The Standard Journal

Georgia unemployme­nt claims continue declining

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA — Initial unemployme­nt claims in Georgia are continuing to trend lower, the state Department of Labor reported Thursday, June 4.

Jobless Georgians filed 149,163 unemployme­nt claims last week (the last week of May), down more than 16,000 from the week before and the fourth decline during the last five weeks.

The labor department paid out $160.8 million in benefits last week (the last week of May), up $1.3 million from the previous week. Since March 21, when Georgia businesses began shutting down to discourage the spread of COVID-19, the state has distribute­d more an $1.3 billion in regular unemployme­nt benefits.

The agency issued more than $51 million in benefits last week (the last week of May) to self-employed Georgians, gig workers, independen­t contractor­s and laid off employees of churches and other nonprofits through the federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance (PUA) program.

During the last 11 weeks, the job sector accounting for the most initial unemployme­nt claims by far has been accommodat­ion and food services, with 595,036 claims.

The health care and social assistance job sector is next with 275,476 claims, followed by retail trade with 268,879 claims.

The wave of approximat­ely 2 million claims that have deluged the labor department during the last two months have forced the agency to divert some of its roughly 1,000 employees from their regular duties to process those claims, Georgia Commission­er of Labor Mark Butler said Wednesday, June 3. About 650 to 700 employees are working on those claims, he said.

Butler is citing the department’s unpreceden­ted workload in asking the General Assembly to spare the agency from across-the-board budget cuts Gov. Brian Kemp has ordered to help the state government weather the loss of tax revenues brought on by the coronaviru­s-induced economic downturn.

 ?? aP-elaine Thompson ?? In this photo taken June 4 a customer walks out of a U.S. Post Office branch and under a banner advertisin­g a job opening, in Seattle. The U.S. unemployme­nt rate fell to 13.3% in May, and 2.5 million jobs were added — a surprising­ly positive reading in the midst of a recession that has paralyzed the economy and depressed the job market in the wake of the viral pandemic
aP-elaine Thompson In this photo taken June 4 a customer walks out of a U.S. Post Office branch and under a banner advertisin­g a job opening, in Seattle. The U.S. unemployme­nt rate fell to 13.3% in May, and 2.5 million jobs were added — a surprising­ly positive reading in the midst of a recession that has paralyzed the economy and depressed the job market in the wake of the viral pandemic

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