Unemployment tops 10 percent

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Russell Fox attends a job fair Thursday in New York. The Labor Department said Thursday that new jobless claims jumped unexpectedly last week. (AP photo)
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DeKALB – DeKalb County’s unemployment rate hit 10.6 percent in May, according to data released Thursday by the Illinois Department of Employment Security.

This continues a trend started in April, when unemployment in the county hit a 26-year high. The last time the county’s rate was higher was in March of 1983, when it reached 10.9 percent, according to IDES. That month, 4,294 of the 39,452 employable people in the county were out of work.

In May, the state estimated the labor force at 59,079, with 6,239 unemployed.

The city of DeKalb had a 9 percent unemployment rate in May, with 2,139 of the 23,665 eligible workers unemployed, according to state data.

The statewide unemployment rate is 10.1 and the national rate is 9.4.

DeKalb ranks 15th of the state’s 102 counties in unemployment. At the same time last year, it was 63rd, with a 5.9 percent rate.

The Rockford metro area, which includes Winnebago County and part of Boone County, had the highest jobless rate, 13.4 percent, a 1.3 percentage point increase from April and just shy of the March high of 13.5 percent.

Boone County tops the ranking list, with a 13.7 percent unemployment rate, and Winnebago County is number two at 13.3 percent. Other neighboring counties with higher unemployment rates than DeKalb were Kendall at 11.2, Ogle at 11.1 and Kane at 10.9 percent.

Boone County has been especially affected by the intermittent idling of the Chrysler plant in Belvidere.

The Chrysler plant will reopen at the end of July after most of the automaker’s assets were sold to a group led by Italy’s Fiat Group SpA, but it’s clear the area must seek out other types of high-paying jobs, said Mark Williams, executive director of Growth Dimensions, the economic development agency for city of Belvidere and Boone County.

“It’s exciting for Fiat to be a part of our community, but we certainly need to find other non-auto job opportunities,” Williams said. “But the question you really need to look at in addition to the kinds of jobs is, what’s the income of the jobs going to be?”

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