This week, he and other workers are stepping in to hear food supplies for fellow workers in need – right in front of the offices of key U.S. senators who are opposed to expanding unemployment benefits.
The proposed bill would extend the incentive measures of the CARES law that were introduced in the spring, including the moratorium on eviction. Each of those senators is up for re-election in November.
In Atlanta, Davis will join dozens of airport workers on Tuesday in setting up a soup kitchen outside the office of Kelly Loeffler, the junior Republican senator from Georgia. Similar demonstrations are planned in Denver, Phoenix, Houston, Charlotte and Austin.
Reality check on here
Davis says he received a letter from the owners of his building, Braden Fellman Group LTD, informing him that he had one day to pay his rent in full, along with a late fee, before the company went ahead with it. evacuating him.
“I’m still talking to her about a payment arrangement,” Davis told CNN Business on Sunday. “They will really have to come to do a reality check with what is happening in our society.”
On Monday, Braden Fellman-co-owner Andrew Braden told CNN Business the letter Davis received was just an automated warning sent to tenants who did not pay rent within a four-day grace period. Braden agreed to talk to Davis over the phone to pick up the case.
“I’ve talked to a lot of employers across Georgia who are having a hard time getting people back to work,” Loeffler told Fox Business last month. “We need to remove that incentive not to be at work. … I see no great need to extend federal unemployment insurance.”
Loeffler’s office on Monday said she needed more time to respond to a request for comment on the soup kitchen set up outside her office on Tuesday.
“I think it’s the height of hypocrisy that these same senators are willing to give billions to companies, but a poor worker who gets $ 600 is too much,” Taylor told CNN Business on Sunday.
The ripple effects of declining to prolong unemployment could cost Americans more in the long run.
Taylor estimates that at least 80% of its members, most of whom are people of color, are still out of work. The majority of them relied on the $ 600 weekly unemployment checks they received through the CARES Act for Income.
“You’ll have an incredible increase in homelessness,” Taylor told CNN Business. “You’ll have people transferring public hospitals because they do not have health insurance, which means the taxpayers are paying for it. I think we have a situation of extreme poverty in large parts of the community that the schools will affect I do not know how [HEROES Act opponents] think that this will not affect their schools, their hospitals, their lives. “
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