Dayton Daily News

Ohio's jobless system blasted for failures

Broken phone, online systems frustrate laidoff workers seeking aid.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

After enduring months of criticism from laid-off workers, leaders with Ohio’s unemployme­nt system this week came under fire by state lawmakers who said it’s outrageous and unacceptab­le that there’s been so many problems.

Ohio House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Derek Merrin, R-Moncolva, lambasted the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services for what he called broken phone and online systems that laid-off workers must use to apply for jobless benefits.

“We are in year 2020 — how do we not have a phone system that properly works?” Merrin said. “We have a call system where people are losing connection.”

Merrin’s criticism echoed the complaints of countless Miami Valley residents and Ohioans who have grown angry and upset because they could not get unemployme­nt benefits quickly, often citing problems with the applicatio­n process and an inability to get a hold of call center staff.

“Whenever I called, I was told by recording lines were busy and call back another time,” said Butler County resident James Taylor in written testimony this month. “The recordings did not give me an option to hold.”

Ohio Department of Job and

Family Services Director Kimberly Hall said the unemployme­nt office was over- whelmed by unpreceden­ted call and claims volumes, but it has taken numerous steps to try to fix the issues and improve the system.

“It was never built for the claims volume it is now handling,” she said.

On We d ne s day after- noon, Hall testified before the House Ways and Means committee about the unem- ployment system. Her testimony was part of hear- ings for Ohio House Bill 614, which seeks to study and reform the state’s unem- ployment compensati­on system.

Ohio has processed more than 92% of the more than 1 million claims it has received, Hall said.

But many laid-off residents have contacted the newspaper with complaints that they could not get through to apply for benefits, sometimes after long waits on hold or repeated disconnect­ions.

Some residents told this newspaper they have called the unemployme­nt office dozens of times or more with no success, while others say the online applicatio­n system simply did not work.

Communicat­ion to the unemployme­nt office was impossible, and without per- sonal assistance, important questions cannot be asked and answered, said Taylor in his testimony in support of H.B. 614.

Taylor said he filed online, but that felt like being in a “black hole” with no idea where to turn.

“I know steps take time to implement but it is very stressful when an applicant is facing the unknown with- out support,” said Taylor, whose unemployme­nt claim was denied because he did not make enough money.

Ohio’s unemployme­nt system technology dates back to 2004 and is anti- quated and failed to meet the demand caused by this crisis, said Hall.

The department’s call center received about 20,000 calls per week before the pandemic, but that skyrock- eted to about 500,000 calls per week in mid-March.

The call center has received more than 7 mil- lion calls during the pandemic, which has led to problems, Hall said.

“We quickly learned that if we reduced the number of individual­s able to wait in the queue, wait times would be shorter, but more people would be disconnect­ed because of high call volume,” she said. “If we increased the number able to wait in the queue, fewer would be disconnect­ed, but wait times would be longer. Without a large pool of call center agents, this places the agency in an ongoing Catch-22.”

Hall said staff have been able to answer less than 40% of calls, which is unacceptab­le. But she blamed that on insufficie­nt staffing.

“We have calculated that we would have needed at least 50 times our preCOVID-19 level of full-time agents to meet the peak volume of calls,” she said.

When this public health eme r gency started, the unemployme­nt office had about 550 staff, including 40 full-time agents in the call center, which was adequate to handle the demand before this emergency, Hall said.

But the office reduced staff in recent years, as unem- ployment fell to historical­ly low levels. In 2009 during the Great Recession, 1,422 people worked in the unem- ployment office.

Merrin said the department was overwhelme­d by calls because the online applicatio­n system is broken and has not allowed many jobless Ohio in dire straits to apply for benefits they sorely need.

Merrin criticized the unemployme­nt office for not calling unemployme­nt seekers back if they were disconnect­ed and not having voicemail set up to allow callers to leave messages.

He said his and other lawmakers’ voicemails are full of messages from frustrated constituen­ts who could not get a hold of anyone at the call center.

“The Legislatur­e right now is your voicemail system,” he said. “You do have a voicemail — it’s us.”

In 2018, the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services awarded an $86 mil- lion contract to overhaul and update the unemployme­nt and other systems. The department’s goal is to have the system ready by 2022.

Merrin questioned why the project will take so long and why Hall didn’t push harder to improve the customer experience and unem- ployment systems when she took over the department in early 2019.

“My q uesti o n to you, knowing that a solution is a couple of years off, why didn’t you take prudent steps — you and your staff — to at least improve and update the current system that every Ohioan has to live with the next couple of years,” he said.

Hall said the unemployme­nt office has been work- ing hard to catch up and keep up with demand and claims.

The office added claim adjudicato­rs and the call center, which expanded its hours, now has 1,250 fulland part-time staff, she said.

The office added a new feature that allows some callers to schedule a call back time. There is now an online virtual assistant and the office implemente­d a variety of IT improvemen­ts, Hall said.

Hall said the state is work- ing on providing a tool that allows some claimants to file their weekly claims via text on their mobile phones.

Hall said about 7.3% of une m ployment claims received since the start of the pandemic are still pend- ing, more than half of which were filed since early May. She estimates there are about 83,200 pending claims.

The vast majority have issues that require investi- gation, such as identity veri- fication, over payments and prior claim issues, she said.

Earlier this month, multiple people provided testimony in support of H.B. 614 after they say they experience­d serious problems with the unemployme­nt system.

Harrison worker Micheall Reed said he has unsuccessf­ully tried to get a hold of the unemployme­nt office since April 8.

“I go through the prompts, it says ‘we’re extremely busy, try another time,’ and it hangs up,” he said.

Breanna Holland, a 23-year-old Marysville resident, said she spent three weeks trying get reach the unemployme­nt office by phone and through its website after her employer closed, and she was put out of work.

“I spent all day everyday calling and calling and call- ing OD JFS. I could not reach a person. I could not leave a message. There was no call queue,” she said.

Holland said sheonly got through and started receiving payments after asking her state representa­tive for help.

Rep. John Rogers, D-Mentor-on-the-Lake, the rank- ing member of the Ways and Means Committee, said the unemployme­nt office has to do a better job communicat­ing with its clients, especially after they weren’t allowed to work because of the government’s orders and lockdown.

“We need to do a better job of responding to pe ople when they look to us for help,” he said.

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