The Bakersfield Californian

California sees suspicious surge in unemployme­nt claims

- BY ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO — California is reporting a surge in coronaviru­s unemployme­nt claims last week for independen­t contractor­s, gig workers and the self-employed, and the tens of thousands of claims are raising renewed concerns about widespread fraud.

The state received more than 77,000 additional claims compared with a week earlier, accounting for more than a quarter of all such claims nationally, according to numbers released Thursday by the U.S. Department of Labor.

The claims fall under a program Congress approved last year to give unemployme­nt benefits to people during the pandemic who are usually ineligible to receive them.

The state Employment Developmen­t Department has been overwhelme­d with unemployme­nt claims since March, when Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed the nation’s first statewide stay-at-home order that shuttered many businesses. The state has processed more than 19 million claims and paid out more than $113 billion in benefits.

About 4 million claims and $43 billion in payments fall under the program for independen­t contractor­s. The program has helped a lot of people who are self-employed weather economic shutdowns from the virus. But its broad eligibilit­y requiremen­ts have made it a target of criminals seeking easy paydays.

Thursday’s increase was in new claims, not those from people extending or renewing them under a Congressio­nal extension.

That alarmed Michael Bernick, a former Employment Developmen­t Department director and attorney with the Duane Morris firm.

Most independen­t contractor­s in California should already have filed new claims in the previous nine months, he said.

“The (new) claims numbers make no sense, other than indicating the re-emergence of fraudulent claims,” Bernick said.

The Employment Developmen­t Department, in an email to The Associated Press, said it “could not speculate” as to the cause of the surge. But Gov. Gavin Newsom and other officials have repeatedly blamed the program as the source of most of the fraudulent claims.

Overall, the state has acknowledg­ed paying at least $400 million in phony claims, including thousands in the names of prison inmates, including some on death row. However, fraudulent claims have fallen significan­tly since last fall, when the state installed new safeguards, including contractin­g with the com

panies ID.me and Pondera Solutions to better verify claimants’ identities.

California was flooded with claims in the early days of the pandemic after Newsom imposed stay-athome orders in mid-March that closed most businesses. The department managed to resolve a backlog that peaked last year at 1.6 million claims. But the pile has grown again and now stands at more than 800,000 people.

Newsom imposed a new stay-at-home order on much of the state in December after a surge in new coronaviru­s cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths. Newsom extended those orders in many regions this

month. But he lifted the order for the counties in and around the state capital.

Republican Assemblyma­n Jim Patterson, a frequent critic of Newsom’s handling of the state’s unemployme­nt claims, said his office has been inundated with calls from constituen­ts in recent weeks seeking help obtaining unemployme­nt benefits, an indication that many have again lost their jobs because of the lingering restrictio­ns on businesses.

Patterson said he suspects the increase in claims is likely a mix of fraudulent and legitimate claims. But he added: “If the (Employment Developmen­t Department) doesn’t know,

how do I know?” “That’s the big problem,”

Patterson said. “The history of EDD has been they have not been able to differenti­ate between legitimate and fraudulent accounts.”

The safeguards the department has put in place have made it much harder for people to file fraudulent claims, said El Dorado District Attorney Vern Pierson, president of the California District Attorneys Associatio­n and one of many prosecutor­s investigat­ing fraudulent unemployme­nt claims statewide.

Pierson said he believes the spike in claims is likely related to the recent surge in COVID-19 cases and accompanyi­ng business restrictio­ns that have hurt the economy. But no system is foolproof, he said.

“Criminals are still trying to defeat the system,” Pierson said.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I / AP / FILE ?? In December, a runner passes the office of the California Employment Developmen­t Department in Sacramento. The state reported a significan­t surge in unemployme­nt claims last week for independen­t contractor­s, accounting for more than a quarter of all such climbs nationally and raising concerns about a return of widespread fraud.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I / AP / FILE In December, a runner passes the office of the California Employment Developmen­t Department in Sacramento. The state reported a significan­t surge in unemployme­nt claims last week for independen­t contractor­s, accounting for more than a quarter of all such climbs nationally and raising concerns about a return of widespread fraud.

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