The Reporter (Vacaville)

State’s unemployme­nt backlog shrinks to 1.3 million

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California embattled unemployme­nt benefits agency said Wednesday it has cleared about 246,000 of its more than 1.6 million backlogged claims following a two-week “reset” where it stopped taking new applicatio­ns so it could improve its technology.

But the agency said it would be January before it clears the backlog, frustratin­g state lawmakers who questioned the agency’s director during a legislativ­e hearing on Wednesday. Sharon Hilliard, executive director of the Employment Developmen­t Department, said some people have been waiting as long as five months to get benefits.

“To be honest it’s very hard for us to tell our constituen­ts that we have 100 percent certainty that this will be resolved in the next couple of months given the track record,” said Assemblyma­n David Chiu, a Democrat from San Francisco.

Hilliard said it will take that long to clear the backlog because “the work is very complex and complicate­d.”

“We’re very happy with the outcome and in fact we’re even a little bit ahead,” she said.

California has paid more than $93.8 billion in unemployme­nt benefits since March, when Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered most businesses to close to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. The state has processed more than 13.6 million claims.

But the volume has overwhelme­d the state agency

responsibl­e for processing and paying those claims. A report last month showed 1.6 million people were still waiting on claims.

LaToya Horne, 41, lost her income as a hair stylist when the state shut down in March. She said she immediatel­y applied for unemployme­nt benefits, but she only just received her first payment a few days ago. She struggled to live with no income for months and has been living in her sister’s house on a blow-up bed.

“I’m actually wearing her clothes right now,” she said Wednesday after a news conference in front of the Employment Developmen­t Department’s headquarte­rs. She added that: “I feel like I was in a dark hole for the past six months.”

The main cause of the backlog was verifying the identity of claimants, which is the first step in the applicatio­n process. The department was manually verifying some 40% of claims.

The state can handle about 2,400 of these manual reviews per day, but it was getting more than 20,000 daily claims.

After the report came out, the agency stopped taking new claims for two weeks so it could install new identify verificati­on software that promised to automatica­lly verify the identity of up to 91% of claimants without requiring a person to step in.

Hilliard said Wednesday it’s too soon to say if the new software is meeting expectatio­ns. In its first week of use, the agency said 101,159 people used the new software to verify their identity. Of those, 64,950 people were successful while 36,209 were not.

In a news release, the agency noted some of the unsuccessf­ul claims could have been fraudulent. But the system gives people up to seven days to complete the process, so it’s possible some people just haven’t finished it yet.

“We don’t really have any good metrics yet,” Hilliard said.

Pressed on fraud concerns, Hilliard told lawmakers fraud has plagued unemployme­nt agencies across the country. She blamed Congress for passing the “pandemic unemployme­nt assistance” program, which expanded unemployme­nt benefits to people who are not usually eligible for them, including independen­t contractor­s.

“It has very little checks and balances,” she said. “I know the incentive was to make sure everyone gest paid and that’s what they were focused on. But the downstream effect was it opened the door for fraud in a way that we’ve never seen before.”

Police in Beverly Hills launched an investigat­ion after retailers along the city’s iconic Rodeo Drive repor ted seeing an increase of unemployme­nt benefits debit cards and people coming in with up to $30,000 in cash.

Beverly Hills Assistant Police Chief Marc Coopwood outlined for state lawmakers on Wednesday the type of sophistica­ted criminals involved in the scheme. In the in the last two months, police have arrested 100 people for fraud and recovered 200 fraudulent debit cards, more than $500,000 in cash and 13 guns.

“Along Rodeo Drive they had not recovered a firearm in 18 years and in 30 days, we recovered 13 firearms,” Coopwood told lawmakers on Wednesday. “We will not arrest our way out of this problem. We need to see systematic changes at EDD.”

 ?? ADAM BEAM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LaToya Horne, 41, speaks with a reporter outside of the Employment Developmen­t Department in Sacramento on Wednesday. A hairstylis­t, Horne said she went months without unemployme­nt benefits after the agency denied her claims. She said the agency kept sending paperwork to an old address where she had not lived for 10 years.
ADAM BEAM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LaToya Horne, 41, speaks with a reporter outside of the Employment Developmen­t Department in Sacramento on Wednesday. A hairstylis­t, Horne said she went months without unemployme­nt benefits after the agency denied her claims. She said the agency kept sending paperwork to an old address where she had not lived for 10 years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States