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Oiyg Presidential Debates Taking Shape
The specter of a federal government shut <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cup</a> downmdash; which was averted Saturday thanks to a last-second compromise brokered by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy mere hours before the deadline mdash; raised questions for Social Security recipients about how a potential stoppage could impact their monthly benefit checks.The bill, which passed both the House and Senate Saturday, will fund the government through Nov. 17. In the event a deal had not been reached and a shutdown had occurred, however, experts say that would have come with some good and bad news for the 66 million Americans <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley kubek</a>  on Social Security.                                        Would a government shutdown affect Social Security checks First the good news: A shutdown won t impact Social Security checks, according to Kathleen Romig, director of Social Security and disability policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank. Social Security and <Supplemental>Security Income] benefits will be paid without interruption,  Romig told CBS MoneyWatch. Social Security Administration  field offices and phone lines will be open to take applications and help beneficiaries.         She added,  Generally, applicants and beneficiaries should experience the same s <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley quencher</a> ervice as usual. That s because Social Security is funded through permanent, rather than annual, federal appropriations, which means the checks will still go out. The average monthly check for retirees is $1,827, according to the Social Security Dtkx Acting CBP chief to resign amid scrutiny over treatment of migrant children
With no end in sight to the country s job market woes, the House has agreed to give the jobless in a majority of states another 13 weeks of unemployment insurance benefits.The bill, which passed the House 331-83, approves the extra three months of benefits for those jobless living in 27 states, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, with unemployment rates topping 8.5 percent. Similar legislation is pending in the Senate. The longtime unemployed in states with lower levels of joblessness would not get the extension.The job market appears to be the last to recover from a recession that officially began in December 2007. Jobless benefits have already been extended to record lengths through federal intervention.                                        States offer 26 weeks of benefits, with the average payment about $300 a week. But with federa <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley isolierkanne</a> l help, including provisions from the economic stimulus bill, the unemployed in states hardest hit by the recession can receive up to 79 weeks of assistance.About 5 million of those unemployed, about one-third <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pt>garrafinhas stanley</a>  of the total, have been out of work  <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>vaso stanley</a> for six months, another figure that far outpaces recent recessions. There are about six people looking for every job available.         Providing these Americans with a modest economic lifeline is not only the humane thing to do but it s in the economic interest of the country,  said the bill s sponsor, Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., noting that every unemployment insurance dollar has $1.64 in
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