The Day

Latinos have nation’s highest unemployme­nt rate, and in Connecticu­t it could be extreme

- By ANA RADELAT Ana Radelat is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2020 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. aradelat@ctmirror.org

The U.S. Labor Department reported Friday that the national unemployme­nt rate, especially among Latinos and African Americans, soared to historic heights in April because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In Connecticu­t the job loss among Latinos may have been even greater.

The U.S. Labor Department pegged the unemployme­nt rate for the nation at 14.7% in April — the highest since the Great Depression. Broken down, that was 14.2% for non-Hispanic whites, 16.7% for African Americans and 18.9% for the nation’s Latinos.

However, according to UnidosUS, the nation’s largest Latino advocacy group, the coronaviru­s pandemic has ravaged sectors of the economy where Latinos and other people of color make up a significan­t portion of the workforce. The leisure and hospitalit­y sectors are among the industries where Latino employees saw the greatest losses. They make up nearly a quarter of all workers in leisure and hospitalit­y, nationwide and an even greater proportion of the workforce in that sector in Connecticu­t: 32%.

“These (unemployme­nt) numbers are simply devastatin­g for our community and country,” UnidosUS President Janet Murguí said. “We are seeing that Latinos are bearing the brunt of this pandemic because they hold a disproport­ionate number of jobs in devastated industries such as hospitalit­y, transporta­tion and travel. And because these are often hourly or gig jobs, they do not have benefits such as sick leave and other paid time off.”

She is advocating that Congress

address the job loss discrepanc­ies in the next stimulus bill.

“The alarming rate of job loss overall among Latinos and other communitie­s in similar circumstan­ces underscore­s the need for stimulus efforts that fully include everyone,” Murguía said.

While no racial and ethnic breakdown of Connecticu­t’s jobless numbers is available — and no Connecticu­t unemployme­nt data for April will be available from the U.S. or state labor department­s until May 22 — Latino unemployme­nt before the pandemic was much greater than white, non-Hispanic unemployme­nt in the state.

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