Ohioans receiving unemployment benefits can expect starting mid-to-late September. The payments will be retroactive, going back to Aug. 1.
(ORA) President John Baker told ideastream those additional funds are 鈥渞eally a lifeline鈥 for many restaurant employees, whose industry has been particularly hard hit by the pandemic.
More than 585,000 Ohioans usually work in the restaurant industry, but when the pandemic hit and restaurants statewide had to close their doors, hundreds of thousands of employees 鈥 more than half the state's food service workforce 鈥 were left without jobs.
As coronavirus restrictions lifted and restaurants have been allowed to reopen over the summer, the situation improved. But Barker said roughly one-third of Ohio鈥檚 restaurant employees are still unemployed.
鈥淔or so many in our industry they鈥檙e just trying to survive until we can get back to whatever the new normal鈥檚 going to be,鈥 he said.
Even among restaurants that have been able to reopen, Baker said most are operating at 50 percent capacity to comply with social distancing rules and other coronavirus precautions.
With the outdoor dining season coming to an end soon, Baker said things are not looking good for the state鈥檚 second largest industry sector. According to a recent ORA survey, more than half of Ohio restaurant owners fear they will have to permanently close by next year.
That鈥檚 one of the reasons Jacqueline Lynum is looking for work everywhere but the hospitality industry. As she put it, 鈥測ou can鈥檛 sit out in the snow and eat.鈥
Lynum was the food and beverage manager at the DoubleTree Hotel in Downtown Cleveland for 25 years before she was furloughed in March. Lynum had been passed by Congress to provide relief during the pandemic.
鈥淚t helped me to pay off some bills because I wasn鈥檛 making [money] anymore and I was able to save some, so that now that we aren鈥檛 getting anything but the unemployment I can still meet most of my payments,鈥 Lynum said.
But those extra benefits expired in July. Lynum said unemployment is roughly half of what she made working full-time, so the additional $300 will be helpful.
For Jeana Said, an extra $300 a week would mean 鈥渁 lot of stress lifted off the shoulders.鈥
Said was a server at Market Garden Brewery in Ohio City for six years before she was furloughed in March. At the same time, schools shut their doors, which meant she had to care for and teach her 4-year-old daughter.
Working in the restaurant industry taught her to budget well, she said, which she has managed to do, though it鈥檚 been 鈥渆xtremely difficult,鈥 she said.
The additional unemployment benefits will help her family, but she knows they won鈥檛 last forever.
鈥淎t the end of the day, I can鈥檛 live off unemployment so there will be a time when I am absolutely going to have to go back to work,鈥 she said.