Business & Tech
Banning, Beaumont Unemployment Rates Continue To Improve
Figures were released Friday by the California Employment Development Department.

PASS AREA, CA — With expansion in most sectors of the regional economy, Banning and Beaumont saw unemployment rates fall last month, according to figures released Friday by the California Employment Development Department.
Beaumont's jobless rate in April, based on preliminary EDD estimates, was 3.1 percent, compared to 3.6 percent in March. In Banning, April's rate was 4.4 percent, compared to 5.3 percent in March.
According to the state figures, the April rate in Banning was more than six percentage points lower than the year-ago level when unemployment stood at 10.5 percent in this city, as California's coronavirus public health restrictions were gradually eased. Beaumont's jobless rate a year ago stood at 7.2 percent.
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Overall, Riverside County's April unemployment rate was 3.8 percent, compared to 4.3 percent in March. One year ago, countywide unemployment stood at 8.1 percent.
About 43,300 county residents were recorded as out of work in April, and 1,108,000 were employed, according to the EDD.
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Coachella had the highest unemployment rate countywide last month at 8.3 percent, followed by Cherry Valley at 7 percent, Mecca at 6.1 percent, Hemet at 5.9 percent and Rancho Mirage at 5.7 percent.
The combined unemployment rate for Riverside and San Bernardino counties in April was also 3.8 percent, and also down from 4.3 percent in March.
Bi-county data indicated that payrolls expanded by the widest margins in the hospitality and professional business services sectors, which added a combined 6,600 jobs in April.
Additional gains were documented in the agricultural, construction, financial services, health services, government and manufacturing sectors, which altogether swelled by 6,400 positions in April, according to the EDD.
The agency said the information technology and mining sectors, as well as miscellaneous unclassified industries, were unchanged.
Payrolls contracted by a total 2,800 jobs in trade, transportation and utilities — the second consecutive month of losses in that sector, according to figures.
The statewide non-seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate in April was, like the Inland Empire, 3.8 percent.
—Patch editor Toni McAllister and City News Service contributed to this report.
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