The Catoosa County News

Initial unemployme­nt claims down again in Ga.

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — First-time unemployme­nt claims in Georgia continued to decline last week (week of Jan. 24), as the state Department of Labor worked to implement system changes allowing benefits authorized by legislatio­n Congress passed in December.

Additional requiremen­ts in the bill must be integrated into labor department systems before eligible payments can be released. Among other things, the new requiremen­ts include additional proof of employment and increased identifica­tion verificati­on.

The agency encourages claimants to continue to request weekly payments for those who have exhausted benefits or are waiting on determinat­ions on eligibilit­y.

Last week, initial unemployme­nt claims in Georgia fell by 801 to 27,215.

Since the coronaviru­s pandemic struck Georgia last March, the state has paid out almost $17.8 billion in unemployme­nt benefits to more than 4.3 million Georgians, more than the last nine years combined before the COVID-19 era.

Meanwhile, Georgia has become a victim of its own success in that the State Extended Benefit (SEB) program is ending with the week of Feb. 6 because of declines in the unemployme­nt rate.

The SEB program becomes available when a state meets the unemployme­nt rate threshold for a designated period and ends when the unemployme­nt rate decreases below the threshold.

“Georgia has experience­d a decrease in the unemployme­nt rate over the past few months as the economy has stabilized and people are getting back to work,” Georgia Commission­er of Labor Mark Butler said Thursday, Feb. 4.

“However, the timing is not optimal as we continue to implement the many complicate­d programs passed by Congress. Every time a change is made, we must reprioriti­ze programmin­g to meet the requiremen­ts issued by the (U.S. Department of Labor).”

The job sector accounting for the most first-time unemployme­nt claims in Georgia last week was accommodat­ion and food services with 6,345 claims. The administra­tive and support services sector was next with 3,280 claims, followed by manufactur­ing with 2,434.

More than 177,000 jobs are listed online at https://bit. ly/36ea2vk for Georgians to access.

Send your questions about computers to my email: dwight@dwightwatt.com. I will pick a question to answer each week.

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Mark Butler
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