All of those states, save Connecticut, are led by Republican governors who also have announced that their states will soon end the $300-per-week federal boost to regular state unemployment checks, saying the supercharged benefits are discouraging people from seeking work amid reported labor shortages in some industries.
“I think it’s, in one sense, a worthwhile experiment,” Brian Marks, who teaches economics at the University of New Haven, said of the return-to-work incentives. “However, one has to take into account, and one will have to do the analysis, that some people will be hesitant to go back to work because of health concerns or the absence of child care, let’s say.”
Eye on Boise: Lawmakers fail, again, to pass drop-dead bill on administrative rules
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How That Blue State Bailout Is Rescuing The Reddest States
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Lewis Center for the Arts supports research of 56 Princeton undergraduates
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VENICE – Paul Kaldy took a daring step last Oct. 15 when he opened a third Tri-Healthy store – to go along with two in Ohio – in the San Marco Building on Tampa Avenue in Venice.
“We had no plans of coming to Florida, we visited and never left,” Kaldy said. “We mention that story and I’d say at least 50% to 60% of the people they have a similar story. The come down and they visit Venice and they don’t ever leave.”
The Kaldys are among several business owners who decided to open new ventures on the island of Venice in 2020, despite the COVID-19 pandemic.