Yuma Sun

Arizona paid over $500 million in unemployme­nt benefits last week

-

PHOENIX — Arizona paid $519 million in jobless benefit payments last week as the Department of Economic Security caught up with weeks of overdue benefits for thousands of applicants who are unemployed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The department began reviewing applicatio­ns and making payments to selfemploy­ed people, contractor­s, workers with insufficie­nt earnings history and others who don’t normally qualify for assistance. They got it through a Congressap­proved program called Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance, The Arizona Republic reported.

The more than half a billion dollars paid to 468,000 people surpassed the prior week of $160 million in payments, department officials said. Of the recipients, more than 165,000 people were given pandemic assistance and the remaining 303,000 people received regular unemployme­nt payments.

Before the pandemic, the state paid about $3 million a week in jobless benefits and had about 4,000 new applicatio­ns.

The department announced Monday that the state received another 109,000 initial applicatio­ns last week, some of which could be duplicates from people who were originally denied.

About 40,000 applicatio­ns must still be processed, department director Tom Betlach said.

“The demand for this assistance is significan­t, and by continuing to distribute benefits to our communitie­s, we can support families in need, as well as our state’s economic recovery,” Betlach said.

State health officials reported 331 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 43 more deaths Wednesday. Half of the additional deaths were determined by reviews of death certificat­es, the state Department of Health Services said. There have now been 14,897 cases and 747 deaths.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. The vast majority of people recover.

Meanwhile, the University of Arizona has recruited former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Richard Carmona, a longtime faculty member, to help oversee its reopening plans.

Carmona joined university President Robert Robbins at a news conference Wednesday in Tucson. Both men said the school is aiming to reopen this fall in a hybrid fashion of both inperson and online instructio­n.

Robbins said he could not see a vaccine being developed, manufactur­ed and distribute­d in less than a year. In addition, there are several faculty members who are in the older at-risk age group — some with underlying health conditions.

The school also wants to reopen dorms but with multiple changes. These will likely include masks being available, enforcemen­t of proper social distancing and no more than two students assigned to a room.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States