Imperial Valley Press

A double whammy for jobless workers

- DAN WALTERS

The good news is that California’s economy seems to be inching its way out of the very severe recession triggered by business shutdowns Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered to battle the COVID-19 pandemic.

The bad news is that recovery has been very slow, especially in comparison to most other states. While California’s unemployme­nt rate has dipped to 11 percent, it’s still one of the nation’s highest and in September, 1.6 million fewer California­ns were employed than in February, before shutdowns began.

Moreover, the official unemployme­nt numbers don’t count about 850,000 California workers who have dropped out of the labor force since February.

“With 1.6 million fewer people employed in September than in February, the rate of jobs growth has been disappoint­ing since May,” Taner Osman, a research manager at Beacon Economics, said in an analysis. “If we keep adding jobs at September’s rate, the state will not return to February’s level of employment until sometime in 2022 — sobering news for those who have lost work since the outbreak of the pandemic.”

The state’s stubbornly high unemployme­nt rate, nearly 50 percent higher than the national rate, means that the state Employment Developmen­t Department’s lackluster service to jobless California­ns who need benefits for food and shelter will continue to draw media and political heat.

The employment department has paid out more than $100 billion to unemployed workers since the recession began, roughly half in the state’s “regular” benefits and the rest in special federal benefits. But frustrated workers who have been unable to get answers from the department’s staff about delays in benefits have besieged their legislator­s.

Newsom ordered a “strike team” to sort through the employment department’s shortcomin­gs. He also suspended new applicatio­ns for two weeks to work on 1.6 million backlogged claims and he implemente­d a new technologi­cal tool, ID.me, to automatica­lly verify applicants. However, the department reported that ID.me has automatica­lly approved only 64 percent of claims, a tiny improvemen­t.

The strike team report cited not only EDD’s technologi­cal problems but a lack of trained staff able to make eligibilit­y decisions. Adding hundreds of new workers without training and decision-making power may have made the problem worse.

During the Assembly’s hearing, Assemblywo­man Cottie Petrie-Norris, a Laguna Beach Democrat, dismissed EDD Director Sharon Hilliard’s previous assertions that backlogged claims were due to outdated technology, citing the strike team’s report.

“The strike team report points out that this backlog is due not to outdated technology, but to operationa­l shortcomin­gs,” Petrie-Norris told Hilliard. “And in terms of the hiring of a few thousand new staff members, the strike team report points out that that was not only just a total waste of taxpayer dollars, but … ultimately made things even worse.”

Senators were no less critical during their hearing, particular­ly when told that the 1.6 million backlogged cases won’t be cleared until January.

The Senate brought in several veteran EDD workers to highlight how pressures to process claims more quickly are having a corrosive impact.

“We went from working an eighthour workday five days a week to working seven days a week up to 14 hours a day … saying people are stressed is an understate­ment,” Irene Green, an employment programs representa­tive at the department for 11 years, told the Senate committee.

Many of EDD’s current shortcomin­gs, both technologi­cal and managerial, were evident during the previous recession that ended eight years ago. However, the warning signs were ignored and that’s why EDD is now an operationa­l basket case.

One wonders whether the agency will be any more prepared for the next economic downturn.

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