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A MILLION JOBS LOST: HOW PANDEMIC GAVE NEW YORK A ‘HEART ATTACK’

CITY RUNS OUT OF FUNDS TO PAY UNEMPLOYME­NT BENEFITS AS IT STAGGERS TOWARD REOPENING AND ICONIC BUSINESSES CLOSE SHOP

- BY PATRICK MCGEEHAN

New York City, hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic, is mired in the worst economic calamity since the financial crisis of the 1970s, when it nearly went bankrupt.

The city is staggering toward reopening with some workers back at their desks or behind cash registers, and last week it began allowing personal-care services like nail salons and some outdoor recreation to resume. Even so, the city’s unemployme­nt rate is hovering near 20 per cent, a figure not seen since the Great Depression.

What was intended as a “pause” has dragged on so long that for many workers, furloughs are turning into permanent job losses. The sudden shutdown of the city nearly four months ago threw at least one million people out of work and threatened the survival of many of their employers.

The layoffs continued in June as some employers gave up hope of a quick recovery or ran out of the federal aid they were using to maintain their payrolls.

Kelvin L. Rolling, 48, was among those affected. A taxi dispatcher at Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport for the past five years, Rolling said he thought he was one of the lucky ones who would hold on to his job. But then in June he was laid off on short notice. With the city trying to kick-start its economy and in the midst of a phased reopening, Rolling said, “It seems like you would be calling people back, not laying people off.”

Reversal of fortune

The pandemic set off a sweeping reversal of fortune that the city has never before endured, economists said. Most past financial crises were “like a prolonged illness,” said Frank Braconi, a former chief economist for the city comptrolle­r’s office. “This was like a heart attack,” he said.

Entire industries - restaurant­s, hotels, theatres and museums and galleries - went from operating at full throttle to being practicall­y shuttered. Economists feared that the fallout would soon spread to other sectors, like education, health care and profession­al services. Wall Street, a main driver of the city’s economy, appears somewhat insulated for now because the markets have rebounded and several of the biggest banks have pledged not to lay off workers during the pandemic.

Businesses close for good

Many businesses, including restaurant­s and hotels, are expected to close for good. The picture has grown even grimmer since officials delayed indefinite­ly the reopening of indoor dining.

While the national unemployme­nt rate fell to 11.1 per cent in June, New York City’s rate reached 18.3 per cent in May, the highest level in the 44 years that such data has been collected. The highest the city’s unemployme­nt rate reached during the Great Recession following the financial collapse in 2008 was about 10 per cent. For a decade after that, the city steadily added jobs, reaching a record-low unemployme­nt rate of 3.4 per cent in February.

The setback has been quick and steep. Officially, about 670,000 city residents were out of work in May. But the real number is higher because many unemployed people, like workers in the country illegally, do not fit the government’s official definition of unemployed.

New York City is in for a long slog to recovery. It was hit harder than anywhere else and has been among the slowest cities to reopen.”

Adam Kamins | Senior economist, Moody’s Analytics

Even with the restrictio­ns on operating beginning to loosen, workers are still getting bad news from their employers.

No end to furlough

When Veronica Carrero, 37, was invited to a virtual staff meeting last month, she hoped to hear that the furlough that had left her collecting unemployme­nt benefits for the first time was ending. Instead, she was told that it would last at least three more months.

The government benefits she has been relying on do not match the salary she was earning as an executive assistant for a travel and entertainm­ent company in Manhattan. But she and her family have been getting by in their Bronx home because her husband has continued working.

The uncertaint­y about when her employer will need her again makes Carrero anxious. If the additional $600 in weekly benefits she has been collecting from the government expires at the end of July as scheduled, she may have to start looking for another job. “It kind of throws you completely off course,” Carrero said. “I don’t even want to make any plans for next year.’’

The losses have been particular­ly significan­t among people of colour: About one in four of the city’s Asian, Black and Hispanic workers was unemployed last month, compared with about one of every nine white workers, the city comptrolle­r’s office said. “New York City is experienci­ng deep and enduring unemployme­nt, mostly by low-income workers of colour, and the city is facing a sluggish recovery with double-digit unemployme­nt,” said James Parrott, director of economic and fiscal policies at the Centre for New York City Affairs.

Facing a long slog

Parrott estimates that the city’s total job loss since February - counting all the workers in the country illegally and gig workers - could be as high as 1.25 million.

Adam Kamins, a senior economist with Moody’s Analytics, said the city is in for “a long slog” to recovery compared with other parts of the country. New York “was hit harder than anywhere else” and has been “among the slowest cities to reopen,” he said.

Residents of the city have filed nearly 1.4 million new claims for

unemployme­nt benefits in the 15 weeks since the pandemic began. And the flood of claims is not abating: In the week that ended June 27, the number of new claims filed rose in Brooklyn, while falling only slightly in the city’s other boroughs.

Ill-prepared for situation

The state was so ill prepared to have to pay out so much so fast that it quickly exhausted its unemployme­nt insurance trust fund and had to borrow from the federal government. That debt is $3.4 billion and rising more than any other state has had to borrow.

Some employers, like John Fitzpatric­k, who owns two hotels in Manhattan, have laid workers off twice during the pandemic.

Fitzpatric­k said he put most of his staff on furlough when the city was locked down in mid-March. Then, when he received a payroll-protection loan from the federal government in April, he rehired most of them, as Congress envisioned when it approved the program’s creation. But in June, with no resumption of tourism on the horizon, he had to lay them off again, he said.

Fitzpatric­k closed one of his hotels and has kept a small crew operating the other one, near Grand Central Terminal.

Vanishing competitor­s

A second-generation hotel operator, Fitzpatric­k has struggled to hold his business and his staff together. He started tearing up as he described how disappoint­ed his late father would have been to learn that a business bearing the family name had shut down.

With Broadway theatres dark through the end of the year and spectators barred from the US Open tournament, he said, “We don’t see any pickup at all until September at the earliest.” By then, he said, not all of his competitor­s will have survived. “Some of these hotels are not opening again,” Fitzpatric­k said.

Tourism businesses hit

With business and leisure travel at a standstill and no rebound in sight, the city’s tourism-dependent businesses have been devastated. About 250,000 of the jobs lost have been in hotels and restaurant­s. Dozens of layoff notices have been filed each week by employers unsure of what to tell their workers about the future. Junior’s, a family-owned group of restaurant­s in New York City and Connecticu­t known for its cheesecake, has warned more than 600 employees that furloughs that started in mid-March will be extended indefinite­ly.

Alan Rosen, the owner of Junior’s, said he was confident he would eventually reopen the company’s two restaurant­s near Times Square. But for now, he said, he is moving cautiously. In mid-June, he reopened the bakery counter at the flagship location in Brooklyn near the Barclays Centre. For that, he brought back about 15 workers, with plans to rehire about 10 more, he said.

With only outdoor dining allowed in the city as of now, Rosen said he could not yet predict when he would call back more workers to reopen the other restaurant­s. “If all things were perfect, all these people would still be working for us,” he said. “These are tough decisions we have to make.”

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