DULUTH – Despite soaring unemployment, the phones aren't ringing so often at SOAR Career Solutions, a nonprofit employment service.
One client saw her housekeeping job at Holiday Inn disappear.
Another had her interview at St. Luke's canceled amid a hiring freeze.
One man grew discouraged after he couldn't get hired at Target.
All they can do now is wait.
"What we're seeing right now is a lot of inactivity — they don't know what to do," said Jason Beckman, program director at SOAR.
While unemployment soars throughout Minnesota and the country, Duluth's economy has been particularly hit hard by the COVID-19 downturn, with two of its major industries — hospitality and medical workers — seeing major job losses.
Duluth's CareerForce center has helped process more than 18,000 unemployment insurance applications from St. Louis County residents in the past month, a quarter of which are in food, drink and hospitality. Last year, the office handled about 800 unemployment applications over the same time period.