By Howard Fischer, Capitol Media Services
Published: Monday, May 3, 2021 - 4:45pm
Updated: Monday, May 3, 2021 - 5:41pm
Arizonans are going to have to start looking for work again later this month if they want to keep their unemployment benefits.
Gov. Doug Ducey on Monday rescinded an order he signed in March 2020 suspending those job-search requirements during the pandemic. That was based on not wanting to force people who were infected with COVID-19 or were caring for others with the virus to go out looking even as the pandemic was raging.
Now, effective the week of May 23, anyone wanting to keep those benefits will again have to make contact with potential employers at least four days a week.
By Howard Fischer
Capitol Media Services
PHOENIX Arizonans are going to have to start looking for work again later this month if they want to keep their unemployment benefits.
Gov. Doug Ducey on Monday rescinded an order he signed in March 2020 suspending those job-search requirements during the pandemic. That was based on not wanting to force people who were infected with COVID-19 or were caring for others with the virus to go out looking even as the pandemic was raging.
Now, effective the week of May 23, anyone wanting to keep those benefits will again have to make contact with potential employers at least four days a week.
Ducey reinstates job-seeking requirement for unemployed
Arizonans are going to have to start looking for work again later this month if they want to keep their unemployment benefits.
Gov. Doug Ducey on Monday rescinded an order he signed in March 2020 suspending those job-search requirements during the pandemic. That was based on not wanting to force people who were infected with Covid or were caring for others with the virus to go out looking even as the pandemic was raging.
Now, effective the week of May 23, anyone wanting to keep those benefits will again have to make contact with potential employers at least four days a week.
Thomas P. Kelly Jr.
He worked on award-winning documentaries before spending nearly three decades at the university.
Thomas P. Kelly Jr., an Oscar-nominated producer who served as a professor and dean of Loyola Marymount University s College of Communication and Fine Arts for nearly three decades, has died. He was 91.
A resident of Glendale, Kelly died April 7 of natural causes, his daughter Liz Kelly Barone announced.
Kelly wrote and produced the Oscar-nominated
A Space to Grow (1968), a 32-minute documentary narrated by Henry Fonda about the federally funded Upward Bound program that aims to engage students in learning to inspire them to attend college.