Coronavirus
Alabama Unemployment Claims Top 330K Since Coronavirus

Alabamians filed 331,670 unemployment claims in a four-week period that began in mid-March, the Alabama Department of Labor said Thursday.
During the week of April 12-18, 66,432 initial unemployment claims were made, with 59,527 of those related to loss of work because of the coronavirus, according to ADOL.
Manufacturing jobs accounted for 9,770 of those claims, followed by accommodations and food services with 6,685 and retail trade with 5,540. Health care and social assistance accounted for 5,367 of the claims.
Jefferson County saw the largest number of initial claims with 9,611, followed by Mobile County with 6,708, Madison County with 4,528, Montgomery County with 3,479, and Baldwin County with 3,221.
Around the Birmingham/Tuscaloosa/Black Belt region, Tuscaloosa County reported 3,033 claims; Shelby County, 1,832; Walker County, 724; Fayette County, 131, Pickens County, 162; Bibb County, 292; Hale County, 277; Perry County, 101; Greene County, 119; and Sumter County, 110.
In east Alabama, Calhoun County had 2,436 claims; Etowah County, 1,661; St. Clair County, 1,303; and Talladega County, 1,866.
In the Tennessee Valley area, Morgan County had 1,373 claims; Limestone County, 816; Lauderdale County, 1,115; Colbert County, 700; Franklin County, 275; Lawrence County, 239; Marshall County, 239; Jackson County, 698; and DeKalb County, 660.
As unemployment claims continue to roll in, the ADOL is reminding claimants that in order to stay eligible for benefits, those who have been placed on a temporary layoff related to the COVID-19 pandemic must return to work if called back.
Anyone who does not return to a job when work is available could be considered a “refusal of work” and could disqualify claimants from receiving unemployment insurance benefits.
“It’s important for workers to know that if their employer reopens or otherwise calls them back to work, they must do so, unless they have a good work-related cause for not returning,” said ADOL Secretary Fitzgerald Washington. “Quitting work without good cause to obtain additional benefits under the regular unemployment program or CARES Act programs qualifies as fraud.”
The federal CARES Act provides some unemployed people an additional $600 a week in unemployment through July.
The CARES Act provides for consequences for fraudulent cases including fines, confinement, and an inability to receive future unemployment benefits until all fraudulent claims and fines have been repaid. Employers are encouraged to use the New Hire system to report employees who fail to return to work. Information about the New Hire System can be found at labor.alabama.gov/nh/new-hire.aspx.