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She quit her job to care for her children during COVID Now, Wisconsin demands $30K repayment for unemployment benefits

Health She quit her job to care for her children during COVID. Now, Wisconsin demands $30K repayment for unemployment benefits. June 28, 2021 6:48 PM Naomi Kowles Updated: MADISON, Wis. When Dominique Aldridge quit her job as a certified nursing assistant in Green Bay last March, it was because her three young children–two of them school-aged–suddenly had no daytime childcare when schools closed as COVID-19 first spread in Wisconsin. A single mom, her hands were tied. She’s now recently back at work after moving to Chicago, with her children’s new schools reopening in late spring. But the state Department of Workforce Development is threatening a warrant if she doesn’t repay $29,706 they paid out to her in regular and extra federal unemployment benefits during the pandemic, because of a minor error in one of her weekly claims in April 2020.

Faces of Unemployment: Waiting and appealing

Billions were paid out, but thousands had to wait. Posted: 5:17 AM, Apr 08, 2021 Updated: 2021-04-08 14:42:34-04 Toni Matis of West Bend has appeared on TMJ4 News before. She has been fighting to get unemployment benefits for nearly a year. To get by, she rationed her medication. Today, she is on the verge of having her car repossessed. And says she would have lost her housing without the help of a sympathetic landlord. Toni Matis Her hearing was held one year to the day since she first started interacting with the unemployment system. After a year of fighting, an administrative law judge has ruled in her favor.

As issues ease a bit, states begin to debate improvements to broken unemployment systems

As issues ease a bit, states begin to debate improvements to broken unemployment systems
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Partisan paralysis has torn Wisconsin s safety net and left the jobless struggling to survive the pandemic

Partisan paralysis has torn Wisconsin’s safety net and left the jobless struggling to survive the pandemic Brandon Cacek filed for unemployment insurance in mid-March last year after losing his substitute teaching job due to the pandemic. He is still waiting for that crucial aid 11 months later. “I keep leaving out hope that I’m going to get some kind of assistance through this,” said Cacek, 40, a Marine Corps veteran and father of two in Marinette, Wisconsin. “But the longer this goes on the less hope that lingers.” Nearly every person who has reviewed Cacek’s case has found no reason to deny him compensation, he said. That includes an administrative law judge who ruled on Dec. 28 that Cacek qualifies for benefits dating back to March 5.

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