Some unemployed Americans will soon receive an extra $300 per week as states roll out bonus relief benefits from FEMA

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Some unemployed Americans will soon receive an extra $300 per week as states roll out bonus relief benefits from FEMA
Economic stimulus checks are prepared for printing at the Philadelphia Financial Center May 8, 2008 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.Jeff Fusco/Stringer
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In order to help those who were laid off due to the pandemic, Congress earlier this year sent out weekly $600 bonus unemployment checks. At the end of July, those benefits lapsed, and a month and a half later, Congress has yet to pass another package.

But on August 8, President Trump allocated $44 billion to FEMA to provide grants to states in order to bridge the gap between the original stimulus package and the next one— whenever that may be, if it happens at all.

The Lost Wages Supplemental Payment Assistance Grant allowed states to decide on their own if they needed the money and apply it accordingly. The deadline for the grant was September 10, and now states are figuring out how to distribute the money, and in many cases have already sent it out.

The $300 weekly unemployment bonus payments you may have heard about recently are a part of this rollout, but their distribution status at a state level varies.

Every state except South Dakota applied for the FEMA grant. Guam and the US Virgin Islands will also be receiving funds as well.

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CNBC reports 21 states have either finished paying out the $300 payments or have begun sending them out. Those include, in alphabetical order, according to CNBC: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas and Utah.

It is also worth noting that the FEMA grants differ from the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program, which covers those who are not covered by unemployment benefits, including independent contractors and part-time workers.

The $300 per week benefit payments supplement a state's current unemployment payouts — meaning they'll be applied in addition to whatever unemployment benefit the state is already paying those who lost their job. In order to be eligible for the FEMA grant funds, a household must already be receiving $100 in unemployment benefits. This means about 6% of households will be ineligible for this new plan, according to CNBC.

John Pallasch, assistant secretary for the US Department of Labor, said this barrier was enacted so the funds would go to those who had lost their primary source of income, according to CNBC.

Some states are still processing the payments. For the states that have not yet processed them, the benefits will be applied retroactively for the weeks of August 1, 8, and 15.

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Kentucky is the only state giving out a minimum of $400 a week, ($300 from FEMA and $100 in state funds.) Montana did as well, but recently ran out of funds, according to the Montana Department of Labor and Industry.

According to the Arizona Department of Economic Security, Arizona has already paid out all the grant money, which lasted for a total of six weeks. Louisiana has also concluded payments as well, as reported by Louisiana Workforce Commission.

Like the $600 weekly federal unemployment bonus payments, the states' weekly $300 supplemental payments aren't indefinite, either — the maximum number of weekly payments is six, and that includes any retroactive August payments.

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