Daily Southtown

Unemployme­nt rate in August drops to 11%

State reports another 25 deaths related to COVID-19

- By Jerry Nowicki

SPRINGFIEL­D — The unemployme­nt rate in Illinois fell to 11% for the month of August, a decrease of a half of a percentage point from the previous month as the state added 66,000 nonfarm jobs, according to preliminar­y figures released by the Illinois Department of Employment Security Thursday.

Thatwas 2.6 percentage points higher than the national rate for the month, whichwas 8.4%, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The national rate reflected a decrease of 1.8 percentage points fromthe week prior.

The state’s unemployme­nt rate, while decreasing, was still historical­ly high, standing 7.2 percentage points above where it was a year ago.

Therewere 695,000 unemployed workers in the state for the month, a decrease of 2.9% from the previous month but an increase of 182.6% from the year prior as COVID-19 and associated economic restrictio­ns continue to affect employment rates. Nonfarm payroll employment is down by 428,700 jobs from a year ago.

From April to August this year, the labor force has rebounded 3.6%, or nearly 224,000 individual­s. That’s after a 4.6% decline from January to April, which affected 294,000 individual­s, according to IDES.

For the week ending Sept. 12, there were 27,384 initial unemployme­nt claims in the state, whichis up by 1,906 from the week prior – an increase of 7%, according to IDES. The number of continued claims, however, dropped by 8%, or 44,556, to 507,880.

The leisure and hospitalit­y industry added 16,400 jobs on the month while government added 15,900 and profession­al and business services added 9,900.

Leisure and hospitalit­y, however, had also seen the biggest drop in employment from a year ago, losing 143,700 jobs, while profession­al and business serviceswa­s second, losing 72,500 jobs.

The release of unemployme­nt figures came as the state reported another 25 COVID-19 related deaths in persons aged from their 30s to their 90s. That brought total virusrelat­ed fatalities to 8,392.

TheIllinoi­s Department of Public Health also reported another 2,056 new confirmed cases of the virus among 57,800 test results reported over the previous 24 hours. That made for a one-day positivity rate of 3.6%, which brought the rolling sevenday average to the same number.

There have now been 268,207 confirmed cases since the virus first reached Illinois, withmore than 4.9 million test results reported.

Meanwhile, Region 7 of the state’s reopening plan, which includes Will and Kankakee counties, sawits second straight day below akeymetric thatwill allow the rollback of some added mitigation measures. The rolling positivity rate dipped to 6.1% there, according to the latest figures, remaining below 6.5%. One more day below that figure and the region can go back to dining and drinking indoors at businesses, according to the governor’s office.

Region 4, which includes theMetro East area on the border of Missouri near St. Louis, saw its rate dip by a half of a percentage point to 8.4%. That’s still well above the 6.5% threshold to decrease mitigation­s, but it’s a 1.7 percentage point decrease fromthewee­k prior.

While southern Illinois’ Region 5had a rate of 6.8%, other regions ranged from 2.7% to 6%.

Hospitaliz­ations remain stubbornly flat above their pandemic lows in Illinois aswell.

While the numbers routinely fluctuate by the hundreds daily, there were 1,558 hospital beds in use by COVID-19 patients in the state at the end of Wednesday, which was roughly level from the day before. Of those patients, 359 were in intensive care unit beds and 144 were on ventilator­s.

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