Senate nears vote on jobless aid, housing credit

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Tempe resident Tesfai Hawggmana uses computers at a Goodwill Job Center in Chandler, Ariz., to search for a job on Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2009. Evidence of continuing high unemployment can be found at any career center across metropolitan Phoenix. The Goodwill Career Center already had a steady stream of people needing help on its opening day. (AP Photo/East Valley Tribune, Thomas Boggan)
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WASHINGTON (AP) — A major economic relief bill that extends benefits to the jobless and expands a first-time home buyer tax credit took a step forward Monday in the Senate.

The Senate took a procedural vote that effectively blocked Republicans from trying to terminate at year's end the financial rescue plan known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner can extend the $700 billion program beyond the end of the year, but Republicans say that authority should be taken away, arguing that Democrats are using unspent TARP money as a slush fund to pay for programs unrelated to financial stabilization.

They said Democrats were avoiding a tough vote on an unpopular program.

The vote on the unemployment bill was 85-2. That is well above the 60 needed to limit amendments and move the legislation toward a final vote, which is likely later this week.

The legislation, expected to win quick passage in the House once the Senate acts, contains a trio of measures backed by the administration to prevent the fragile economic recovery from backsliding and help tide people over until companies start hiring again.

—It provides up to 14 additional weeks of unemployment insurance benefits to out-of-work people whose benefits are running out. The jobless in 27 states where the unemployment rate is at 8.5 percent or above will get six weeks on top of that. Supporters argue that, despite signs of economic recovery, the unemployment rate, now at 9.8 percent, continues to inch up and 7,000 people a day are exhausting benefits.

Some 15 million unemployed are chasing 3 million jobs, said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont. Unemployment insurance "is a lifeline that many families and communities continue to need just to keep afloat."

—The $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit, part of the $787 billion stimulus package enacted last February and set to expire at the end of this month, would be extended through June, as long as buyers sign a purchase agreement by the end of April.

The proposal alsomakes available a $6,500 credit to home buyers who have been in their current residence for the past five years or more. There are also measures to help the IRS catch people trying to defraud the government.

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