California's unemployment paradox: openings and joblessness

California's unemployment paradox: openings and joblessness


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Despite California’s high unemployment rate, many positions at restaurants, bars and retail stores are going unfilled — causing some business owners to fear they won’t be able to fully


reopen even when the state gives the green light on June 15. The Golden State’s unemployment rate remained unchanged between March and April, holding steady at 8.3% even as employers added


nearly 102,000 jobs, according to figures released Friday by the Employment Development Department. That accounts for 38% of all U.S. jobs gained last month — a bright spot that dims when


one takes into account that California still has the nation’s second-highest unemployment rate and has regained only 48% of jobs lost amid the pandemic. In some areas, the share of jobless


residents is actually increasing: Los Angeles’ unemployment rate shot from 11.4% in March to 11.7% in April. Nevertheless, Gov. Gavin Newsom touted the April unemployment figures as


California “continuing to lead the nation’s economic recovery,” noting that his $100 billion stimulus plan would help small businesses recover. Not all business owners were convinced.


Experts say the staffing shortage is likely due to a multitude of factors: People — especially women — dropping out of the labor force as schools and child care centers closed, fear of


contracting the virus in the workplace, some families finding that it makes more financial sense to stay on unemployment than to return to work, low-wage workers gravitating to other parts


of the state and other careers, and low wages in general. ______________ THE CORONAVIRUS BOTTOM LINE: As of Sunday, California had 3,672,963 CONFIRMED CASES (+0.04% FROM PREVIOUS DAY) and 


61,755 DEATHS (+0.1% FROM PREVIOUS DAY), according to a CalMatters tracker. California has administered 36,255,229 VACCINE DOSES, and 49% of eligible Californians are fully vaccinated. PLUS:


CalMatters regularly updates this pandemic timeline tracking the state’s daily actions. We’re also tracking the state’s coronavirus hospitalizations by county and lawsuits against COVID-19


restrictions. ------------------------- On the latest podcast episode, we talk to California’s first Latino Senator Alex Padilla about his push for citizenship for undocumented immigrants,


clean energy and infrastructure reform. Listen here, or read an overview of the conversation here. ------------------------- _A Message from our Sponsor_ ------------------------- OTHER


STORIES YOU SHOULD KNOW 1. MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR JUNE 15 It’s really happening — California is really reopening. After more than a year of wearing masks and waiting in extra-long grocery


lines due to six-foot rules, almost everything will snap back to normal on June 15, state health officials said Friday. Business capacity limits? Gone. Physical distancing requirements?


Gone. Mask mandates? Gone for fully vaccinated people in most situations, though restrictions will remain for unvaccinated people and workplace guidelines still have to be finalized. Dr.


Mark Ghaly, the state’s health and human services secretary, also said California will not create a vaccine passport, though the state is working on privacy and equity guidelines for


businesses who decide to use such a system. Californians who attend indoor events with more than 5,000 guests will be required to show proof of vaccination or of a negative COVID test — a


precaution also recommended for outdoor events with more than 10,000 guests. One area that may not return to normal as quickly: schools. The union United Teachers Los Angeles, for example,


wants Los Angeles Unified to keep mask requirements and physical distancing mandates in place when schools reopen full-time in the fall. 2. CARD ROOMS GIVE BIG TO BONTA Yes, it’s 2021, but


you can bet your bottom dollar that California politicians and interest groups are already gearing up for the 2022 election. Case in point: Of the $500,000-plus newly appointed Attorney


General Rob Bonta has raised for the 2022 election — which is already shaping up to be a closely watched race — card rooms, non-tribal casinos and their executives have contributed more than


$300,000, Politico reports. Those groups oppose a likely 2022 ballot measure that would allow tribal casinos and some horse racing tracks to conduct sports betting. Guess who’s in charge of


writing the ballot measure title and summary that many voters use to make their decisions? That’s right — Bonta. Gaming interests are also giving thousands of dollars to Bonta’s wife, Mia,


who is running for her husband’s vacant Alameda-area Assembly seat. * CAMPAIGN CONSULTANT NED WIGGLESWORTH: ““This … highlights a longtime major flaw in the initiative process, where an


attorney general can take campaign contributions from interest groups and then write the ballot label for measures that impact those interests.” A lot’s at stake in how ballot measure titles


and summaries are written. Last year, then-Attorney General Xavier Becerra was sued at least six times for the way he labeled and summarized some of the most contentious measures. 3. SF ON


TRACK TO BREAK OVERDOSE RECORD — AGAIN More than 250 San Franciscans died of drug overdoses from January to April of this year — a sizable uptick from the 181 who fatally overdosed during


the same period last year, when the city saw a record number of overdose deaths, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The scope of the city’s drug crisis dwarfs that of the pandemic: Last


year, more than twice as many San Franciscans died from drug overdoses as from COVID-19. Nevertheless, a superior court judge on Friday rejected a request from the San Francisco city


attorney to ban four people charged with drug dealing from the Tenderloin, where much of the city’s drug use is concentrated, citing the defendants’ constitutional rights. The line between


public safety and individual rights is a hotly contested one: Counties are currently debating whether to opt into a state law that would permit them to force more severely mentally people


into treatment against their will. San Francisco isn’t the only city struggling with a surge in overdose deaths. Fentanyl overdose deaths spiked 202% in San Diego County last year, prompting


the county’s public health officer to sign an order Friday that would allow the general public to administer Narcan inhalers to help reverse overdoses. ------------------------- _A Message


from our Sponsor_ ------------------------- CALMATTERS COLUMNIST DAN WALTERS: Newsom’s $100 billion “California Comeback Plan” relies on uncertain tax revenue. FUNDING PEACE: With rising gun


violence in communities of color, Newsom and lawmakers must fully invest in California’s Violence Intervention and Prevention program, argues Pastor Mike McBride, co-founder of Black Church


PAC. ENSURING WATER SUPPLY: Water agencies need to invest in infrastructure and plan for drought to diversify their water supply portfolio and increase reliability, writes Heather Dyer of


San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District. ------------------------- _A Message from our Sponsor_ ------------------------- OTHER THINGS WORTH YOUR TIME TECH BILLIONAIRES KICK-START THE


RECALL FIGHT over Gavin Newsom. // Vox CALIFORNIA NEEDS AN EXTREME WEALTH TAX, says multimillionaire. // Sacramento Bee WEALTHY PROGRESSIVES SPENDING $10 MILLION, even if it means beating


other California Democrats. // San Francisco Chronicle NEWSOM CAUGHT BETWEEN KEY DEMOCRATIC BLOCS on oil setbacks. // Associated Press NEWSOM WOULD PUT BILLIONS TO CALPERS, CALSTRS pensions.


// Sacramento Bee SAN FRANCISCO SCHOOL BOARD SLOW TO REOPEN, quick on racial issues. // Washington Post CALIFORNIA CITY APOLOGIZES FOR TREATMENT of early Chinese immigrants. // New York


Times INSIDE THE PRESIDIO FIELD HOSPITAL that never was. // Here/Say CALIFORNIA ARGUES SOBER HOME ORDINANCES ARE ILLEGAL, forcing cities to make expensive decisions. // Orange County


Register THE PEOPLE WHO CLEAN LOS ANGELES’ SKID ROW FIND NEEDLES, RATS, CORPSES — and deep gratitude. // Los Angeles Times TENT CITIES EXPLODE IN MARIN, sparking new tensions. // Mercury


News FACING A DROUGHT, CALIFORNIA’S FARMERS make hard choices. // Mercury News RUMORS FLY AFTER ADVENTUROUS WOLF GOES MISSING in California. // Los Angeles Times 12TH DEAD WHALE WASHES UP ON


BAY AREA SHORE — here’s what officials know. // San Francisco Chronicle ------------------------- _See you tomorrow._ _Tips, insight or feedback? Email [email protected]._ _Follow me on


Twitter: @emily_hoeven_ _Subscribe to CalMatters newsletters here._ _Follow CalMatters on Facebook and Twitter._ _CalMatters is now available in Spanish on Twitter, Facebook and RSS._


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