The Denver Post

Layoffs spark surge in state jobless claims

- By David A. Lieb

In Ohio,

JEFFERSO NCI TY, M O.» more than 48,000 people applied for jobless benefits during the first two days of this week. The tally during the same period the prior week: just 1,825.

In neighborin­g Pennsylvan­ia, about 70,000 people sought unemployme­nt aid in a single day — six times the total for the entire previous week.

Jobless claims are surging across the U.S. after government officials ordered millions of workers, students and shoppers to stay at home as a precaution against spreading the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease.

“We’ve been getting flooded with calls,” said John Dodds, director of the nonprofit Philadelph­ia Unemployme­nt Project. “It’s going to be a big mess, a double mess: illness and unemployme­nt.”

The growing number of people filing for unemployme­nt checks raises fresh questions about whether states have stockpiled enough money since the last recession to tide over idled workers until the crisis ends. Some fear the demand for help could outpace the states’ ability to pay claims.

“Our unemployme­nt insurance fund is getting hit pretty hard right now,” said Gov. Gina Raimondo of Rhode Island, where coronaviru­s-related jobless claims accelerate­d from zero to nearly 18,000 in barely one week.

Raimondo, a Democrat, said the state needs to start replenishi­ng its fund and appealed for help from the federal government.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is proposing an economic stimulus package that could approach $1 trillion and include sending checks to Americans within a matter of weeks to help them pay for groceries, bills, mortgages and rent.

The Senate gave final approval Wednesday to a separate bill that would inject $1 billion into state unemployme­nt insurance programs.

Valerie Costa, a 41-year-old mother of two, quickly applied for unemployme­nt benefits after the Rhode Island casino where she worked as a bartender and cocktail server closed because of virus precaution­s. For now, her husband is still working.

“We’re limiting our spending. But we also really don’t know what to expect,” she said. “Most of us live through our tips, and if no tips are coming in, that makes things tough.”

The last recession led to the insolvency of unemployme­nt trust funds in 35 states that collective­ly racked up more than $40 billion of debt to keep paying unemployed workers. In many states, those debts were repaid through higher taxes on employers.

To shore up their trust funds, some states also cut the amount and duration of benefits for those who became unemployed in the future.

“States aren’t really recession-ready, because it’s so hard for people to get benefits, stay in the program, and the benefits are insufficie­nt,” said Michele Evermore, a senior policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, a New Yorkbased group that advocates for low-wage workers and the unemployed.

Jobless claims and unemployme­nt also are rising around the globe. The U.N.’s Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on estimates that fallout from the coronaviru­s outbreak could lead to nearly 25 million job losses worldwide and drain up to $3.4 trillion of income by the end of this year.

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