Posts Tagged ‘ohio department of job and family services’

FriMar8

Ohio unemployment rate rose in Jan.

Posted by rrichardson March 8th, 2013, 1:41 pm Post a Comment

Bowdeya Tweh reports:

Ohio’s unemployment rate rose in January to 7 percent as the number of people without work rose by 14,000 from December, the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services said Friday.

The state department said there were 399,000 unemployed Ohio workers in January based on data adjusted for seasonal swings in employment. Nonfarm wage and salary employment increased 3,800 to 5,178,800 from December’s revised figure.

Participation in the labor force was 63.5 percent in January, although it remained lower than the January 2012 rate of 64.1 percent. One year ago, Ohio’s jobless rate was 7.6 percent.

The education and health services sector had the biggest employment gain in January from December, by adding 8,000 jobs. State government employment had the biggest dip from the last month in 2012, by losing 1,800 jobs.

Nonfarm payroll employment in Ohio is up 29,100 from January 2012.

The U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics also said Friday the nation’s unemployment rate dropped 0.2 percentage points to 7.7 percent in February, which was its lowest level since December 2008. Nonfarm payroll employment rose by 236,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis from January.

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Posted in: Business, News, Ohio |

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MonJan14

Jobless benefits reduced in Ohio

Posted by rrichardson January 14th, 2013, 4:14 pm Post a Comment

Jason Williams reports:

Unemployment benefits for thousands of Ohioans have been cut back, effective Saturday – fallout from a statewide jobless rate that’s on the decline.

The maximum time of unemployment compensation dropped to 54 weeks from 63 weeks.

The state still provides 26 weeks of benefits, but federal benefits that kick in after that have been reduced from 37 weeks to 28 weeks.

The change is a result of the New Year’s Day fiscal-cliff deal that extended the federal unemployment benefits program through the end of this year.

Federal unemployment benefits are to decrease if a state’s average unemployment rate drops below 7 percent over a three-month tracking period.

In the most recent period ending in November, Ohio’s unemployment rate dropped to 6.8 percent, leading to Saturday’s nine-week benefits decrease.

In Kentucky and Indiana, the maximum time unemployment benefits can be collected remains unchanged at 63 weeks.

The state of Ohio does not yet know how many of the 157,000 people receiving unemployment benefits are affected, said Ben Johnson, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

(more…)

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Posted in: News, Ohio |

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ThuAug30

Time cut for Ohioans to get jobless benefits

Posted by rrichardson August 30th, 2012, 11:38 am Post a Comment

The Associated Press

The state of Ohio is cutting the length of time that jobless workers can get benefits.

Starting in September, the maximum weeks of unemployment compensation will drop to 63. Currently, jobless workers can get up to 73 weeks of benefits. Before April, they could get up to 99 weeks.

The Columbus Dispatch (http://bit.ly/SUCTVv ) reports that falling unemployment has triggered the reduction.

With Ohio’s unemployment rate at 7.2? percent in July, the state no longer qualifies for as many weeks of emergency unemployment benefits.

According to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, about 138,000 workers are collecting unemployment benefits. They receive an average of $300 a week.

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SatMar31

Ohio tops in job gains

Posted by rrichardson March 31st, 2012, 8:28 pm Post a Comment

Paul E. Kostyu reports:

Ohio led the nation in adding 28,300 jobs in February, beating out Texas and New York, according to figures released Friday by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Service-providing industries, which include trade, transportation and utilities, as well as government jobs, led Ohio’s gain with 21,300 jobs, according to data released last week by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services. Construction and manufacturing also were among the industries that saw gains last month.

“Wow,” said George Vredeveld, an economics professor at the University of Cincinnati, when told of Friday’s federal report.

Vredeveld said his first instinct is that Ohio’s manufacturing base “has had a pretty good heartbeat for the past nine to 10 months.” And if the numbers indicate a revival of manufacturing, “then that’s good because Ohio is obviously heavy in manufacturing.”

Manufacturing has gained 18,600 jobs since February 2011. Ohio’s unemployment rate was 7.6 percent in February, down from 7.7 percent in January.

“That’s very good news,” Rob Nichols, spokesman for Gov. John R. Kasich, said Friday. “But we have so much work to be done. We were in a very deep hole.”

Nichols said improved employment should strengthen Kasich’s hand in dealing with the Ohio Legislature. Lawmakers have been hesitant to go along with the governor’s plan to lower state income taxes while increasing taxes on energy companies tapping oil and natural gas reserves in shale deposits in the eastern half of the state.

“Over the previous decade, Ohio lost 600,000 jobs and in the last 14 months we’ve added 83,000,” Nichols said. “We have to reduce the tax burden on Ohioans.”

Ohio has led job growth in the Midwest and has been in the top five states nationally for a couple months, something Kasich points out on a regular basis.

But Vredeveld cautioned that “one or two months do not a trend make, so let’s be careful. We can be hopeful.”

Nichols said he doesn’t mind giving some credit to the national economic policies of President Barack Obama for Ohio’s job growth.

“We don’t care who gets the credit,” he said. “This is not about politics. It’s about getting Ohio back on track.”

Vredeveld said 75 to 85 percent of changes in state and local economies are influenced by national economic policy, but he said “what we’re doing in Ohio” has an impact.

“I wouldn’t discount the impact of state policy on job growth,” he said.

The Labor Department said unemployment declined in 29 states and rose in eight. Unemployment was unchanged in 13 states and Washington, D.C. Job growth was broader in January when unemployment rates declined in 45 states.

Ohio’s job numbers come on the heels of Moody’s recent upgrade of the state’s credit rating from “negative watch” to “stable.”

Nichols said it was the first time since 2007 that Ohio has had a stable credit rating from all three major rating agencies – Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch.

Nationwide, employers added 227,000 net non-farm jobs in February, just under the average of 245,000 jobs per month since December.

That has helped lower the national unemployment rate to 8.3 percent, the lowest in three years. The economy is expanding modestly, but economists expect the stronger job market will help lift growth later this year. The data released Friday may suggest that is already happening.

The Associated Press contributed.

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