DannLaw, Zimmerman Law Offices file motion after state appeals Common Pleas Court ruling ordering the state to secure and distribute $900,000,000 in federal FPUC funds
Reacting to the state of Ohio’s decision to appeal Judge Michael Holbrook’s ruling in favor of thousands of Ohioans unjustly denied nearly $1 billion in Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC) benefits, attorneys from DannLaw and Zimmerman Law Offices today asked the Tenth District Court of appeals to order Governor Mike DeWine and the Ohio Department of Jobs and Families Services (ODJFS) to take all action necessary to obtain the funds from the U.S. Department of Labor and deposit them with the Clerk of Franklin County Common Pleas Court. The motion is designed to ensure that the funds will continue to be available as the state’s appeal proceeds. You may read and download the motion here: Bowling Candy 2025 02 20 Motion for Injunction WITH EXHIBITS
“Once the funds are deposited with the Clerk of Courts, they will be available for distribution to Ohioans who need and deserve them when we ultimately prevail,” Marc Dann said. “If, for some reason, our victory is overturned, the money will simply be sent back to the federal government. Given the current status of the case, what we are proposing is the most equitable path forward.”
In the motion the plaintiff’s argue that “time is of the essence and there is a compelling need for this Court to grant injunctive relief to prevent manifest injustice because federal policymakers have publicly expressed their intent to use unspent pandemic emergency money for other causes.”
“Congress is already talking about using unspent COVID relief dollars as part of a deal to raise the debt ceiling and the DOGE crew is turning over rocks to find and repurpose unspent money,” Dann explained. “The governor can preserve the FPUC funds with the stroke of a pen by signing a letter to the Department of Labor requesting the money.”
“Of course, he could use the same pen to abide by the orders Judge Holbrook issued on February 12. Even though he and the Tenth District Court ruled that the Governor has a legal obligation to secure and distribute these funds to eligible Ohioans, he continues to fight against the people he was elected to serve,” Dann said. “Because he refuses to do the right thing voluntarily, we are forced to protect our clients by asking the Court of Appeals to order him to do so.”
The motion notes that the Appellate Court has “…the power to issue an ‘affirmative injunction’ as necessary to “prevent manifest and extreme injustice where all or some part of those rights [obtained by the trial court’s judgment] will otherwise be irrevocably lost to appellee, and the appellant has little or nothing to lose.”
“That certainly applies in this case. Our clients could lose $900,000,000 while the state has no real interest in the FPUC funds and are merely the conduit that passes the money from the federal government to Ohioans,” Dann said. “The state’s continued defiance of court orders and refusal to abide by their legal obligation to secure these funds makes injunctive relief appropriate and absolutely necessary.”
In their motion the plaintiffs ask for an order that directs the Defendants to:
(1) take all action necessary to reinstate Ohio’s participation in the FPUC program from June 26, 2021 through its expiration;
(2) to take all action necessary to obtain Ohio’s share of FPUC program benefits from the U.S. Department of Labor;
(3) deposit the FPUC program benefits with the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, Franklin County Ohio, pending resolution of this appeal; and
(4) for all other relief this Court may deem just and proper.
For additional information please contact Marc Dann at 330-651-3131