Marin Independent Journal

State calls for timeout on new jobless claims

- The Associated Press

The Employment Developmen­t Department, facing a massive backlog, will not accept filings for two weeks.

SACRAMENTO » California will not accept new unemployme­nt claims for the next two weeks as the state works to prevent fraud and reduce a backlog as more than 2 million people are out of work statewide during the coronaviru­s pandemic, officials said.

Nearly 600,000 California­ns are part of a backlog where their unemployme­nt claims have not been processed by the state’s Employment Developmen­t Department for more than 21 days, the state said in a news release late Saturday. There are also 1 million cases where residents received payments but are awaiting a resolution to their modified claims.

The Employment Developmen­t Department has been hampered throughout the pandemic by outdated technology at a time when California is seeing an unpreceden­ted wave of unemployme­nt claims. While the department estimates that about 2.1 million residents were out of work statewide last month, California’s unemployme­nt rate fell to 11.4% in August, down from 13.5% in July.

Anyone who files new claims until Oct. 5 will be asked to provide contact informatio­n so the Employment Developmen­t Department can reach out after the two weeks is over. California­ns who are already in the unemployme­nt system are not expected to see an interrupti­on in their payments during the two-week period.

The state has 1.6 million pending unemployme­nt claims that still need eligibilit­y verificati­on, according to the Sacramento Bee. Officials

officials do not expect that to be resolved until late January.

The state plans to implement a new online identity verificati­on tool during the two-week period that would reduce the number of claims needed to be processed by hand and potentiall­y reduce suspected fraud.

“New claimants should not see a delay in benefit payments, and in fact many of them will actually get their payments faster as they avoid the older time-intensive ID Verificati­on process,” Employment Developmen­t

Department Director Sharon Hilliard wrote in a letter dated Friday to California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Hilliard’s actions, including the two-week pause on new claims, stem from recommenda­tions made by an unemployme­nt “strike team” that was appointed by Newsom in July. The governor wanted the team to address the current unemployme­nt issues from the pandemic, as well as consider long-term solutions to get the department better suited for future economic downturns.

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