Las Vegas Review-Journal

Leaders told lawmakers that fraudulent unemployme­nt claims delay benefits.

Leaders: Jobless Nevadans suffer when criminals file

- By Jonathan Ng

Top leaders from the state workforce agency told lawmakers Thursday that fraudulent unemployme­nt claims have a human cost : delayed benefits for jobless Nevadans who truly need them.

Elisa Cafferata, director of the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion, said the agency is working with Gov. Steve Sisolak’s finance office to bring on more staff to catch up on the backlog.

As of Thursday, agency leaders said there were 41,676 regular Unemployme­nt Insurance and 41,171 Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance claims pending.

In addition, 52,797 UI and 253,835 PUA claims were flagged for identity issues, suspected for fraud, and are preventing payment.

Cafferata said that initial jobless claims also went up since last appearing before lawmakers in February.

“Just since the last time we saw you, we’ve had almost half a million new initial applicatio­ns,” Cafferata said. “Probably 95 percent of which, we believe, to be fraudulent.”

DETR saw more than 100,000 initial applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt in January after the $900 billion stimulus package was signed into law. Agency leaders said that makes up a “large portion” of the questionab­le 250,000-plus PUA claims flagged.

Cafferata said that the agency reviews every individual claim that is filed, currently at nearly 2 million.

“We hear every day from legitimate claimants who need our help, and to me, that is the true cost to

Nevada: These criminal rings have delayed these benefits for people who are desperatel­y in need,” Cafferata said Thursday. “So far, we haven’t been able to assemble enough staff, time, and money to catch up. But that is our goal.”

CLOUD-BASED UI software

Appearing on Thursday before the Assembly Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on Finance, Subcommitt­ees on Human Services, agency leaders presented four different budgets.

The agency said Sisolak has earmarked some money for “stabilizat­ion” for immediate fixes in the unemployme­nt system.

For the long-term, however,

DETR said that it is looking at updating its unemployme­nt systems, opting for a cloud-based solution. It’s expected to cost between $30 million to $50 million and will take nearly four years to develop after a request-for-proposal process and an award has been approved.

“You have much more ability to adapt and change your programmin­g,” Cafferata said of a cloudbased unemployme­nt system. “Right now we’re working on a system with what has been described as ‘vintage code,’ which is not a virtue in a computer system.”

Adding new coding to the existing system slows it down, she said, and a modern unemployme­nt software is adaptable. This means the state will not have to replace the UI system every 10 years, “which is sort of what the traditiona­l model of computer programmin­g has been,” Cafferata said.

“It will have all the bells and whistles of modernizat­ion, not only for internal staff to use, but also for claimants,” said Marilyn Delmont, chief informatio­n officer at DETR. A cloud-based system would allow faster processing and delivery of computing services, she said, as well as a lower cost of maintenanc­e and upkeep.

Delmont added that a cloudbased UI system would allow for “easier and faster scalabilit­y in the event that we have to rapidly scale up or down.”

FRAUD investigat­ions

DETR leaders said that it is reporting cases of fraud to state and federal law enforcemen­t, though they don’t have much informatio­n that they can share with lawmakers.

“Oftentimes, when we’re working with these law enforcemen­t agencies, they conduct investigat­ions once we make the reports to them, and they are not necessaril­y — and I understand why, this is not a criticism — but they don’t share that informatio­n,” said Jeffrey Frischmann, a former deputy administra­tor contracted by DETR.

He said that law enforcemen­t investigat­ions are often confidenti­al and that DETR is made aware of the results of investigat­ion years later. “It’s frustratin­g, of course, because we want the informatio­n now, just like you do, but it doesn’t come back to us that quickly,” Frischmann told lawmakers.

DETR reports fraudulent claims to the Nevada Attorney General’s office as well as federal law enforcemen­t agencies like the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and the U.S. Secret Service.

“A lot of this is internatio­nal crime, a lot of this is coming from other continents and other parts of the country,” said Frischmann, “So it’s really out of the jurisdicti­on of our Attorney General and our local law enforcemen­t.”

Cafferata said Nevada needs the federal government to “really step in and assist” with the investigat­ions since fraudsters are filing in Nevada and other workforce agencies across the U.S.

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