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Audit outlines Oregon Employment Department鈥檚 pandemic unemployment failures

A job center in North Portland run by the Oregon Employment Department. An audit from the Oregon Secretary of State's office released July 27, 2022 details OED's numerous problems as it struggled to keep up with historic numbers of jobless claims during the pandemic.
Kate Davidson
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OPB
A job center in North Portland run by the Oregon Employment Department. An audit from the Oregon Secretary of State's office released July 27, 2022 details OED's numerous problems as it struggled to keep up with historic numbers of jobless claims during the pandemic.

The report explores why many jobless Oregonians waited weeks or months to receive unemployment benefits. Auditors recommend an ombuds office to help claimants navigate the system.

Oregon鈥檚 unemployment insurance system experienced a litany of problems during the pandemic, a new audit from the Oregon Secretary of State has found, to thousands of workers who lost jobs.

鈥淭he goal of a safety net is for it to be there when you need it,鈥 Secretary of State Shemia Fagan said in a press release accompanying the report. 鈥淭his audit helps explain why Oregon鈥檚 unemployment insurance program failed when it was needed most and identifies actionable steps (the Oregon Employment Department) can take to make sure help is available the next time Oregonians need it.鈥

that were known to claimants and covered by the media. That includes the Employment Department鈥檚 antiquated and inflexible computer system, which was difficult to update when programs changed. Previous audits from the Secretary of State鈥檚 office, in 2012 and 2015, warned that the agency鈥檚 mainframe system, dating to the 1990s, was too rigid to handle complicated claims or rule changes, and relied too much on manual processes, leading to errors. The 2015 audit recommended that the Employment Department replace that legacy system 鈥 a modernization process that is only now underway.

The modernized unemployment system is expected to launch by spring of 2024.

Audit recounts OED鈥檚 communications problems when jobless rates spiked

The new audit also points to problems in the Employment Department鈥檚 communication systems with both claimants and employers. In the spring of 2020, the agency鈥檚 phone lines were hopelessly jammed by the surge in calls from people seeking help getting benefits.

鈥淥ED reported receiving more than 20 million calls in April 2020 alone,鈥 the audit states.

Claimants were put on hold for hours. They got relentless busy signals. Sometimes they were disconnected altogether. At the start of the pandemic, the agency didn鈥檛 have an online contact form for people who couldn鈥檛 get through by phone 鈥 a tool it later developed.

Blocked phone lines prevented people with limited English proficiency, as the audit notes and OPB reported, and online claims forms were initially offered only in English.

While critical in tone, the new audit is not blistering.

Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan asked Clackamas County Clerk Sherry Hall to produce a detailed plan as to when the votes would be fully counted.
courtesy of Oregon Secretary of State's office /
/
Oregon Secretary of State's office
"This audit helps explain why Oregon鈥檚 unemployment insurance program failed when it was needed most," Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan said in a statement. The audit released July 27, 2022 contains seven forward-looking recommendations to improve the system.


It notes the scale of job devastation the pandemic and related restrictions caused, as well as the pressure that put on the agency. 鈥淥regon鈥檚 unemployment rate nearly quadrupled,鈥 the report states, 鈥済oing from 3.4% in February 2020 to 13.3% by April 2020.鈥

In 2020, 580,000 people received unemployment benefits 鈥 a staggering 600% increase from the year before.

鈥2020 was like an avalanche,鈥 agency employee Jenifer Stepat says in the report.

The audit recognizes steps the Employment Department took to strengthen its systems, as well as the challenge of implementing brand-new at a time of record-high unemployment claims. Auditors anticipate that many of the issues the report describes can or should be addressed in the agency鈥檚 long-awaited modernization.

Fagan, in comments to reporters Wednesday, acknowledged the unprecedented spike in jobless claims that hit the state in 2020. But she said the audit should be seen in a human context 鈥 of families waiting for too long to get much-needed benefits.

鈥淲e have to make sure that we provide these tools and these recommendations to both lawmakers and the agency to say, you know, I鈥檒l be damned if Oregonians will ever experience this kind of pain again when a program that they have paid into their entire working lives doesn鈥檛 work at the time that they needed it the most,鈥 Fagan said.

At times the audit damns with faint praise.

The report notes that Oregon seems to have paid out than some other states 鈥 roughly $24 million in 2020 or just 0.32% of claims paid that year. Washington, by contrast, paid out hundreds of millions of dollars in fraudulent claims in 2020.

Oregon鈥檚 success, the audit says, is partly due to fraud prevention practices and learning from the experiences of other states.

鈥淎nd fraudsters targeting states with better computer systems that paid out claims faster,鈥 it adds.

Auditors examine monthslong adjudication delays

Perhaps the audit鈥檚 most critical assessment involves adjudication, the detailed process for resolving eligibility issues with claims. led to lengthy payment delays.

The agency had already struggled to meet federal timeliness guidelines for adjudicating claims prior to the pandemic. Those guidelines require state agencies to adjudicate at least 80% of claims within 21 calendar days.

But the pandemic made everything worse.

Auditors concluded that the time it took adjudicators to reach claimants by phone or letter could slow down the process.

鈥淥ED did not previously have a consistent caller ID for outbound calls, making it less likely people would answer adjudicator calls,鈥 the report states, describing the phone tag that could ensue. The Employment Department did not ask people their preferred communication method or use texting, because many fraudsters use text messages to try to con people.

Likewise, the agency did not require even the largest employers to use an electronic system to respond to unemployment claims, and relied instead.

Some unemployment claims took months or even years to resolve, the audit says, because of inadequate controls in the agency鈥檚 outdated IT systems.

Auditors looked at more than 155,000 adjudication records from claims in 2019 and 2020. They found 900 adjudicated claims with missing or illogical dates. Tens of thousands of records were potential duplicates.

Auditors also found more than 1,000 claims that appeared to take a year or more to adjudicate. It was unclear to them how many claims truly stalled for that long and how many had errors in the date field.

The agency examined a small subset of those claims more closely. It confirmed that some had languished for two years before being finalized. Those claims had been sent to another unit for fraud detection.

Many of the adjudication data fields in the Employment Department鈥檚 system are manually entered, according to the audit. That includes the date an issue that may need investigation is detected, the date a decision is made on the claim, and the code describing that decision. The report says most manually entered fields in the current computer system don鈥檛 have drop-down lists of options, to reduce errors and typos.

What鈥檚 more, the audit found the agency had no formal procedures to ensure that claims flagged for adjudication didn鈥檛 fall through the cracks. It found no centralized repository for adjudicators to stay up to date as guidance changed for unemployment programs. Auditors say that increased the risk that adjudicators could make inconsistent decisions when allowing or denying benefits.

Recommendations to prepare for future spikes in unemployment

Auditors proposed seven recommendations, which the Employment Department agreed to. They include:

In the Wednesday press conference presenting the audit, Fagan noted that the Employment Department isn鈥檛 the only institution that should consider how it can improve. Fagan served eight years in the Oregon Legislature before winning election as secretary of state.

鈥淚t is not a sexy topic to say, hey let鈥檚 solve this potential risk before it happens by investing in new (information technology) systems. But this shows how important it is and how important it is for lawmakers to act with urgency when there are big risks built in the IT systems,鈥 Fagan said.

鈥淪o in terms of responsibility and blame, there鈥檚 enough to go around. But the bottom line is, this was real people and real families impacted and we don鈥檛 want that to ever get lost in kind of a shuffle of whose fault it was.鈥

Rob Manning contributed to this story.

Copyright 2022 Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Kate Davidson is OPB鈥檚 business and economics reporter. Before moving to Oregon, she was a regular contributor to "Marketplace", a reporter at Michigan Radio focused on economic change in the industrial Midwest and a producer at NPR.