many of them are looking for jobs, which puts more pressure on the system, Clegg said.

 Credits 

Copyright 2024 by Capitol Broadcasting Company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.