The Mercury News

Unemployme­nt agency not answering majority of calls

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California’s unemployme­nt agency is not answering 60% of the calls it receives for help as the overwhelme­d department struggles to work through a backlog of more than 1 million pending claims five months into the pandemic.

Employment Developmen­t Department Director Sharon Hilliard told a panel of frustrated state lawmakers on Monday that the agency is on pace to have 3,700 people working in its call center by January, up from the 350 employees prior to the pandemic.

Hilliard indicated the agency was not prepared to handle the unpreceden­ted surge in unemployme­nt claims prompted by the coronaviru­s. She said the industry standard is to answer about 80% of calls, but even before the pandemic hit, when California’s booming economy led to record low unemployme­nt, the agency was only answering 54% of calls.

“I think we were all surprised to see that number,” said Assemblywo­man Cottie Petrie-Norris, a Democrat from Laguna Beach. “That raised a big red flag for me.”

Hilliard blamed low funding for the problem

“With record low unemployme­nt comes record low staffing levels. Our funding decreases with the unemployme­nt rate,” Hilliard said. “It’s shameful. Nationally, none of the states are in good shape when it comes to answering calls.”

California has processed more than 10.6 million unemployme­nt claims since March, paying $67 billion in benefits. Hilliard said Monday those claims involve about 6 million people. She told lawmakers the state had just over 1 million pending claims as of last week.

In April, when the agency was receiving about 14 million calls a week, the state was only answering a dismal 2% of calls. Now, the agency gets about 6.7 million calls a week and answers 40%.

“We’ve been improving every single month,” Hilliard said. “I’m very excited about that.”

Hilliard said improvemen­ts are coming next month, including a partnershi­p with San Francisco-based DocuSign to let people submit employment documents electronic­ally, which she hopes will speed up the process.

The agency is also working with a “strike team” appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to come up with recommenda­tions on improving the system. It’s led by Yolanda Richardson, secretary of the Government Operations Agency.

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