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 An additional 37,626 Illinoisans filed for unemployment the 
week ending July 11, bringing total job losses to 1,458,097 since COVID-19 began 
shutting down the state’s economy, according to new data from the U.S. 
Department of Labor. Despite a small decline in new initial claims, Illinois has 
so far been unable to reduce the number of workers still needing unemployment 
checks, even as other states see large drops. 
 Since the last monthly jobs report, continued unemployment claims in Illinois 
are virtually unchanged. All other neighboring states and Midwest states have 
seen a substantial decline.
 
 
 While Illinois claims remain stagnant, Ohio has seen a 47.1% decline in 
continued claims, the largest in the region. Illinois is in a distant last 
place: the second-worst state in the region, North Dakota, saw continued claims 
drop significantly more at -9.9% change from the week ending April 18 through 
the week ending July 4.
 Lockdowns hurt, as is evident from 1.45 million Illinoisans 
filing jobless claims. Most small businesses have less than two months of cash 
on hand while the median small enterprise has more than $10,000 in monthly bills 
and less than one month of cash on hand. Illinois’ small businesses employ the 
majority of Illinois workers. Allowing businesses to open again is an important 
step to save lives and livelihoods.to 
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 As new data on COVID-19 emerges, Illinois will have 
			to adapt to changing circumstances. Still, research shows the 
			sequential lift of a lockdown is the best way to mitigate both the 
			human cost of the virus and the economic damage.
 Illinois voters need to consider the potential for the COVID-19 
			economic damage to be magnified by the progressive income tax hike 
			state leaders are seeking Nov. 3. Economists argue against 
			increasing taxes during a recession. A progressive tax will increase 
			taxes up to 47% on more than 100,000 small businesses just as they 
			are trying to recover from the COVID-19 economic damage. Those small 
			businesses are responsible for the vast majority of new jobs in 
			Illinois.
 
 A safe return to work is the first step to bringing Illinoisans back 
			to work, to tackling growing racial gaps and to reviving the 
			Illinois economy. A tax increase would be a misstep.
 
			
            
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