RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — More than 100,000 Virginians filed unemployment claims in the past week, new data released Thursday by the U.S. Department of Labor shows. It’s a significant drop from the nearly 150,000 from a week before but still a massive number compared to filings before the coronavirus outbreak.
Overall there have been more than 415,000 claims filed in the last month, which is about 9% of the state’s workforce.
The new figures come amid growing unhappiness from Republican lawmakers and others with Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam’s plans to keep non-essential businesses closed through May 8.
Some Republican leaders have urged Northam to release a schedule to allow businesses to reopen as soon as possible and a few dozen people gathered peacefully near the governor’s mansion in Richmond on Thursday afternoon to protest closures and social distancing measures.
“Hundreds of thousands of Virginians are hurting right now. They’re scared, and they need something to hold on to … They need to know that there’s a light at the end of the tunnel, that this nightmare is going to end,” House Republican Leader Todd Gilbert and other House Republicans said in a statement.
Others said many Virginia businesses will not survive an indefinite closure. Nicole Riley, the Virginia director of the National Federation of Independent Business, said her members understand the need for caution but also require advance notice on when they can start operating again.
“We need a date and we need a date certain,” she said.
Outside the Executive Mansion Thursday, some protesters sat quietly on chairs or picnic blankets while others held signs, and one pocket of demonstrators chanted, “End the lockdown. Northam must go.” Most were not wearing masks.
Tara Thessen said the number of deaths in Virginia, which had climbed to just over 200 on Thursday — did not justify the restrictions implemented on a state of about 8.5 million people.
“I think we need to reopen. We need people to be working,” said Thessen, a 42-year-old from Rockville who brought her four young children.
Northam’s spokeswoman, Alena Yarmosky, said in a statement that the governor, who is a doctor, will “continue to make decisions based in science, data, and public health.”
“He is grateful to the millions of Virginians who are taking this seriously and working together to protect themselves, their families, and their communities,” she said.
The crowd, which organizers said in a press release was expected to be in the thousands, was roughly the same size as the police and press there to cover it on a sunny, warm spring day.