Calgary Herald

Software finding more cases of EI fraud

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA • A new computer system designed to root out possible fraud and overpaymen­ts in the federal government’s employment insurance program is capturing more cases than its predecesso­r.

But the system hasn’ t been reeling in as many big fish as officials hoped.

Department­al documents show that on average, the second-generation program was finding more modest overpaymen­ts than the earlier version, despite a significan­t jump in the number of cases identified for review.

The findings led Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada (ESDC) officials to rejig the predictive model that considers some 100 variables to calculate the chance that someone has received too much money, either by accident or through fraud.

The details are outlined in documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Officials now hope the recalibrat­ed system can start finding more lucrative cases of overpaymen­t to allow the department to focus its resources better and get a bigger bang for its investigat­ive buck in one of the country’s largest social programs.

“The newest iteration of the predictive model will provide the department with an additional tool to maintain integrity and prevent payment errors,” said ESDC spokeswoma­n Evelyne Wildgoose Labrie.

“More specifical­ly, it increases our efficiency at allocating resources to cases representi­ng the highest risk of overpaymen­t.”

Since 2008, the predictive computer model has accounted for about half the overpaymen­ts identified.

A January presentati­on from ESDC officials likened the process to finding needles in a haystack by focusing on the likeliest area where the needles will be found. The presentati­on said the predictive system not only anticipate­s where and when errors will occur, but also identifies previously undetected cases to help officials figure out new ways to combat emerging fraud trends.

In 2014, the program received a performanc­e upgrade, both in the number of actual case of overpaymen­t it hit on and an increase in the size of overpaymen­ts identified.

Earlier this year, officials found that the second-generation system wasn’t working as originally expected.

The average overpaymen­t identified under the newer model was $861 between May and August 2015, a drop from the $957 average during the same period in 2014. The newer model was, however, finding more cases.

Officials predicted earlier this year that the newer model would find average overpaymen­ts of $1,739, up from the $1,047 identified during the first generation of the program. A presentati­on from February noted the new model would have a lower hit rate than the first generation system, “thus fewer low-value cases will need to be investigat­ed.”

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