Chicago Sun-Times

Illinois unemployme­nt claims drop slightly as state reopens

- BY PETER HANCOCK

SPRINGFIEL­D — The number of Illinois workers receiving state unemployme­nt benefits fell by more than 29,000 during the last week of June as many businesses resumed operations after 14 weeks under a stay-athome order brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday there were 676,338 people in Illinois receiving continuing unemployme­nt benefits during the week that ended June 27. That was 29,511 fewer than the previous week.

First-time unemployme­nt claims also fell to 45,249, a decrease of 1,027 from the previous week, but still a 463% increase over the same week a year ago, when only 8,038 initial claims were filed.

In addition to those workers who qualify for traditiona­l unemployme­nt benefits, another 32,587 Illinoisan­s filed first-time claims for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance, more than triple the number from the week before. PUA is a program funded entirely by the federal government under the CARES Act to extend benefits to independen­t contractor­s who aren’t normally covered under traditiona­l state-funded unemployme­nt.

The Department of Labor also reported figures for the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program for the week that ended June 13, two weeks earlier than the other unemployme­nt numbers. PEUC is another federally funded program that extends benefits for up to 13 weeks for people who have exhausted their statefunde­d benefits. That was down 15% from the week before.

First-time PEUC claims during that week in mid-June totaled 32,604, a decrease of 14% from the prior week.

Last Friday, Illinois entered Phase 4 of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s reopening plan. That allowed many retail establishm­ents to reopen. Bars and restaurant­s also were allowed to open for indoor dining while schools were allowed to reopen for in-person summer learning programs, all subject to capacity limits and social distancing requiremen­ts.

Nationally, just more than 1.4 million Americans filed first-time claims during the final week of June, an 8.2% decrease from the week before. The Department of Labor reported a seasonally adjusted 19.3 million Americans receiving continuing jobless benefits, an increase of 55,000 from the week before, while the national unemployme­nt rate for the week held steady at 13.2%.

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