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Nearly 14% of Tri-Cities jobs have disappeared since coronavirus restrictions started

The number of new jobless claims slowed down across the state last week, but it provides a short respite before another expected surge.

Washington had 82,435 new jobless claims for the week ending April 18, according to the latest data from the Employment Security Department. That’s down significantly from the peak of 181,975 new claims in the final week of March.

Benton County had 1,534 new jobless claims last week, down from a peak of 4,294 at the end of March. Franklin County had 673 new jobless claims, down from a peak of 1,648 at the end of March.

In the five weeks since the coronavirus pandemic restrictions took hold, 14,874 Benton residents have filed for unemployment benefits — or about 14.1 percent of workers in the county in February. Franklin County had 13.9 percent file — or 5,915 residents.

Statewide jobless claims are expected to jump for this week as the unemployment benefits program was expanded on April 19 to include more individuals such as self-employed workers.

“It is hard to imagine that the fifth highest week of claims in Washington state history could be considered the calm before the storm, but that is certainly what we saw last week,” said Employment Security Commissioner, Suzi LeVine said in a news release. “Although remaining at historic levels, the initial claims dropped last week before the tsunami of applications began this week when we launched the expanded benefit under the federal CARES Act.”

In the first 36 hours of the expanded program, the state received more jobless claim applications than the entire record-breaking week of March.

According to the data, Washington has lost a staggering 605,514 jobs since March 7.

The Employment Security Department also reported that $1.4 billion has been paid by the state since the pandemic began. About $900 million of that was sent out this week, LeVine said.

State data indicates that in the past two weeks, people in the 25 to 34 age group have taken the brunt of the job losses, followed by those in the 35 to 44 age group.

Retail trade was the industry across Washington that had the most job losses last week, followed by the health care/social assistance industry and manufacturing.

This story was originally published April 23, 2020 at 12:10 PM with the headline "Nearly 14% of Tri-Cities jobs have disappeared since coronavirus restrictions started."

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Dave Gallagher
The Bellingham Herald
Dave Gallagher has covered the Whatcom County business community since 1998. Retail, real estate, jobs and port redevelopment are among the topics he covers.
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