Daily Southtown

New jobless claims in Illinois fall sharply

- By Peter Hancock

SPRINGFIEL­D — Firsttime unemployme­nt claims fell sharply last week as both the state and national economies have begun gradually reopening from the COVID19 pandemic.

The Illinois Department of Employment Security said Thursday that 15,595 Illinois workers filed initial claims for regular unemployme­nt benefits during the week that ended March 20. And while that number would normally be considered high, it was down 78% from the week before. It was down 88% from the same week a year ago, at the start of the pandemic, when more than 126,000 people filed first-time claims.

That decline was in line with a national trend. The U.S. Department of Labor reported that the total number of initial claims nationally fell by more than 42,000, to 241,745.

IDES also announced Thursday that the state’s preliminar­y unemployme­nt rate dropped threetenth­s of a point in February to a seasonally adjusted 7.4% as the economy added 21,100 nonfarm jobs. Those numbers reflect activity for the week of Feb. 12.

That rate was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national rate and it was 3.8 percentage points higher than February 2020, just before the pandemic forced a shutdown of major parts of the economy.

“IDES and the Pritzker administra­tion remain committed to supporting claimants and families with the services they need as the state moves toward a full reopening and the economy begins to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic,” Deputy Gov. Dan Hynes said in a statement. “IDES continues to serve an unpreceden­ted number of claimants while working on process improvemen­ts that make navigating unemployme­nt and job-seeking services as easy as possible.”

The biggest job gains in February were in the leisure and hospitalit­y industry, which added 32,300 jobs. That sector was among the hardest hit during the pandemic because of restrictio­ns placed on bars and restaurant­s, hotels, airlines and the cancellati­on of many convention­s. Compared to a year earlier, the sector was still down by more than 185,000 jobs.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, in the week that ended March 13, there just over 225,000 Illinois workers receiving continuing unemployme­nt benefits, a 7.6% decrease from the prior week.

The agency also reported that 4,993 Illinois workers filed initial claims last week for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Insurance, the federally-funded program for gig workers, independen­t contractor­s and others who don’t qualify for regular unemployme­nt. That was down by more than 16,000, or 76 %, from the prior week.

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