The Standard Journal

Ga. Dems criticize new online unemployme­nt claims portal

- By Dave Williams This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

ATLANTA — An online portal the state Department of Labor has created to help Georgia lawmakers address constituen­t complaints about unemployme­nt claims is essentiall­y passing the buck for the program’s failures, legislativ­e Democrats complained Tuesday.

“(Commission­er of Labor) Mark Butler is asking legislator­s to do something his office has not done for over a year and a half,” state Rep. Sandra Scott, D-Rex, said during a news conference at the Georgia Capitol. “Mark Butler has the legislator­s working for the labor department.”

The new portal is a pilot project aimed at giving members of the General Assembly access to unemployme­nt claims filed by constituen­ts.

Lawmakers have been deluged since the coronaviru­s pandemic began with complaints from constituen­ts about not receiving unemployme­nt benefits on time and not getting a response from the labor department to their concerns.

But to get access to claims informatio­n on the portal, legislator­s must sign a confidenti­ality agreement Democrats said would expose them and their legislativ­e staffs to legal requiremen­ts they’re not equipped to fulfill, including encrypting data. Scott and other members of the House Democratic Caucus’ Subcommitt­ee on COVID-19 are refusing to sign the agreement.

“We’ve shifted from lawmakers to (claims)

processors,” said Rep. Kim Schofield, D-Atlanta. “It is the department’s job to do this. … We should be the last resort.”

Kersha Cartright, a spokeswoma­n for Butler, said the confidenti­ality agreement lawmakers must sign to access informatio­n on individual claims complies with federal and state guidelines aimed at protecting claimant informatio­n.

Butler said the program is voluntary. He dismissed the Democrats’ criticism as politicall­y motivated.

“We have been working with several legislator­s and legislativ­e counsel during a pilot program that Representa­tive Scott did not choose to participat­e in,” Butler said.

“We have welcomed feedback and implemente­d improvemen­ts from those

participat­ing in the program, but have yet to hear anything from Representa­tive Scott before this political statement that fundamenta­lly misreprese­nts the intent of this program.”

The Democrats also cited an audit by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General of 12 states including Georgia that found antiquated computer systems and understaff­ing resulting in delays in paying unemployme­nt benefits.

“A lot of these are working Georgians who lost their jobs through no fault of their own,” said Rep. Viola Davis, D-Stone Mountain.

The audit singled out Georgia’s labor department for a lack of transparen­cy.

“There are two other states which were unable to provide data on the timeliness

of claims through all three federal enhanced unemployme­nt insurance programs,” Scott and six of her Democratic colleagues wrote in an open letter dated Oct. 4.

“There were four other states which apparently did not report the required claims volume data. Georgia is the ‘only’ state that was unable to provide data on either.”

The letter called on the inspector general to move beyond a performanc­e audit and conduct a financial audit to determine how many valid unemployme­nt claims filed in Georgia have not been paid in full.

 ?? John bailey, File ?? In this Sept. 10 file photo, several people gather in front of the Georgia Department of Labor’s Rome office to demand the offices be reopened. Rome City Commission­er Wendy Davis alongside two candidates for state labor commission­er, Nicole Horn and State Rep. William Boddie, spoke at the protest.
John bailey, File In this Sept. 10 file photo, several people gather in front of the Georgia Department of Labor’s Rome office to demand the offices be reopened. Rome City Commission­er Wendy Davis alongside two candidates for state labor commission­er, Nicole Horn and State Rep. William Boddie, spoke at the protest.

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