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From the Worcester Telegram | Nov 15, 2009


Tips on what to do when you lose your job



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David Alpert, left, and other job seekers line up outside the Metropolitan Pavilion in New York for a Careerbuilder.com job fair. (BLOOMBERG NEWS FILE PHOTO)

 




Attachment.CHICAGO —  The shock of being laid off barely had time to set in before Jim Wessel began looking for another job. 

Released as purchasing director for a resort one Friday this fall, Wessel started phoning business contacts from his car on the way home. He tweaked his résumé over the weekend, signed up for job-related Web sites, and reconnected with old friends who happened to be recruiters. 

The loss of a job can leave you disoriented, wondering what to do first. With unemployment topping 10 percent last month and more than 15 million Americans looking for work, it’s essential to quickly address not only job options, but other money-related issues. 

“The important thing is to get yourself organized,” says Deborah Russell, director of work force issues for AARP. 

While Wessel, of Belle Vernon, Pa., took immediate action, having a plan hasn’t paid off in another job yet. But the 31-year-old has a few promising leads and knows it was important to move fast. 

“If I can acquire a job with only being unemployed for three months in this market, I’ll consider it a success,” he says. 

Here are important things to do if you get a pink slip: 

•Tap your ex-employer for assistance. Getting laid off can be so stunning that the tendency is to walk away and say you’ll figure things out on your own. But many companies offer help beyond the basic severance package, such as access to legal counsel or clients and outplacement resources. 

Human resource departments sometimes even will negotiate the terms, such as payouts for vacation time, or work with you on legitimate ways to extend your benefits, according to Heather Hammitt of the Illinois State Council of the Society of Human Resource Management. 

For example, if you’re dismissed toward the end of the month, you might be allowed to stay on the payroll until the beginning of the next one so you’re covered under the group insurance plan for another month. 

“Most organizations know that downsizing isn’t the greatest public relations move,” says Hammitt, who also is head of human resources at a bank in Ottawa, Ill. “So they know that if they help their (laid-off) employees, word will get out in the community.” 

•Register for unemployment benefits. Even if you don’t expect to be out of work for long, file for unemployment insurance benefits promptly. The sooner you do so, the sooner you’ll have that extra check to slow the drain on your savings. 

To find your local unemployment insurance agency, call the U.S. Labor Department at (877) US2-JOBS or visit the following link: www.servicelocator.org/OWSLinks.asp

To qualify, you must have been laid off, not fired, and have worked for a stipulated minimum amount of time — typically a year and a half. Once you’ve registered, you must show you’re looking for work in order to receive your weekly benefit. 

•Secure your health insurance. Don’t scrimp by forgoing health insurance. The biggest error made by laid-off workers is giving up the coverage known as COBRA, according to Jim Pogue, senior vice president of group benefits for Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America. 

“Saving by not paying for your COBRA or keeping health care for your family,” Pogue says, “can ultimately lead you into financial ruin.” 

The federal law COBRA — the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act — allows most people to stay on their former employer’s health plan for 18 months after they are let go. You will pay more for insurance than you did when you worked, since the company covered most of the premium, but you’re likely to pay less than you would for insurance you buy on your own. 

More information on COBRA coverage is available at a U.S. Department of Labor link:www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq_consumer_cobra.html

Compare COBRA costs with those of getting coverage through your spouse’s plan, if that is available. 

Also decide whether to maintain dental, life and disability insurance, or go without until you find another job; ask your ex-employer about those benefits. 

•Get career options in order. Revise your résumé, make a list of people you want to contact for job advice, and do homework on your labor market. Go to your local employment agency, and find a career center that can tell you about training and job opportunities nearby. Seek out a career counselor at your community college or elsewhere to help organize your next steps. 

Useful Web sites with job information and advice include CareerBuilder.com, Monster.com and the Labor Department’s job opportunities page at www.dol.gov/dol/jobs.htm


 

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