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Four states in the Mountain West are opting out of the federal government s $300-a-week pandemic unemployment compensation.
The Republican governors of Idaho, Utah and Wyoming announced their decisions this week. They follow Montana, which last week became the first state in the nation to drop the unemployment supplement that the American Rescue Plan extended into September.
The governors cite labor shortages and point to their state s low unemployment rates. The added payments will end in the second half of June.
Because of positive job growth, we will be discontinuing the federal unemployment programs tied to the pandemic as part of the federal stimulus package.
Published May 13, 2021 at 9:43 AM MDT Listen • 5:13
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The Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday that the Logan and Cache County area has achieved Clean Air Act standards for fine particulate pollution for the first time since 2008. This story and more in the Thursday morning news brief.
Thursday morning, May 13, 2021
State
Will Ending Federal Pandemic Benefits Get People Back To Work?
Utah announced Wednesday it will opt out of federal pandemic-related unemployment benefits, joining Wyoming, Idaho and Montana in doing so. Gov. Spencer Cox said in a statement the market should not be competing with the government for workers. Jason Shogren, an economist at the University of Wyoming, said ending the extra $300 in assistance will no doubt encourage some people to go back to work, but it will make things more difficult for others like single parents who need childcare to return to jobs.
In a statement, Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon said, “Incentivizing people not to work is just plain un-American.
Jason Shogren is an economist at the University of Wyoming. He said ending the assistance will no doubt encourage some folks to return to jobs, but for some, it will make things a lot more difficult. I can imagine single parents who have not had to look for childcare this past year because they ve been home and getting unemployment, it s going to be a double whammy on them, he said.
Shogren said raising wages would also encourage more hiring but would likely have other reverberations in the economy.
April 20, 2021
A mule deer buck makes its fall migration in western Wyoming. (Emilene Ostlind Photo)
A new interdisciplinary study led by University of Wyoming researchers brings together approaches from ecology, economics and law to explore emerging big-game migration corridor conservation strategies meant to protect the phenomenon of migration across vast and complex landscapes.
The research was published in the Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum under the title “Where the Deer and the Antelope Play: Conserving Big Game Migrations as an Endangered Phenomena” and can be found for free online at https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/delpf/vol31/iss1/2/.
The law review article provides detailed information about migration ecology and economic principles relevant to conserving migrations, before examining the successes and shortcomings of existing legal and policy efforts. Finally, the paper outlines a potential future legal approach with promise to both meet the biological needs