IDES offices closed Labor Day
Customers
should certify; services available on Internet
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[August 29, 2012]
CHICAGO -- Illinois Department
of Employment Security offices will be closed Monday in observance
of Labor Day. All services will be available on the IDES website.
Claimants scheduled to certify for benefits are encouraged to use
the Internet.
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Regular office hours of 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. will resume Tuesday.
Labor Day is celebrated on the first Monday of September. The labor
movement created the tribute to honor the economic and social
achievements that the American worker brought to our nation. The
first celebration was in 1882 in New York City. The day was a
Tuesday. The holiday moved to Monday in 1884. Although there are
conflicting reports that the holiday began either with the
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners or with the International
Association of Machinists, there is agreement that the Central Labor
Union was responsible for the initial demonstration and picnic.
Municipal ordinances first recognized the day in 1885. New York
was the first state to propose legislation creating the holiday, but
Oregon was the first to enact a law on it, in 1887. Illinois created
the holiday in 1891. In 1894, Congress established the first Monday
in September to be the legal holiday. In 1909, the American
Federation of Labor declared the Sunday before Labor Day as Labor
Sunday. It recognizes the spiritual and educational aspects of the
labor movement.
Although IDES offices will be closed, services are available at
www.ides.illinois.gov.
People can file for first-time unemployment benefits; certify for
benefits, which is necessary to receive payment; and switch the
method of payment to direct deposit. The IDES will process customer
certifications on Monday.
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Because Monday is a federal banking holiday, the availability of
some benefit payments might be delayed. The IDES does not determine
federal banking holidays.
There are 120,000 help-wanted ads on
Illinoisjoblink.com,
the IDES employment website that links job seekers with employers.
This no-cost career resource allows individuals to create multiple
resumes that emphasize different talents and allows businesses to
search for specific skills. The keyword matching technology
increases the likelihood of a successful new hire. Illinois JobLink
emphasizes Illinois jobs, scrapes other commercial job boards and
compares favorably with private efforts that cost hundreds of
dollars for a single advertisement.
[Text from
Illinois
Department of Employment Security
file received from
the
Illinois Office of
Communication and Information]
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