Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • News
  • Editorial/Opinion
  • Glossary
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Returning to Work During COVID-19

By kamala , 8 June 2023
Author
Kamala Budhathoki 'Sarup'
Returning to Work During COVID-19

Published in Cape May County Herald Newspaper.

I was at home for almost three months, without work, and it was not a happy time due to the ongoing pandemic.

In New Jersey, the unemployment rate reached 15.3%, in April, according to NJ.com (https://bit.ly/30kA8nw), due to the temporary closing of the businesses and establishments that helped put food on the table for these people.

The article stated, “The jobless rate is the highest since record keeping began in 1976, the state labor commissioner said, and exceeded the national rate, which hit 14.7% in April. A staggering 38.6 million people across the nation and 1.1 million in New Jersey have filed claims for unemployment benefits since the start of the public health crisis.” With the pandemic crisis at its peak, it was difficult for people to apply for unemployment and receive approval in the state.

I work for a small business, one of the best bed and breakfasts in Cape May. When the stay-home order hit, it was truly an awful experience, as every family of the business was directly affected by the pandemic's aftershock.

The whole nation was in economic meltdown and all kinds of businesses, especially small businesses, were affected. However, when the government started to open the states in phases, they introduced a Small Business Administration loan, also termed the Paycheck Protection Program. Its main target is to help businesses, especially small ones, to keep their workers/workforce employed during this crisis. When my boss called me and asked if I was able to work, I was reluctant at first. Without a cure, I felt as if something was stopping me from leaving my home, since opening the business is also risking the chances of infection.

It is important to look at the human costs rather than the economic costs. Reopening businesses aids the declining economy, and even though health experts warn us of the dangers of reopening the nation sooner, if proper precautions and meticulous planning are done, one can avoid being infected with the virus. In other words, without strict health and social distancing, reopening the nation will possibly be more dangerous.

My employer had plans regarding the control measure for virus spread. After considering the safety measures taken, my perception changed, and I agreed to return to work.

-- copyright http://www.mediaforfreedom.com

Column
News

Editorial

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6

Recent content

  • The Rhythms of Compassion for the New Age
    10 years 9 months ago
  • 'People-centred' post-2015 development agenda
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Spotlight data and technology as key to sustainability
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Tax cut on tobacco under High Court Lens
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Millennium Development Goals ‘springboard’ for future
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Wrong development priority in spite of Socio-Economic Census
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Join the crusade: Big push for transgender
    10 years 9 months ago
  • Burundi: Storm Warning
    10 years 9 months ago
  • UN Human Rights Council Reaffirms
    10 years 9 months ago
  • AIDS is a 'human rights issue,' Ban declares.
    10 years 9 months ago

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 130
  • Page 131
  • Page 132
  • Page 133
  • Page 134
  • Page 135
  • Page 136
  • Page 137
  • Page 138
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page