U.S. Representative Rick Larsen (WA-2) issued the following announcement on June 4
During the week of May 24-30, there were 31,224 initial regular unemployment claims (down 36% from the prior week) and 774,959 total claims for all unemployment benefit categories (a decrease of 155,423) filed by Washingtonians, according to the Employment Security Department (ESD). ESD believes the continued decrease is due to a variety of reasons including fraud prevention measures and more people going back to work with the reopening of some industry sectors and regions over the past three weeks.
ESD paid out over $514.7 million for 400,352 individual claims.
Unemployment claim type | For week of
May 24-30 | For week of
May 17-23 | For week of
May 10-16 |
Regular Unemployment Insurance (UI) initial claims | 31,224 | 48,445 | 138,733 |
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) initial claims | 12,878 | 21,250 | 61,325 |
Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) initial claims | 10,176 | 19,111 | 59,630 |
Continued/ongoing weekly claims | 720,681 | 841,576 | 1,410,892 |
Total claims | 774,959 | 930,382 | 1,670,580 |
Since the week ending March 7 when COVID-19 job losses began:
- A total of 2,045,863 initial claims have been filed during the pandemic (1,280,711 regular unemployment insurance, 409,566 PUA and 355,523 PEUC)
- A total of 1,152,516 distinct individuals have filed for unemployment benefits
- ESD has paid out over $4.9 billion in benefits
- 826,123 individuals who have filed an initial claim have been paid
Weekly data breakdown
By industry
Industry sectors experiencing the highest number of initial claims during May 24-30 were:
- Health care and social assistance: 3,614 initial regular claims, down 1,699 (32 percent) from the previous week
- Accommodation and food services: 3,065 initial regular claims, down 700 (19 percent) from previous week
- Retail trade: 2,826 initial regular claims, down 1,410 (33 percent) from previous week
- Construction: 2,437 initial regular claims, down 574 (19 percent) from the previous week
- Manufacturing: 2,288 regular initial claims, down 1,373 (38 percent) from the previous week
- Management occupations: 4,383 regular initial claims, down 7,115 (62 percent) from the previous week
- Food preparation and serving: 3,169 regular initial claims, down 585 (16 percent) from previous week
- Office and administrative support: 2,804 regular initial claims, down 885 (24 percent) from previous week
- Construction and extraction occupations: 2,783 regular initial claims, down 459 (14 percent) from the previous week
- Transportation and material moving occupations: 2,343 regular initial claims, down 556 (19 percent) from the previous week
- Sales and related occupations: 2,285 regular initial claims, down 1,027 (31 percent) from the previous week
King County, the most populous in the state saw initial regular claims decrease from 14,371 to 8,974 during the week of May 24-30, down 38 percent from the week before.
Other counties with the largest number of initial claims during the week were:
- Pierce County: Initial regular claims filed decreased from 6,348 to 4,069 down 36 percent from the week before.
- Snohomish County: Initial regular claims filed decreased from 5,675 to 3,580 down 37 percent from the week before.
- Spokane County: Initial regular claims filed decreased from 2,932 to 1,973 down 39 percent from the week before.
- Clark County: Initial regular claims filed decreased from 2,182 to 1,385 down 37 percent from the week before.
During the week of May 24-30:
- By gender: 51.0 percent (15,938) of the initial regular claims were filed by males while 48.5 percent (15,148) were filed by females
- By age group: 24.9 percent (7,786) of initial regular claims were filed by the 25-34 years old age group, followed by 20.7 percent (6,461) by the 35-44 years old age group and 17.5 percent (5,465) by the 45-54 years old age group.
- By race/ethnicity: 61.0 percent (19,046) of initial regular claims were filed by Caucasians, followed by 7.5 percent (2,352) filed by Asians and 6.4 percent filed by African Americans (2,005).
- By disability status: 2.1 percent (643) of initial regular claims were from individuals identified as having a disability, including 0.1 percent (18) who identified themselves as disabled veterans.
- By veterans status: 4.9 percent (1,544) of initial regular claims were filed by veterans, including 152 initial regular claims from individuals eligible for veterans benefits due to family relations with a veteran
NOTE: ESD will send out the next weekly new claims press release on Thursday, June 11 at 10 a.m. Pacific Time.
Data disclaimer and definitions
Per U.S. Department of Labor regulations, weekly unemployment claims data is embargoed and not available for release until the Thursday following the claim week.
Initial claims include individuals who filed first-time claims as well as additional claims filed by individuals as a result of a new unemployment event. Initial claims include claims that are still being reviewed for eligibility. Counts for initial claims are not indicative of the number of claims that will result in monetary compensation.
Continuing claims equal continued weeks claimed including a total of all weeks for which benefits were claimed, even though such benefits were not paid or payment status is uncertain or unknown, e.g., waiting weeks, partial weeks, weeks for which penalties are being served and weeks for which a monetary or nonmonetary issue is pending.
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) is an emergency program established by the federal CARES Act that temporarily expands unemployment insurance eligibility to self-employed workers, freelancers, independent contractors, and part-time workers impacted by the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) is an emergency program established by the federal CARES Act that extends unemployment insurance for an extra 13 weeks to those who have exhausted their regular unemployment benefits.
Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC) is an emergency program established by the CARES Act to increase unemployment benefits for Americans who are out of work because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Under FPUC, eligible people who collect certain unemployment insurance benefits—including regular unemployment compensation—will get an extra $600 in federal benefits each week through July 31, 2020. They do not need to file a separate claim to receive this money, it is automatically added to their payment.
Original source can be found here.
Source: U.S. Representative Rick Larsen (WA-2)