Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Another 74K file first-time unemployme­nt claims

Ill. lawmakers clash over reopening plan, strategies to soften virus’ financial impact

- By Jerry Nowicki

SPRINGFIEL­D — Another 3.2 million Americans filed for unemployme­nt during the week ending May 2, including more than 74,476 Illinoisan­s.

That brought the total number of insured unemployed for the week to 697,443 in Illinois, according to the U.S. Department of Labor estimates, while the total number of jobless claims since mid-March grew to 33.3 million nationwide. The numbers represent roughly 11% of Illinois’ civilian labor force and 15% of the nation’s workforce.

Last week’s 74,000 filings were fewer than the 81,000 filings the week prior, and down considerab­ly from the peak of more than 200,000 during the week ending April 4. The Illinois Department of Employment Security announced Thursday that it has processed more than 1 million claims since March 1.

“The devastatio­n this pandemic has wreaked upon our economy, the economy of the United States and that of the world, is mind boggling,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in his daily COVID-19 briefing Thursday. “The swiftness and immediacy of its economic impact has never been seen before.”

The numbers continue to grow while states around the country contemplat­e the best plan for reopening their economies as the novel coronaviru­s pandemic appears to be in the middle of a plateau.

Pritzker’s “Restore Illinois” plan, which he says is backed by science and epidemiolo­gists, has faced criticism from Republican lawmakers for moving too slowly to get the state working again.

“Until we have a vaccine or an effective treatment or enough widespread immunity that new cases fail to materializ­e, the option of returning to normalcy doesn’t exist,” Pritzker said in unveiling the plan Tuesday. “That means we have to learn how to live with COVID-19 until it can be vanquished.”

Pritzker’s plan separates the state into four regions by grouping the state’s various medical districts and sets timelines and benchmarks that must be met for a region to move into the next of five phases.

All of Illinois is currently in the second, or “flattening,” phase. The earliest a region can enter stage three is May 29, and it would have to have a test positivity rate of below 20% for 14 days, as well as 28 days without an increase in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations. Hospitals in the region would also need a 14% surge capacity.

To reach the final phase in which large events are allowed and all sectors of the economy are open, there will need to be a widely available vaccine, treatment, or no new cases of the virus.

House Republican­s on Wednesday called for a legislativ­e session to debate the merits of a more localized reopening strategy, claiming Pritzker’s plan will kill Illinois small businesses, particular­ly in the hospitalit­y industry.

“Our state cannot survive this way, businesses, the employers cannot survive this,” House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, RWestern Springs, said in a videoconfe­rence.

Democratic leaders have not yet indicated they have plans to call a legislativ­e session to address reopening. House Speaker Michael Madigan said in a statement Wednesday that the health of lawmakers, staff and the public will be paramount when deciding when to return for session.

“While I am eager to see a return to normalcy, we are talking about people’s lives, and any plan for a return to

Springfiel­d must have the health and safety of all those involved as a top priority, including the communitie­s the members represent,” Madigan said in the statement.

Pritzker has faced continued criticism from Republican lawmakers for long wait times and other reported problems with the state’s unemployme­nt filing system. While the governor said its capacity has been upped to handle an unpreceden­ted number of claims, Republican­s in the videoconfe­rence Wednesday detailed a steady flow of calls to their offices regarding issues with unemployme­nt.

Rep. Avery Bourne, RMorrisonv­ille, said one constituen­t told her she called IDES 157 times before finally getting through.

“This is really a broken, broken system,” Bourne said.

Pritzker said Thursday his office has worked to deal with years of state government disinvestm­ent in the department, which has 500 fewer employees than it did when the Great Recession hit in 2008-2009.

“This historic number of claims has also led to historic levels of benefits being paid out,” Pritzker said. “In the first four months of 2020, Illinois has paid out over $2 billion in claims. That’s $500 million more than what was paid out in all 12 months of 2019.”

Pritzker said the system was unprepared for the initial crush of claims, but staff has worked “thousands of overtime hours,” and the agency has brought on new employees and brought back retired employees, increased call center hours, updated and increased phone systems, overhauled the web platform, implemente­d an alphabetiz­ed calling schedule and brought on outside partners.

He said another 100 call center agents will be on the job by Monday, with another 100 coming down the line.

“As a result of these improvemen­ts IDES is now paying unemployme­nt benefits in a timely manner to 99.9% of clean claims,” he said. “And the majority of these claimants, approximat­ely 75%, receive their first payments within two weeks of filing.”

Also this week, IDES released new instructio­ns for independen­t contractor­s and the self-employed who may be eligible for newly-created federal pandemic unemployme­nt assistance.

Workers who believe they are eligible for the new insurance must first apply for regular unemployme­nt assistance. Receiving a denial for regular unemployme­nt benefits is a mandatory first step in determinin­g eligibilit­y for the new benefits. IDES encouraged workers to submit the regular claims before a new pandemic unemployme­nt insurance portal goes live on May 11.

If claimants receive an eligibilit­y determinat­ion of $0, they can appeal that decision by providing verificati­on of wages earned, or they can submit a claim for pandemic unemployme­nt assistance via the new portal when it opens.

Pritzker said IDES is prepared to process these claims starting Monday at a rate of 140,000 claims per hour.

 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? House Republican Leader Jim Durkin listens as Gov. J.B. Pritzker delivers his first State of the State speech Jan. 29.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE House Republican Leader Jim Durkin listens as Gov. J.B. Pritzker delivers his first State of the State speech Jan. 29.

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