Lake County Record-Bee

EDD halts payments amid fraud problems

Agency to hire hundreds as it confronts new unemployme­nt fiasco

- By George Avalos

A widening fraud problem has prodded the state Employment Developmen­t Department to suspend unemployme­nt payments to many California workers at the same time coronaviru­s-linked business shutdowns have left people without a job.

The halt in payments for an unspecifie­d number of workers in the state comes at a time when the EDD is reporting that a backlog of unpaid unemployme­nt claims has again begun to swell.

The brutal bottom line: Many California workers now face suspended unemployme­nt payments due to fraud concerns, a logjam of unpaid legitimate claims, and

a loss of work because state and local agencies have imposed business closures to help combat the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“As part of ongoing efforts to fight fraud, EDD has suspended payment on claims considered high risk,” the EDD stated in a tweet posted on Jan. 3.

The EDD appears to be scrambling this week to hire hundreds of phone agents quickly, according to a tweet that was posted on Jan. 3, just a few hours after the disgraced state agency revealed its decision to halt unemployme­nt payments.

The state agency has begun to solicit quotes for services with the quotes due by 8 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 6, the EDD tweet stated.

“This Request for Quotation (RFQ) is for a contractor to provide a team of 300 phone agents to assist EDD customers,” the EDD tweeted.

Multiple people responded to the EDD tweet and posted screenshot­s of a message they received when they logged into their respective accounts on the EDD website.

“You have been receiving unemployme­nt benefits, but we have temporaril­y suspended your claim because it may be tied to fraudulent activity,” the EDD told multiple workers who were seeking informatio­n on the state agency’s website about their payments.

At the same time, the EDD efforts to whittle away a mammoth backlog of unpaid legitimate claims appear to have floundered. The setback has left a growing number of California workers trapped in the EDD’s bureaucrat­ic limbo.

In September, the EDD vowed it would have erased the backlog of jobless claims by the end of January.

However, with the backlog now increasing yet again, it wasn’t immediatel­y clear if the EDD would be able to follow through on its promise.

The total number of unemployme­nt claims that are stuck in the EDD backlog was about 777,800 for the week that ended on Dec. 30, a dashboard posted on the EDD’s website shows. That’s an increase of 32,100 from the backlog of 745,600 that the backlog the EDD posted for the week that ended on Dec. 23.

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