Several Indiana residents filed a lawsuit against the state government after Gov. Eric Holcomb last month announced Indiana would pull out of the federal government’s COVID-19 unemployment program.
The lawsuit, which was filed last week, seeks to force Indiana to return to the $300-per-week program, which was slated to end in September. Holcomb, a Republican, said he made the decision in a bid to motivate unemployed people into finding work amid reports of staffing shortages nationwide.
Singer-Mann added that after the governor’s decision removing the extra unemployment benefits, “we‘ll have to decide which utility bill to pay, which household items to let go of,” and “we’ll have to change what kind of shampoo we use, what kind of toilet paper we use.”
Another plaintiff, Rev. David Greene, president of the Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis, alleged that his “community is dealing with enough stress and trauma.”
The lawsuit was filed on June 17 by the Macey Swanson Hicks & Sauer law firm in the Marion County Superior Court. The suit argued that Indiana law requires the state to procure federal insurance benefits to its residents and said Holcomb’s actions would hurt thousands of people.
However, the governor’s office, in a statement to media outlets last week, said it is working with the federal Department of Labor to end the program.
Indiana’s Department of Workforce Department “has timely notified impacted claimants about the state’s withdrawal from the federal programs and continues to connect impacted Hoosiers with the resources they need to gain skills and be matched with employment,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
The Epoch Times has contacted the governor’s office for comment.
Dozens of GOP-led states in recent weeks have pulled out of the federal benefits program—which was passed for the first time under the CARES Act in March 2020—with officials arguing that businesses cannot find employees to hire.
And it now appears that blue states may also be following suit.