Advertisement“This change is required by state law that was passed in 2003,” said Matthew Kitsos, a spokesperson for the state labor department.Get Starting PointA guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.The statewide jobless rate without seasonal adjustments was 5 percent in March. Unemployment adjusted for seasonal factors, the more commonly reported figure, which was 4.4 percent last month, the highest since October 2021.The change is unwelcome news for local employers, who finance unemployment benefits through payroll taxes. Massachusetts has among the most generous jobless programs in the country and is the only state to allow recipients to collect 30 weeks of payments.“The cracks in our broken unemployment insurance system are now becoming chasms,” said Christopher Carlozzi, Massachusetts state director for the National Federation of Independent Business. “This is yet another example of the commonwealth’s outlier policies compounding a worsening UI crisis.”AdvertisementBusinesses are already paying back nearly $5 billion in federal money, including $2.1 billion that was improperly used for state benefits, an error made by the Baker administration. The state estimates that the unemployment insurance trust fund will be insolvent by 2028.Governor Maura Healey has asked Labor Secretary Lauren Jones and Matthew Gorzkowicz, her secretary of administration and finance, to conduct a review of the unemployment program’s solvency and suggest reforms. The administration will work with business and labor organizations as part of that review.Here are the 12-month average unemployment rates, seasonally unadjusted, for metros across the state.Amherst Town-Northampton – 3.9 percentBarnstable Town – 4.9 percentBoston-Cambridge-Newton (includes part of southern N.H.) – 3.8 percentPittsfield – 4.1 percentProvidence-Warwick, R.I. (includes parts of southeast M.A.) – 4.8 percentSpringfield – 5.2 percentWorcester – 4.2 percentLarry Edelman can be reached at larry.edelman@globe.com.
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