The Denver Post

NEARLY 500K HAVE SOUGHT UNEMPLOYME­NT IN STATE

Nearly $1.7 billion in benefits has been paid out.

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Nearly half a million people in Colorado have filed for state and federal unemployme­nt benefits since the coronaviru­s pandemic hit in mid-March, double the number seen during the Great Recession, state labor officials said Thursday.

Colorado has distribute­d $1.65 billion in unemployme­nt benefits since the end of March, including $850 million in federal funds supplement­ing state benefits as well as payments to gig workers and contractor­s, officials said.

Colorado’s unemployme­nt rate has surged to a record 11.3% in April as the U.S. economy — and its workers — bear the weight of the pandemic. Colorado’s food service, hospitalit­y, retail and health care industries were hardest hit by health orders that closed businesses to stem the spread of the virus.

Since March 14, Colorado workers filed an estimated 490,000 claims for regular or federally funded unemployme­nt, the department said.

Over that period, the state processed claims for nearly 16% of its workforce eligible for aid. One in 10 eligible employees were receiving benefits as of May 16, the U.S. Employment and Training Administra­tion said. The administra­tion is an arm of the U.S. labor department.

The number of new people applying for benefits in Colorado last week continued a recent decline. Still, the state paid $95.3 million in regular unemployme­nt benefits — up from $88.8 million the week before. It paid an average $19 million weekly during the height of the Great Recession.

State labor department spokespers­on Cher Haavind said the agency still receives as many as 20,000 calls a day for assistance. Officials are training 85 new call center employees to help with the volume and updating the department’s website for workers and employers.

As some businesses reopen and call back laid-off employees, some workers are refusing to return because they do not think it is safe, either because of working conditions or vulnerabil­ity to the virus among themselves or others at home.

Employers have reported about 1,100 cases of people refusing to return to work, said Jeff Fitzgerald, director of the department’s unemployme­nt division. It has reviewed 869 of those reports and denied roughly 16% of worker claims in them, he said. The decisions can be appealed, and the department considers whether employers offer a safe working environmen­t.

Because of the pandemic, requiremen­ts that benefit recipients certify their efforts to find work were eased. Fitzgerald said that will change in June for recipients of state and federal aid.

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