The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sorting jobless claims a 'massive task'

More than 2 million applicatio­ns handled since mid-March.

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

Georgia’s jobless ranks continue to surge, despite a shelter-in-place order that expired at the end of April.

The state Department of Labor processed 165,499 initial jobless claims last week, with many businesses continuing to lay off workers even as others reopen amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More than 2 million claims seeking unemployme­nt benefits have been handled since mid-March. Tho u gh that includes duplicates, mistakes and some outright attempts at fraud, nearly half the claims have been judged as valid by authoritie­s.

“It is a massive task that we are undertakin­g right now,” said Mark Butler, state labor commission­er.

Starting in late March, that wave of claims overwhelme­d a staff set up to handle a low-unemployme­nt economy. Many thousands of jobless Georgians waited weeks for their applicatio­n to be handled and for

payments to start.

The department knows many are still waiting.

Some processing can be automated, but many tasks must be done by a staff member, Butler said. “The unemployme­nt system is not meant to pay people quickly; it is meant to pay people carefully.”

Despite the addition of extra workers — retirees, contractor­s and interagenc­y transfers — the department has not come close to eliminatin­g the backlog.

“If a claim is perfect, if there’s no issue, if the employer is in agreement, you are probably talking realistica­lly about 30 to 35 days right now,” Butler said.

And for many, the delay has been even longer.

Rico Blalock of Peachtree City filed in March after being laid off from his job as a waiter at a local branch of a restaurant chain. The 21-year-old student said his claim was delayed partly because his former bosses listed his address as his Kennesaw State dorm.

But fixing that has not resulted in a payment.

In the meantime, Blalock has depleted his savings and moved back in with his mother.

“I feel lost in the system,” he said.

That system is one of the least generous in the country, according to the U.S. Labor Department. But since March 21, Georgia has paid about $1.1 billion in state benefits, in addition to passing along federal emergency payments to workers.

Those payments have trimmed 35% from the state’s trust fund that pays those benefits.

The department has also issued about $3 billion in payments from several federal emergency programs.

Since Gov. Brian Kemp lifted many restrictio­ns at the end of April, many businesses have reopened, including some restaurant­s, which means some workers being recalled. However, even many of the open businesses must stick to social distancing protocols, which can mean fewer customers and a thinner staff.

Nationally, about 2.1 million initial unemployme­nt claims were filed last week, down 323,000 from the previous week.

In a separate report also issued Thursday, the state Department of Labor said that metro Atlanta had lost a stunning 293,800 jobs last month while the official unemployme­nt rate jumped to a record 12.7%.

That job loss was nearly five times as high as the previous worst, suffered during the harshest month of the Great Recession in 2009.

That figure does not include residents who have dropped out of the labor force altogether. Atlanta’s labor force fell last month by nearly 200,000, according to the Department of Labor.

And the continued flood of jobless claims virtually guarantees that May’s numbers will be even worse.

Employment in the region during April was 400,626 below the level of a year earlier, a retreat that takes Atlanta back to the jobs levels of mid-2015.

The statistics are grim, but the situation is temporary, said Butler. “I am going to go out on a limb and say that we are going to recover faster than most states.” Job openings are up, he said. However, some cuts — including budget-balancing cuts to public employees — are still on the horizon.

Butler said he is asking that his department be spared from layoffs, which would only delay payments for thousands of Georgians who are already jobless.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Even as some places have closed amid the pandemic, others are opening and hiring, such as the new Nuts ’n Berries Decatur, where Karon Ford works on organizing the produce Tuesday before its soft opening in the former Rainbow Natural Foods location.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Even as some places have closed amid the pandemic, others are opening and hiring, such as the new Nuts ’n Berries Decatur, where Karon Ford works on organizing the produce Tuesday before its soft opening in the former Rainbow Natural Foods location.
 ?? SOURCES: GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS ??
SOURCES: GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Owner Mari Geier works on inputting inventory Tuesday at her new store, Nuts ’n Berries Decatur, before its soft opening in the former Rainbow Natural Foods location. The store is a second location of its Brookhaven counterpar­t.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Owner Mari Geier works on inputting inventory Tuesday at her new store, Nuts ’n Berries Decatur, before its soft opening in the former Rainbow Natural Foods location. The store is a second location of its Brookhaven counterpar­t.

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