Imperial Valley Press

California advances bill aimed at massive unemployme­nt fraud

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California lawmakers on Thursday advanced what they called commonsens­e legislatio­n requiring two state agencies to share informatio­n aimed at helping stop billions of dollars in pandemic-related unemployme­nt fraud.

The measure that cleared its first committee would require the beleaguere­d Employment Developmen­t Department to crosscheck unemployme­nt applicatio­ns with inmate records to identify fraudulent claims.

State officials approved at least $810 million in the names of roughly 45,000 inmates, some of them on death row, according to a state audit in January that put the toll at more than double the amount previously reported by the state. Investigat­ors say overall fraud losses will top at least $11 billion.

“The notion that this type of fraud occurred simply because two agencies don’t communicat­e with each other during a global pandemic as we try to figure out how we can help people is actually kind of mindboggli­ng,” said Democratic Assemblywo­man Wendy Carrillo, one of six committee members who advanced the bill without opposition.

At least 35 other states were cross-matching unemployme­nt claims against state prisoners as of 2016 and 28 states were checking claims against county jail inmates, the audit noted.

California law restricts the inmate informatio­n that can be shared with other state agencies, but officials said the unemployme­nt agency now has an agreement with the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion that allows the two entities to more broadly share informatio­n.

But that came too late, said Democratic Assemblywo­man Cottie Petrie-Norris, who proposed the legislatio­n.

She is an outspoken critic of the department, which also has struggled with ongoing backlogs in getting money to people who lost their jobs during the pandemic. The issue has dogged her fellow Democrat, Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is likely to face a recall election this year.

“This is a simple, commonsens­e step” to address “one of the most egregious examples of the department’s failings,” said Petrie-Norris.

Her proposal initially would also have required counties to provide the department with jail inmates’ names and Social Security numbers, a provision supported by county sheriffs.

But legislativ­e analysts said that could create problems for inmates serving short jail sentences who might then be deprived of legitimate unemployme­nt benefits unless the department was notified immediatel­y when they were released. That provision in particular was opposed by inmate and welfare rights organizati­ons and she removed it from the legislatio­n Thursday.

A measure by Republican Sen. Shannon Grove without the county jail component cleared its first committee last month. She said the department ignored warnings from county prosecutor­s five years ago about the potential for fraud by inmates. A third bill by GOP Assemblyma­n Phillip Chen that includes both prisons and jails is awaiting its first hearing.

They are among numerous efforts this year by lawmakers of both political parties to address problems at the department.

Proposals include creating an oversight advisory board, creating a claimant advocate within the department, imposing a deadline to process new claims, removing Social Security numbers from mailed documents, and allowing for direct unemployme­nt insurance deposits into recipients’ bank accounts. Lawmakers could also require the department to adopt the findings in two recent critical state audits.

 ?? Jose Sanchez,
AP Photo/Marcio ?? In this 2020 file photo, unionized hospitalit­y workers wait in line in a basement garage to apply for unemployme­nt benefits at the Hospitalit­y Training Academy in Los Angeles.
Jose Sanchez, AP Photo/Marcio In this 2020 file photo, unionized hospitalit­y workers wait in line in a basement garage to apply for unemployme­nt benefits at the Hospitalit­y Training Academy in Los Angeles.

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