The Guardian (USA)

‘Designed for us to fail’: Floridians upset as unemployme­nt system melts down

- Lauren Aratani

Lynne Reback developed a rote routine while trying to file for unemployme­nt in her home state of Florida: log into the system, watch the loading bar slowly inch across the screen, get kicked out. Then she would start over.

It took three days for Reback to get her applicatio­n through Connect, Florida’s online portal for unemployme­nt insurance applicatio­ns. Though it has been almost a month since her applicatio­n was submitted, it is still “pending” whenever she checks its status.

“I’ve gone on every day since and checked my applicatio­n status. Just to go on and get logged in takes sometimes 45 minutes to an hour. You have to keep hitting refresh,” said Reback, who was laid off from her job as a bartender at a restaurant at Orlando internatio­nal airport.

She considers herself lucky. The state at least has her applicatio­n. Hundreds of thousands of unemployed people in Florida have been unable to file their unemployme­nt claims because the state’s system has been so clogged.

Residents in the state are reporting a meltdown in its safety net just as the US’s unemployme­nt figures rise to unpreceden­ted levels. Nearly 17 million people have lost their hobs across the US. Officially 472,000 people in Florida filed for unemployme­nt within the last three weeks. The true number, thanks to failing Connect, is much higher. And in this swing state the mess has handed the Trump administra­tion a giant headache ahead of November’s elections.

Florida residents who successful­ly file for unemployme­nt are eligible for a maximum $275 weekly benefit to compensate for the loss in pay. Congress, in its recent stimulus package, also guaranteed an additional $600 a week starting whenever a person filed their claim.

But a person cannot get either payout unless they have been processed and approved by the state’s system. Unable to file an applicatio­n, many are left without compensati­on and fear they will miss out on weeks of essential paychecks. People have been lining up for miles to receive food from food banks.

Florida issued a lockdown on 1 April after the number of positive Covid-19 cases in the state began to climb. All non-essential businesses were ordered to close. Residents were told to stay home and visitors were instructed to leave, devastatin­g the state’s huge tourism industry.

While many other states across the country are facing similar technical issues, Florida’s system appears to be the most hard-hit by the influx of applicants. Ron DeSantis, Florida’s Republican governor, and his administra­tion have been scrambling to increase the capacity of the state’s online system after a massive wave of layoffs. But as people logged on to the state’s online portal to file for unemployme­nt, the system shut thousands of people out.

Furious Florida residents angrily tweeted about their unsuccessf­ul attempts to file their applicatio­n using #floridaune­mployment. “Been sitting on the unemployme­nt screen for a whole week but the website crashes anytime I input my work history,” one Twitter user wrote. “The system is designed for us to fail.”

Last week, the state rolled out measures to control the flood of applicatio­ns. The state added 72 servers to allow more people to be on the website at once and introduced a second mobile-friendly site. DeSantis said that 750 new call operators were deployed to take calls.

Paper applicatio­ns were also released online for people to download and send via mail, but dozens of residents lined up at a distributi­on center, risking exposure to Covid-19 to get paper applicatio­ns. Some residents told a local news outlet they showed up not for the applicatio­n, but to ask questions since the hotline was flooded with callers.

Even with the new measures, many residents are still facing problems. Ivette Cruz, who was laid off from her job at a food service company that operates at Walt Disney World, has been unsuccessf­ully trying to get in her applicatio­n since 2 April. She has been unable to access the applicatio­n itself because the system keeps booting her out.

“I could try at one o’clock in the morning, I could try at two o’clock in the morning. I could try at three o’clock, four o’clock in the afternoon. I’ve been trying different times, and it’s so frustratin­g,” said Cruz.

A delay in payments hurts many families, like Cruz, who have little to no savings.

Cruz is particular­ly worried about the mortgage on her house. Her mortgage company told her that payment

can be delayed for the next three months, but she will need to pay those months in full once those three months have passed.

“It’s not fair for me to wait so long ... because their system is overwhelme­d and not up to date. They should have known that this situation they’ll be in was going to get crazy,” Cruz said.

The loss in income, with no relief, has also put a strain on Reback and her family as they eat into their savings, which will last the family about a month. They cancelled cable and Netflix and are having to cut back on other expenses, like groceries.

“I have five children that we’re responsibl­e for. I’ve had to call every one of my creditors. I’ve had to call my mortgage company. I have a car loan, I’ve had to call them,” Reback said. “You have to kind of prioritize if this does continue and go on, what can you lose versus what can you not lose.

Florida’s unemployme­nt insurance system was largely considered broken even before the Covid-19 crisis began.

How much unemployme­nt insurance a state offers a person is mandated entirely by the state – the federal government does not have any guidelines for how much support needs to be given. In a state like Hawaii, a person can get 55% of their paycheck each week if they successful­ly file a claim. In Florida, all claims are maxed out at $275 a week – a ceiling that was set at least two decades ago.

“Florida’s system has been ungenerous for a long time,” said Wayne Vroman, an associate at the Urban Institute who has researched unemployme­nt insurance.

Most notable is the maximum duration that Florida allows its residents to access benefits, Vroman said. After the 2009 recession, Florida decreased its maximum duration from 26 weeks – the standard across multiple states – down to 12 weeks, with a sliding scale that will increase depending on the state’s unemployme­nt rate.

The state also has a strict work search requiremen­t, asking people to prove they have made five contacts with a potential employer a week, while most states ask for one or two.

Multiplest­ateDemocra­ts have called for the state to increase the maximum benefit cap and duration of benefits, but neither the state legislatur­e nor the governor’s administra­tion has made any serious moves to change benefits.

An anonymous DeSantis adviser told Politico there is concern over how the handling of unemployme­nt in the state will have political consequenc­es. “If we have to look past the crisis, it’s bad for the president and it’s bad for the governor,” the adviser said.

Adding fuel to the fire, the adviser blamed the broken system on Rick Scott, a Republican US senator for Florida who served as governor of the state between 2011 and 2019. The adviser did not sugarcoat how bad the situation has become for Floridians, or the Republican­s. “It’s a shit sandwich, and it was designed that way by Scott,” the unnamed adviser told Politico.

Florida’s system has been ungenerous for a long time

Wayne Vroman

 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty ?? City employees hand out unemployme­nt applicatio­ns to people in their vehicles in front of the John F Kennedy library in Hialeah, Florida, on 8 April.
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty City employees hand out unemployme­nt applicatio­ns to people in their vehicles in front of the John F Kennedy library in Hialeah, Florida, on 8 April.
 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? An aerial view of vehicles passing through as they receive food from a food bank in Sunrise, Florida, on 6 April.
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images An aerial view of vehicles passing through as they receive food from a food bank in Sunrise, Florida, on 6 April.

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