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Cincinnati business owners react to unemployment changes in Oho

Cincinnati business owners react to unemployment changes in Oho The struggle to find workers has put a strain on some restaurants. Their owners hope Thursday’s announcement will change that. Unemployment changes coming to Ohio in June, DeWine says By Amber Jayanth | May 13, 2021 at 11:09 PM EDT - Updated May 13 at 11:13 PM CINCINNATI (FOX19) - At the end of next month, unemployment checks in Ohio will be a bit smaller. On Thursday Gov. Mike DeWine announced that the state will stop participating in the federal program that gives an additional $300 in unemployment benefits. Meanwhile, the crowds of diners are coming back to restaurants in Cincinnati. At the Taste of Belgium, the owner tells us that they need help.

Bangladeshi community: We are suffering, too | News

MEMBERS of the Bangladesh Muslim Community are suffering too, Muhammad Rafiqul Hassan said. Typhoons Soudelor and Yutu, which battered Saipan in 2015 and 2018, affected everyone, including workers on CW-1 permit, but many were not eligible to receive any assistance from the CNMI government or the Federal Emergency Management Authority, said Hassan, speaking on behalf of the BMC. Amid the Covid-19 pandemic that has shut down the tourism industry since last year, Hassan said CWs are, again, not eligible for many federal relief programs. “We are asking the Office of the Governor, and the Office of the CNMI Delegate to the U.S. Congress to help all lawful residents of the CNMI, including CWs, who are losing jobs and income because of this pandemic.”

New Yorkers filed fewer jobless claims last week

New Yorkers filed fewer jobless claims last week But coronavirus impact remains headwind for economy FacebookTwitterEmail ALBANY The Capital Region s job market continued to show deep losses in December, according to new data released Thursday by the state Department of Labor. The number of jobs  in the five-county metro fell by 45,600, or 9.5 percent, to 434,400, from 480,000 a year earlier. Meanwhile, jobless New Yorkers filed 60,909 initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits in the week ending Jan. 16, the U.S. Department of Labor reported earlier Thursday. That was 12,212 fewer claims than the previous week. Still, claims remain near historic highs as the Covid 19 pandemic continues to take a toll on the economy. Nationally, seasonally adjusted claims totaled 900,000 last week, down 26,000 from the previous week s total, which had been adjusted downward by 39,000 claims. While the numbers were moving in the right direction, they suggest that a large number of Amer

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