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Ohio Now Denying Unemployment Benefits For Workers Who Can't Find Child Care

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The state of Ohio has not been denying anyone unemployment benefits for COVID-19 related reasons, including concerns about contracting coronavirus on the job or being ordered to quarantine. But people who are unable to find child care will no longer be eligible.

Nearly 33,000 people filed for unemployment in last week, bringing the total to well above 1.3 million jobless claims since mid-March. More than $4.1 billion in jobless benefits have been paid out – more than has ever been paid out in a year.

Ohio Department of Job and Family Services director Kim Hall said an executive order allows for benefits to continue for people who can’t telework and are in a high-risk category, are over 65, those who have evidence of a health or safety violation by their employer, and those who have proof that they had to quarantine or are caring for a family member with COVID-19.

"Refusing to return to work because of a child care issue was not included in the executive order," Hall clarifies.

Child care facilities were allowed to reopen May 31, but with limits on total number of kids and strict rules on health.

The refusal is appealable. And Hall said those workers can apply for the federal pandemic unemployment assistance program, for people who don’t qualify for regular unemployment benefits.

Ohio has paid out more than $2.1 billion in federal pandemic unemployment assistance to over 262,000 people, including 1099 employees, independent contractors and self-employed workers.