Paradise Post

State unemployme­nt checks: New report explores why they’re often so hard to get

- By Grace Gedye

If you get laid off, there’s a system that’s supposed to help you get by: unemployme­nt benefits. Whenever California stares down a pandemic or a possible recession, the partial wage-replacemen­t program is one of the most important economic safeguards for workers

But the benefits have become more difficult for workers to access, due to the program’s design and decisions made by California’s embattled Employment Developmen­t Department. That’s according to an in- depth report released Monday from the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office, a non-partisan agency that provides advice to the Legislatur­e.

The report found that the benefits program’s orientatio­n toward businesses — which fund the benefits and have an incentive to keep costs down — led the department to emphasize holding down costs. Pressure from the federal government to avoid errors led the department to try, however successful­ly, to minimize fraud.

The result: the department pursued lowering costs and hindering fraud over making it easy for workers to access benefits.

“Looked at individual­ly, one of these policies might seem totally reasonable, either to limit fraud or minimize business costs,” said Chas Alamo, the report’s author and principle fiscal and policy analyst with the Legislativ­e Analyst’s office. “But when you look at them, and kind of step back and look at the suite of policies that have been made over several decades, it becomes clear that there’s a sort of imbalance in the system,” said Alamo.

Early in the COVID pan

demic as joblessnes­s rates soared, the department struggled to keep up with a surge of benefits claims — leaving some California­ns repeatedly calling the department in frustratio­n and waiting weeks or months for the money to arrive.

Then came sensationa­l reports that the department had paid out as much as $20 billion in fraudulent benefits.

Last December, the department froze 345,000 disability insurance claims due to suspected fraud. As it tried to root out disability benefits fraud, calls to the department with questions surged, and many went unanswered.

Despite an increase in fraud during the pandemic, fraud has historical­ly been uncommon in California’s unemployme­nt benefits, likely “representi­ng less than 1 percent of claims,” the report found. The vast majority of fraud that occurred during the pandemic was concentrat­ed in a temporary federal program that has now ended.

The report lays out evidence that unemployme­nt benefits have become too difficult for workers to access.

 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID MCNEW — GETTY IMAGES ?? Job seekers line up to talk to representa­tives of the state Employment Developmen­t Department (EDD) at the Inland Empire Career Fair on Feb. 25, 2010 in Ontario.
PHOTO BY DAVID MCNEW — GETTY IMAGES Job seekers line up to talk to representa­tives of the state Employment Developmen­t Department (EDD) at the Inland Empire Career Fair on Feb. 25, 2010 in Ontario.

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