Federal unemployment claims jump in Mass.
The state Department of Unemployment Assistance has received 271 federal claims since Feb. 9, according to a spokesperson for the Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Department. That compares to the 58 federal unemployment insurance claims that DUA fielded in February 2024.
The new unemployment data represent a small fraction of the more than 46,000 federal employees in Massachusetts, who work in sectors including public administration, education, transportation, warehousing and the postal service. But more layoffs are in the Department of Government Efficiency pipeline, with more than 80,000 workers at the Department of Veterans Affairs expected to lose their jobs as early as June, according to Reuters.
The EOLWD spokesperson noted the unemployment claims so far represent a snapshot of impacted federal workers.
The data captures Bay Staters who filed initial claims, but not those who were fired but have yet to seek unemployment benefits. It also doesn't account for Bay Staters dealing with 'indirect layoffs,' such as researchers in academia who have lost their federal funding.
The EOLWD spokesperson on Monday said the website had garnered more than 10,500 views since it published Friday. A LinkedIn post that included a link to the site had more than 72,000 impressions, the spokesperson said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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CBS News
10 hours ago
- CBS News
Massachusetts public schools are the best in the country, new report says
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Boston Globe
13 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Builders coalition enters new chapter as founder Dave Madan rejoins
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Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
AG Campbell proposes new regulations on embattled Roxbury mortgage lender tied to Healey donor
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In 2024, homeowners and state officials alike were shocked when the Legislature included a proposal to legally protect BlueHub, one of hundreds of policy riders lawmakers tacked onto a nearly $4 billion economic development bill. The measure was approved as part of a bundle of amendments without debate on the floor or a roll-call vote. Specifically, the language states that lenders utilizing shared appreciation mortgages would not be liable 'for monetary relief, injunctive relief or other equitable relief at common law or by statute' as long as it gives a homeowner 'full disclosure' of any shared appreciation requirement. Homeowners and consumer advocates immediately saw that the measure would benefit BlueHub, which is the only nonprofit entity in the state that offers such a loan. 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After Healey signed the bill into law, some drew connections between the governor and BlueHub's longtime chief executive, Elyse Cherry, who have Bruce Marks, chief executive of Jamaica Plain-based Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, which has helped finance the lawsuit against BlueHub, said the signing represented 'the corruption of the Massachusetts governor.' In a Advertisement Shortly after the bill signing, Wiesner and other consumer advocates met with Campbell and her staff to discuss how to protect homeowners despite the legal immunity given to Bluehub. The regulations Campbell's office proposed this week mirror a number of the ideas floated during that discussion, though Wiesner said that the new law raises questions about what could happen if BlueHub violated the new rules. '[The 2024 law] is a huge barrier to enforcing the regulations,' Wiesner said. 'If you can't enforce the regulations, then the company can get away with violating them.' The proposed regulations, however, do say that while shared appreciation mortgage lenders are exempt under the new law, they can still be held liable for 'unfair or deceptive marketing, servicing, underwriting, and collection acts or practices.' This, Andrea Bopp Stark says, is crucial. 'I do feel they really listened to the concerns of consumers,' said Bopp Stark, a senior attorney at the National Consumer Law Center who also met with Campbell in December. 'I think it's a really great start. It's thoughtful and really tries to protect the borrower.' Campbell's proposal will hold Samantha J. Gross can be reached at