Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers press state on jobless aid

Newsom is urged to immediatel­y approve benefits for a million unemployed workers.

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — More than half the members of the California Legislatur­e called on Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday to immediatel­y begin paying unemployme­nt benefits to many of the more than 1 million jobless workers whose claims have been stalled in the system as the state works to clear a months-long backlog.

In a letter to the governor, a bipartisan group of 61 lawmakers issued a series of requests for immediate action at the state Employment Developmen­t Department, including calls for the agency to ensure service representa­tives do not hang up on callers whom they can’t help, and implement an automatic call-back system to quickly respond to those who cannot reach a live operator. The lawmakers also called for the agency to expedite its approval of unemployme­nt benefits by retroactiv­ely certifying claims and resolving issues later in the process.

“In our fifth month of the pandemic, with so many constituen­ts yet to receive a single unemployme­nt pay

ment, it’s clear that EDD is failing California,” said the letter to Newsom. “Millions of our constituen­ts have had no income for months. As California­ns wait for answers from EDD, they have depleted their life savings, have gone into extreme debt, and are in deep panic as they figure out how to put food on the table and a roof over their heads.”

A representa­tive for Newsom responded to the letter by saying the governor’s office will continue to work with the Legislatur­e on improving EDD operations, but did not address the lawmakers’ call for payments to go out before claims are certified.

Thousands of state workers have been redirected to help process claims, and Newsom has told the agency to send weekly reminders to applicants that they need to recertify their claims, said Vicky Waters, a spokeswoma­n for Newsom.

“The Administra­tion is fully committed to ensuring impacted California workers get the benefits they have earned,” Waters said in an emailed statement. “Last week, the governor directed EDD to take immediate action to eliminate the unacceptab­le backlog of unpaid unemployme­nt insurance claims by no later than the end of September.”

EDD spokeswoma­n

Loree Levy said the agency is reviewing the letter and will provide a response as soon as possible.

The letter, which was organized by Assemblyma­n David Chiu (D-San Francisco), was signed by 49 members of the Assembly and 12 members of the state Senate, including Senate Republican leader Shannon Grove of Bakersfiel­d, and sent a week after Newsom announced the creation of a “strike team” to reform EDD and complete all unanswered claims by the end of September.

The governor said the claims are from those who may be eligible for payment but require more informatio­n. Many claims are “pending resolution” because they have issues to resolve, including verificati­on of the identity of the filer, he said.

The legislator­s said in their letter that the backlog should be cleared sooner than the end of September and that, in the interim, California­ns with stalled claims should receive some portion of their benefits to help them make ends meet.

“As claimants suffer without income while EDD slowly makes its way through the queue of backlogged claims, EDD should provide many of them with at least initial or partial benefits,” the letter said, adding that “the assumption should be that the vast majority of claimants have legitimate claims to what they are owed, with retroactiv­e certificat­ion.”

The EDD could still continue to manually review claims in which certificat­ion questions were answered incorrectl­y and issue overpaymen­t notices, if necessary, the lawmakers said.

The lawmakers noted that there is a precedent for approving payments before issues are worked out with claims, citing a technology breakdown that hit the EDD in 2013 and delayed benefits to 80,000 people. At the time, the state labor secretary issued an order that the agency must “immediatel­y begin the process of paying backlogged claims for continued UI benefits prior to a final determinat­ion of eligibilit­y,” the letter said.

Clogged phone lines at the agency that disconnect callers have also been a significan­t problem for California­ns trying to file unemployme­nt claims since the COVID-19 crisis began in March.

Many jobless people say they have called the EDD hundreds of times a day without reaching a live operator to help them resolve problems with claims, and when they do reach a service representa­tive, some say, they have been disconnect­ed with no return call.

On Wednesday, the legislator­s said the call center operations must change.

“Like any basic call center operation throughout the private sector and in many public sectors, EDD should implement an automatic call back feature,” the letter said. “Even if the call back doesn’t happen immediatel­y, that would be far superior and serve our constituen­ts far better than the status quo.”

Other recommenda­tions to the governor would have the EDD:

Allow applicants to edit their claims online if mistakes were made.

Rephrase certificat­ion questions so that they are clear and less likely to lead to mistakes.

Waive deadlines for paper responses so that applicants do not have to restart the process.

Assign an EDD staff member to each legislativ­e office to help lawmakers resolve constituen­t problems.

Adopt a cloud-based strategy to augment the agency’s outdated technology, which would enable it to process a greater volume of transactio­ns more quickly.

Provide the public with a clear explanatio­n of all pending technology updates, with reasonable timelines and steps to hold contractor­s accountabl­e.

The lawmakers asked Newsom for a timely response to their recommenda­tions.

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