Stock image
The following is a news release from the Idaho Dept. of Labor.
BOISE – Idaho workers laid off due to the coronavirus filed 30,904 initial claims for unemployment insurance between March 29 and April 4, a decrease of 6.2 percent from the previous week’s record level of 32,941.
The combined three-week total of claims filed since Gov. Brad Little declared a state of emergency the week of March 8 is 77,430 – an increase of 7,400 percent.
Laid-off workers of all age groups are affected by COVID-19 layoffs, with people ages 25 to 34 filing 27 percent of all claims.
Women filed 51 percent of all initial claims last week, narrowing the gender difference from the previous two weeks when they made up almost 60 percent.
Initial claims from laid-off employees in accommodations and food services, health care and social assistance, construction and retail trade represented more than half – 57 percent –of the week’s total.
Idaho industries posting the highest percentage of new claims filed over the previous week include accommodations and food services at 17.3 percent, health care and social assistance at 16.3 percent, construction at 16.3 percent, retail trade at 11.4 percent followed by manufacturing at 10.5 percent of the week’s totals.
Payouts for unemployment insurance claims for the week ending March 28 totaled $5.6 million, 86 percent higher than the previous week, and 178 percent higher than the same week, one year ago. Updated payouts from March 29 to April 4 will be available Friday, April 10.
Weekly claims by county and industry sector are available on a new data dashboard found on the department’s Labor Market Information website.
Source: eastidahonews.com

Another 30,904 people apply for unemployment in Idaho
More from CoronavirusMore posts in Coronavirus »
- Respiratory illness season begins to ramp up now. Here’s what’s already starting to hit
- Health board serving Canyon County votes to stop offering COVID-19 vaccine at its clinics
- Utah man sent to prison for selling over 120,000 fake COVID vaccine cards
- A new genetic analysis of animals in the Wuhan market in 2019 may help find COVID-19’s origin
- Children who suffered complications after COVID will not see recurrence after vaccine, study says
More from IdahoMore posts in Idaho »
- Search and Rescue looking for 2 missing fishermen on Henry’s Lake
- FBI says shooter in deadly Michigan church attack was motivated by hatred toward the LDS faith
- 2 Spokane Police officers resign amid investigation for on-duty sexual acts with domestic violence victims
- Retirees call for Idaho to restore pension’s cost-of-living adjustments
- Idaho lawmakers to partner with national conservative think tank to bring more immigration bills
More from MoneyMore posts in Money »
- Judge says contractor must give back $114,000 in ‘unearned payment’ to Rigby homeowners
- Constitutional ban on legal pot advances in Idaho
- Broulim’s takes another step toward a Victor store?
- Walmart to build more robot-filled warehouses at stores
- Stimulus checks, unemployment and more: Here’s the aid that’s coming from Washington — and what might be coming soon







Be First to Comment