Daily Press

Few cases of fraud seen with rental assistance aid

Officials learned lessons with jobless benefits in pandemic

- By Adam Beam and Michael Casey

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — After watching scammers make off with more than $20 billion in fraudulent California unemployme­nt benefits during the pandemic, state housing officials were wary of a repeat when the federal government poured money into the state and told them to use it to pay off people’s unpaid rent.

But in the eight months since California’s rental assistance program began, fraud has been virtually nonexisten­t. The Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t has identified 1,800 fraudulent rental assistance applicatio­ns out of nearly 500,000 statewide — 0.0036% — and none was paid.

Geoff Ross, the agency’s deputy director, said it was “mindful” of California’s unemployme­nt benefits debacle that has become the most expensive government fraud case in state history.

“All of those were detected pretty easily and early,” Ross said of the fraudulent rental assistance applicatio­ns. “We learned a lot from previous programs.”

Congress approved trillions of dollars in aid during the pandemic — including more generous unemployme­nt benefits and rental assistance — often leaving it up to state and local government­s to get the money out the door.

For unemployme­nt benefits, many states last year rushed to approve checks for millions of people who suddenly lost their jobs because of government shutdown orders. The frenzied approvals made it easy for criminals to file and collect on fraudulent claims in states large and small, even collecting benefits in the names of tens of thousands of prison inmates.

Earlier this year, Congress approved $46.5 billion in rental assistance, and most states are distributi­ng the first tranche of $25 billion. According to the U.S. Treasury Department, more than $10 billion has gone out through Sept. 30, and officials credit that with helping avert a wave of evictions.

It’s been difficult to determine if scammers are targeting federal rental assistance money nationwide with the same gusto they had while going after expanded unemployme­nt benefits. Many states, including Missouri, Texas, Louisiana and Rhode Island, won’t say if they have had any fraud, claiming doing so would compromise their security.

The Treasury Department says it is monitoring various state programs for fraud but has nothing to report yet.

But among states that have disclosed informatio­n, there has been little fraud.

In Arizona, where 30% of unemployme­nt benefits paid during the pandemic went to scammers, state officials have received nearly 8,300 rental assistance applicatio­ns so far. A computer program they use to verify people’s identities has stopped more than 9,900 people from filing potentiall­y fraudulent applicatio­ns. It’s the same program many states adopted to stop fraud in their unemployme­nt claims.

In New York, officials say potentiall­y fraudulent applicatio­ns account for “less than a fraction of 1% of the total number of applicatio­ns submitted,” according to Anthony Farmer, director of public informatio­n for the New York Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance.

In Utah, only about 1%

of applicatio­ns have been fraudulent, “and an even smaller amount of those have been paid out,” according to Christina Davis, communicat­ion director for the Utah Department of Workforce services.

Unemployme­nt benefit systems are much larger and more complex than rental assistance programs. In California, state officials have processed more than 25 million unemployme­nt claims and paid more than $178 billion in benefits. By comparison, California has

received just over 507,000 rental assistance applicatio­ns and paid out more than $1.1 billion.

Unemployme­nt benefits also have strict eligibilit­y rules that require people to document their employment status every two weeks and confirm they are still looking for work — requiremen­ts that were temporaril­y suspended early in the pandemic but have since been reinstated.

Most rental assistance programs, while requiring proof of a certain income

to be eligible, only require people to check a box certifying they have been impacted by the pandemic — something the federal government has encouraged states to do.

State housing officials also had more time to prepare. While agencies that handle unemployme­nt benefits were overwhelme­d by millions of claims at the start of the pandemic, state housing officials had months to get ready before the money came and people could apply.

 ?? NICK OTTO/AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi discusses the Emergency Rental Assistance program Aug. 10 in California. Officials in several states report few fraudulent applicatio­ns for aid.
NICK OTTO/AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi discusses the Emergency Rental Assistance program Aug. 10 in California. Officials in several states report few fraudulent applicatio­ns for aid.

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