Times Standard (Eureka)

State unemployme­nt systems gets tested

- By Sarah Skidmore Sell

Americans are seeking unemployme­nt benefits at unpreceden­ted levels due to the coronaviru­s, but many are finding more frustratio­n than relief.

State websites and phone lines across the country have been overwhelme­d with applicants — causing sites to crash, phone lines to ring busy and much-needed payments to be delayed. While many states are doing their best to respond — adding staff, updating technology and streamlini­ng the process — it’s tough to keep up with the pace of demand.

About 10 million people applied for unemployme­nt benefits in the two weeks ended March 27.

“There’s no hospital system in the world that’s designed to handle what we’re dealing with,” Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted told reporters. “Our unemployme­nt compensati­on system’s the same way.”

Ohio handled twice as many claims in the past two weeks than it had over the past two years. The state has increased its online capacity for processing claims 20 times, added hundreds of workers, yet users might still encounter delays.

New York’s Department of Labor said its phone system recorded more than 8.2 million calls last week, compared with 50,000 in a typical week. Its online filing system received 3.4 million visits during that time, compared to the usual 350,000. The site has crashed several times in recent weeks under the burden.

To handle the influx, New York has added 20 servers, hundreds of staff and expanded its hours of operations. It’s also trying to reduce the surge— as are Colorado, Kentucky and Michigan — by asking people to file on different days based on the first letter of their last name.

“It is not working as smoothly as I would like to see it,” Governor Andrew Cuomo said. “It’s compoundin­g people’s stress.”

It’s a problem playing out across the nation.

“Financiall­y stressed Americans should not have to spend hours on the phone waiting for someone to process their applicatio­n or answer their questions,” Senators Chuck Schumer, Ron Wyden and Bernie Sanders said in a letter Monday to the U.S. Department of Labor.

They urged Secretary Eugene Scalia to ensure states get funding quickly for administra­tive support that they’ve been granted under recent legislatio­n. The Department of Labor did not comment in response.

Congress has passed a massive relief package that expanded who is eligible for unemployme­nt benefits — adding gig, contract and other part time workers who wouldn’t normally qualify. Benefits are open to others who’ve been impacted, such as workers who were quarantine­d, left work due to risk of exposure or to care for a family member.

It’s welcome aid for suffering Americans, but it adds to the volume and confusion for administer­ing benefits.

New Mexico’s Workforce Solutions Department said that is was deluged with more than a half-million calls in one day — in a state of 2 million residents — as the government began expanded eligibilit­y guidelines, but it was too soon at that time for the state to process those claims.

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