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As Hollywood actors’ strike enters 12th week, Gavin Newsom just spiked a bill to give unemployment benefits to striking workers

By
Adam Beam
Adam Beam
and
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
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By
Adam Beam
Adam Beam
and
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 2, 2023, 11:20 AM ET
Perry Yung joins SAG-AFTRA members on strike 2023 in New York City. The union has been on strike since July 14.
Perry Yung joins SAG-AFTRA members on strike 2023 in New York City. The union has been on strike since July 14.John Nacion/Getty Images

Close to 60,000 members of the Hollywood actors’ union are still on the picket line as they try to reach a new deal with movie studios — but California won’t be giving them unemployment checks. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom on Saturday vetoed a bill that had been inspired by high-profile work stoppages in Hollywood and the hotel industry.

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Newsom, a Democrat, says he supports workers and often benefits from campaign contributions from labor unions. But he said he vetoed this bill because the fund the state uses to pay unemployment benefits will be nearly $20 billion in debt by the end of the year.

“Now is not the time to increase costs or incur this sizable debt,” Newsom wrote in a veto message.

The fund the state uses to pay unemployment benefits is already more than $18 billion in debt. That’s because the fund ran out of money and had to borrow from the federal government during the pandemic, when Newsom ordered most businesses to close and caused a massive spike in unemployment. The fund was also beset by massive amounts of fraud that cost the state billions of dollars.

The bill would have let workers who were on strike for at least two weeks receive unemployment checks from the state, which can be as much as $450 per week. Normally, only workers who lost their job through no fault of their own are eligible for those benefits.

Labor unions had argued that the amount of workers on strike for more than two weeks is so small it would not have had a significant impact on the state’s unemployment trust fund. Of the 56 strikes in California over the past decade, only two lasted longer than two weeks, according to Democratic state Sen. Anthony Portantino, the author of the bill.

“This veto tips the scales further in favor of corporations and CEOs and punishes workers who exercise their fundamental right to strike,” said Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, executive secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation. “At a time when public support of unions and strikes are at an all-time high, this veto is out-of-step with American values.”

New York and New Jersey are the only two states that allow striking workers to collect jobless aid.

California’s legislation was an attempt by Democratic state lawmakers to support Southern California hotel workers and Hollywood actors and writers who have been on strike for much of this year. The writers strike ended Sept. 26, but the other two are ongoing — meaning many workers have gone months without pay.

Beyond the debt, the Newsom administration has said the fund is not collecting enough money to pay all of the benefits owed. The money comes from a tax businesses must pay on each worker. But that tax only applies to the first $7,000 of workers’ wages, a figure that has not changed since 1984 and is the lowest amount allowed under federal law.

California’s state Legislature has twice increased unemployment benefits since then, once in 1989 and again in 2001.

The Newsom administration has predicted benefit payments will exceed tax collections by $1.1 billion this year. It’s the first time this has happened during a period of job growth, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office.

Lawmakers could attempt to pass the law anyway, but it’s been decades since a governor’s veto was overruled in California.

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