Enterprise-Record (Chico)

California productivi­ty level declines despite hiring

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO » The California unemployme­nt agency’s two call centers to field questions about jobless benefits had two major problems as millions of people sought help due to the pandemic: One had nobody on site to answer calls and the other had hundreds of untrained new hires who didn’t know how to help callers.

The result was about 600,000 callers each month “waiting on hold for hours without a statistica­lly significan­t chance of being served,” according to a review of the Employment Developmen­t Department that found widespread problems that greatly hindered its ability to deal with record jobless claims.

The report detailed the problems that have plagued the agency since March, when the government suddenly ordered businesses to close and people to stay in their homes to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. To date, more than 13 million claims have been filed and the agency has doled out about $86 billion in benefits.

The problems at the call centers are indicative of the outdated technology and lack of oversight the review found.

One of the call centers is in a field office with phones that can’t be forwarded. So when the pandemic hit and employees began to work from home, there was no one to answer millions of calls at the office.

The phone number that routed callers to the center averaged 6.7 million calls per week in July. A recorded message sent callers to a second call center for help, but that center was staffed by the new hires who did not have the training or the experience to help them.

Frustrated claimants are finding and sharing other agency phone numbers not meant for the public, including the phone line for the hearing or speech-impaired.

“If this pattern continues, every employee with a telephone will be overwhelme­d with calls,” the review noted.

Meanwhile, about 1.6 million people are waiting for EDD to process their claims — a number that is growing by about 10,000 claims per day. The agency had set a goal to resolve that backlog by the end of this month, but now says it won’t happen before the end of January.

“I am concerned this is too little, too late for California­ns experienci­ng extreme financial stress as a result of EDD’s failures,” Democratic Assemblyma­n David Chiu said Monday.

The review, ordered by Gov. Gavin Newsom in July, showed how the agency made things worse as it tried to make things better. The agency either hired or redirected more than 1,300 people to process claims. But the agency pulled away its most senior employees to train the workers, causing productivi­ty to decline.

Plus, it takes years to train workers to do the specialize­d work required to process claims. The agency has hired 515 new workers to recalculat­e disputed claims, but so far none of them have had any work to do.

EDD has a computer system to automatica­lly process claims. But the agency is diverting about 40% of those claims to a much slower manual review process to identify and stop fraud. The agency can handle about 2,400 manual claims per day, but it’s getting more than 20,000.

Meanwhile, the manual reviews are not stopping fraud. Most of the fraudulent claims are so sophistica­ted they sail right through the computer system and are never marked for manual review. The team reviewing the agency urged them to turn off conditions that would unnecessar­ily flag claims for manual review. But the agency delayed, worrying it would be inappropri­ate to do that when the risk of fraud was so high.

If the agency had followed the recommenda­tion, it “could have avoided sending hundreds of thousands of claims to manual processing during the spikes in new claims that occurred at the end of August.”

“There has developed at EDD a culture of allowing fear for fraud to trump all other considerat­ions,” according to the review that was made public Saturday night.

About 60% of the state’s unemployme­nt claims are automated. The review team said if the agency can improve that number to 94%, it would reduce the number of claims requiring a real person to review it to about 3,622 per day — “a number which it has the capacity to complete.”

The agency is already working on this, announcing a two week “reset” on Saturday, during which the agency would halt processing all new claims until it can install a new identity verificati­on system by ID.me, a Virginiaba­sed company. The review said once this system is in place “potentiall­y hundreds of thousands” of unemployme­nt claims will have their identity verified immediatel­y without being flagged for a manual review.

Newsom on Monday said the reset won’t cause a delay for people applying for benefits for the first time.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A man takes a photo of a sign advising that the Employment Developmen­t Department is closed due to coronaviru­s concerns in San Francisco.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A man takes a photo of a sign advising that the Employment Developmen­t Department is closed due to coronaviru­s concerns in San Francisco.

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