Las Vegas Review-Journal

Officials depart DETR’S top rung

Two more join agency turnover

- By Jonathan Ng

Two high-ranking officials at the state’s Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion are leaving the agency.

Kimberly Gaa, an employment security division administra­tor, “is currently out of the office on an extended leave,” the agency said Friday evening.

Deputy employment security division adminisato­r Brian Bracken is retiring effective Sept. 11.

In their place, DETR has brought back Jeffrey Frischmann, the previous deputy administra­tor of the division, “on a contracted basis.”

Scott Kennedy, who retired in early 2020 as unemployme­nt insurance operations chief, will step into Bracken’s role as acting deputy administra­tor.

Gaa’s unexpected departure caps months of turmoil at DETR as the unemployme­nt office struggled to clear claims and pay thousands of filers while confrontin­g a lawsuit by Nevada gig workers.

For almost seven weeks, DETR went without a director, until Gov. Steve Sisolak’s Aug. 6 appointmen­t of Elisa Cafferata as the new acting director to head the embattled agency. During that time, Gaa served as the agency’s de facto figurehead.

Gaa, who joined DETR in

2012, was appointed adminstrat­or of the agency’s employment security division on Aug. 16, 2019, to oversee the state’s unemployme­nt insurance program.

“I believe this to be a critical role within DETR and look forward to finding innovative ways to improve the services the agency and division provide to Nevada’s workforce and employer communitie­s,” Gaa

said at the time.

The department has seen a whirlwind of turnover since April, when former director Tiffany Tyler-garner resigned.

Former director Heather Korbulic took Garner’s post just days after she resigned and led the agency for seven weeks before she resigned June 19, citing threats to her safety.

Weeks later, Deputy Director Dennis Perea resigned.

Nevada’s unemployme­nt rate, at 3.6 percent in February, jumped to 30.1 percent in April before tumbling over the past few months.

Still, more than 221,000 unemployed Nevadans continue to file weekly for jobless benefits as of Aug. 29, DETR reported Thursday.

More than 104,000 self-employed or gig workers in Nevada continued weekly claims through the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program in the same period.

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