29 Results
filtered by...
Filter
View Types > Datasets
Sort
Sort by Most Relevant
Filter
Categories
- Disability Insurance
- Employment Projections
- Industry Information
- Labor Force and Unemployment Rates
- Regional Economic Profiles
- Unemployment Insurance
- Wages
Tags
- 2016-2026
- 2018
- 2018-2028
- 2028
- additional claims
- average weekly benefits amount
- awba
- benefits paid by county
- bonding claims
- ca sub-county areas
- ca unemployment rate
- calvaveras
- care claims
- cartographic boundary
- claimants by county
- claimants exhausted benefits
- continued claims
- counties
- disability
- entry-level education
- exhausted claims by county
- exhausted claims by county (all programs)
- fastest growing occupations in sacramento
- fed-ed bx by county
- first claims
- fund balance
- industry sectors visualization
- initial claims by county
- insurance
- insured unemployment rate 13 week average
- labor force participation
- labor force participation by age group
- labor market information
- lfpr
- local workforce development area
- local workforce investment areas
- lwda
- md
- median annual wage
- median hourly wage
- metropolitan statistical area
- mother lode
- mother lode region
- new claims
- north coast
- north coast region
- north valley
- north valley region
- not seasonally adjusted
- occupational employment and wage statistics
- occupations
- paid family leave
- pfl
- regional economic analysis profiles
- regional economic markets
- regional planning units
- rpu
- seasonally adjusted
- short
- short-term
- total projected job openings (2018-2028)
- unemployment insurance
- unemployment rate by age ranges
- unemployment rate demographics
- unemployment rates
- us unemployment rate
- weekly benefit
- wioa
- workforce development areas
- workforce development board
- 2020
- 2020-2030
- 2022
- 2022-2024
- 2024
- 2030
- anaheim-santa ana-irvine
- annual average
- average duration
- average weekly benefits
- benefit amount
- ca labor statistics
- di
- eastern sierra region
- hanford-corcoran
- msa
- northern mountains
- ui benefits
- weekly ui claims
- bakersfield
- benefits paid
- chico
- el centro
- initial claims
- kern
- kings
- los angeles
- los angeles-long beach-glendale
- marin
- modesto
- oakland-hayward-berkeley
- orange
- oxnard-thousand oaks-ventura
- redding
- salinas
- san diego
- san diego-carlsbad
- san joaquin
- san luis obispo-paso robles-arroyo grande
- san rafael
- santa barbara
- santa cruz-watsonville
- santa maria-santa barbara
- santa rosa
- sonoma
- stanislaus
- stockton-lodi
- tulare
- unemployment insurance claims
- vallejo-fairfield
- ventura
- weeks compensated
- alameda
- butte
- calaveras
- contra costa
- monterey
- riverside-san bernardino-ontario
- sacramento--roseville--arden-arcade
- san francisco-redwood city-south san francisco
- san jose-sunnyvale-santa clara
- san luis obispo
- santa cruz
- shasta
- solano
- sutter
- visalia-porterville
- yuba
- yuba city
- amador
- colusa
- del norte
- el dorado
- glenn
- humboldt
- imperial
- inyo
- lake
- lassen
- mariposa
- mendocino
- modoc
- nevada
- placer
- plumas
- riverside
- sacramento
- san benito
- san bernardino
- san francisco
- san mateo
- sierra
- siskiyou
- tehama
- trinity
- tuolumne
- yolo
- alpine
- merced
- mono
- napa
- fresno
- madera
- oews
- oews survey
- santa clara
- bachelor's degree
- doctoral or professional degree
- master's degree
- no degree
- sacramento area in-demand jobs
- some college
- top annual job openings
- top jobs in sacramento metropolitan area
- employment projections
- growth estimate
- occupation
- average wages
- covered employment
- es-202
- establishments
- qcew
- total wages
- 2015
- 2015-2017
- long
- long-term
- industry
- projections
- occupational employment statistics
- oes
- oes survey
- current employment
- industry employment
- industry title
- series code
- labor statistics
- ces
- bls
- local area employment statistics
- local area unemployment statistics
- unemployment rate
- labor force
- laus
- unemployment
- forecast
- outlook
- wages
- employment
29 Results
filtered by
View Types > Datasets
Clear All
Short-term Industry Projections for a 2-year time horizon are produced for the State to provide individuals and organizations with an insight into future industry trends to make informed decisions on employment opportunities and organizational program development. Short-term projections are revised annually. Data are not available for geographies below the state level, including labor market regions. Data is based on second quarter averages and may be subject to seasonality. Detail may not add to summary lines due to suppression of confidential data.
Updated
February 28 2023
Views
7,625
The monthly summary report is intended to provide the user with a quick overview of the status of the UI system at the national and state levels. This summary report contains monthly information on claims activities and on the number and amount of payments under State unemployment insurance laws. This data is used in budgetary and administrative planning, program evaluation, and reports to Congress and the public.
Updated
February 15 2023
Views
7,079
Dataset
Benefits Paid is the total dollar amount claimants were qualified to receive within a given month. These figures include only Regular UI, and exclude any Federal/Military claims and extensions.
Tags
benefits paid
Updated
August 8 2023
Views
6,101
∙ The data provided is the amount of Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits paid to claimants.
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
Updated
February 8 2023
Views
4,346
"∙ The data provided is the number of Unemployment Insurance (UI) claims that have exhausted, regardless of the program. The data includes exhaustion counts for the regular UI and the federal extended programs. The data counts the number of individuals who ran out of benefits in a specific program who may or may not qualify for additional benefits. For example, individuals who have exhausted a regular UI claim may qualify for a federal extension. Individuals who have exhausted all available benefits are also included in the data. The data is representative of those claims that were processed during the month and does not necessarily represent the month the final payment was made in. For example, if a claimant is entitled to benefits for the week-ending January 30, 2010, the claim might not get processed until early February and that count would display in the February data. There are a small percentage of claimants that could go back onto a training extension even after exhausting their FED-ED claim.
"
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
∙ Data may include multiple counts for the same individual. For example, a claimant could have exhausted their Regular UI claim in January and then exhausted their EUC Tier I claim in June.
"
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
∙ Data may include multiple counts for the same individual. For example, a claimant could have exhausted their Regular UI claim in January and then exhausted their EUC Tier I claim in June.
Updated
February 8 2023
Views
4,247
Initial Claims by County (all programs) - The number of claims submitted for all UI programs. Initial claims totals are not representative of the number of individuals filing as a claimant can have multiple initial claims.
∙ Initial Claims by County - The data provided is the number of Unemployment Insurance (UI) initial claim counts, which includes new claims, additional claims, and transitional claims.
• A "new claim" is the first claim for a benefit year period (e.g., for the regular UI program it is 52 weeks). An individual would only have one new claim during a benefit year period.
• An "additional claim" is when another claim is filed during the same benefit year and there is intervening work between the current claim and the previous claim. For example, an individual files a new claim, goes back to work, gets laid off and files another claim before the benefit year period of the first claim expires. An individual can have multiple additional claims during the same benefit year if the individual meets the eligibility requirements.
• A "transitional claim" is when a claimant is still collecting benefits at the end of their benefit year period and had sufficient wage earnings during that year to start up a new claim once the first benefit year period ends.
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
"∙ Initial claims does not represent total individuals as an individual can have multiple claims. For example, someone may begin collecting UI benefits, then go off UI to return to work, then get laid off and go back on UI. In this example, the individual would have
two claim counts. "
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
∙ Initial Claims by County - The data provided is the number of Unemployment Insurance (UI) initial claim counts, which includes new claims, additional claims, and transitional claims.
• A "new claim" is the first claim for a benefit year period (e.g., for the regular UI program it is 52 weeks). An individual would only have one new claim during a benefit year period.
• An "additional claim" is when another claim is filed during the same benefit year and there is intervening work between the current claim and the previous claim. For example, an individual files a new claim, goes back to work, gets laid off and files another claim before the benefit year period of the first claim expires. An individual can have multiple additional claims during the same benefit year if the individual meets the eligibility requirements.
• A "transitional claim" is when a claimant is still collecting benefits at the end of their benefit year period and had sufficient wage earnings during that year to start up a new claim once the first benefit year period ends.
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
"∙ Initial claims does not represent total individuals as an individual can have multiple claims. For example, someone may begin collecting UI benefits, then go off UI to return to work, then get laid off and go back on UI. In this example, the individual would have
two claim counts. "
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
Updated
January 30 2023
Views
4,186
∙ The number of claimants is based on the number of individuals that certified for Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits specifically for the week containing the 12th of the month. For example, the March 2010 figures are based on the number of claimants that submitted a continued claim form to receive UI benefits specifically for the week beginning March 7th through March 13th. Data for the survey week is not available until approximately two months past the survey week (e.g. March 2010 figures were not available until May 2010).
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ The data by month is not additive as individuals can receive benefits in multiple months.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
∙ The data by county represents the mailing address given by the claimant at the time of filing for UI. It is possible that an individual can reside in a different county than their mailing address. Also, this information does not represent the county where the individual worked. It is also possible that a claimant could have moved or changed their mailing address after filing for UI which would not be reflected here. Data for claimants residing outside of California but collecting benefits are not included in these figures nor are invalid addresses in California where a county cannot be determined.
∙ The data by month is not additive as individuals can receive benefits in multiple months.
∙ Data includes the regular UI program and the federal extended benefit programs. The Federal extended benefit programs are:
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 - California began paying benefits in July 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 2 - California began paying benefits in January 2009, payments retroactive to November 2008.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 3 - California began paying benefits in December 2009, payments retroactive to November 2009.
∙ Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 4 - California began paying benefits in January 2010, payments retroactive to December 2009.
∙ FED-ED - California began paying benefits May 2009, payments retroactive to February 2009.
Tags
claimants by county
Updated
January 30 2023
Views
4,054
The 13 week average IUR is calculated using data from the current week, plus 12 weeks prior to the current week. This 13-week average IUR is used by the Department of Labor to determine if states will become eligible for specific Federal extensions.
Updated
August 8 2023
Views
3,680
A Week Compensated is any week in which a claimant receives benefits from the department. These figures include only Regular UI, and exclude any Federal/Military claims and extensions.
Tags
weeks compensated
Updated
August 8 2023
Views
3,296
Showing 21 to 29 of 29 results