New and cumulative jobless claims by state: Numbers and shares of workers either receiving unemployment benefits or waiting for approval during the week ending June 20

State Total currently receiving or applied for regular UI Regular UI as a share of labor force Total currently receiving or applied for PUA
Alabama 161,105 7.2% 43,623
Alaska 50,972 14.8% 19,024
Arizona 236,384 6.5% 1,575,240
Arkansas 117,256 8.6% 151,814
California 3,100,298 15.9% 1,485,792
Colorado 269,599 8.5% 216,357
Connecticut 263,336 13.6% 60,229
Delaware 53,326 10.9% 10,034
Washington D.C. 74,191 17.9% 13,661
Florida 1,058,511 10.1% 0
Georgia 788,588 15.3% 0
Hawaii 140,351 21.0% 168,455
Idaho 35,688 4.0% 55,060
Illinois 751,883 11.8% 107,914
Indiana 238,150 7.0% 238,535
Iowa 162,313 9.3% 19,543
Kansas 102,942 6.9% 65,992
Kentucky 196,492 9.4% 63,312
Louisiana 317,212 15.0% 201,947
Maine 65,240 9.4% 29,356
Maryland 270,876 8.3% 530,082
Massachusetts 590,091 15.4% 500,628
Michigan 614,778 12.4% 1,128,959
Minnesota 391,691 12.5% 80,124
Mississippi 165,516 13.0% 67,884
Missouri 224,160 7.2% 96,426
Montana 44,168 8.2% 45,747
Nebraska 60,017 5.8% 26,831
Nevada 300,505 19.3% 147,006
New Hampshire 97,408 12.5% 0
New Jersey 560,402 12.3% 411,198
New Mexico 108,552 11.3% 49,865
New York 1,750,522 18.3% 1,051,625
North Carolina 551,230 10.8% 247,726
North Dakota 35,488 8.8% 8,774
Ohio 478,580 8.2% 958,818
Oklahoma 228,182 12.4% 2,784
Oregon 400,345 19.0% 2,710
Pennsylvania 814,638 12.4% 1,376,372
Rhode Island 73,070 13.1% 48,401
South Carolina 212,227 8.9% 98,416
South Dakota 17,909 3.8% 4,855
Tennessee 298,763 8.9% 105,207
Texas 1,337,440 9.4% 250,193
Utah 78,535 4.8% 14,227
Vermont 43,539 12.8% 9,407
Virginia 401,796 9.0% 236,391
Washington 486,319 12.3% 183,888
West Virginia 80,210 9.9% 0
Wisconsin 250,616 8.1% 20,428
Wyoming 17,373 5.9% 3,881

Notes: For comparisons to the size of the labor force, we use February 2020 levels. Totals reflect the number of workers whose have made it through at least the first round of processing or are waiting for their claim to be processed.

Unless otherwise noted, the numbers in this blog post are the ones reported by the U.S. Department of Labor, which they receive from the state agencies that administer UI. While the DOL is asking states to report regular UI claims and PUA claims separately, many states appear to also be including some or all PUA claimants in their reported regular UI claims. As state agencies work to get these new programs up and running, there will likely continue to be some misreporting. Since the number of UI claims is one of the most up-to-date measures we have of labor market weakness and access to benefits, we will still be analyzing it each week as reported by DOL, but ask that you keep these caveats in mind when interpreting the data.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, June 25, 2020.

View the underlying data on epi.org.