Among the resources that the White House鈥檚 disaster declaration offers to Oregon is a new funding stream to benefit people whose jobs went up in flames from the wildfires still burning in parts of the state. The Oregon Employment Department announced Wednesday that people who鈥檝e become unemployed as a result of the state鈥檚 catastrophic wildfires will soon get support from Disaster Unemployment Assistance.
Now with so many programs 鈥 regular Unemployment Insurance, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, Extended Benefits, as well as Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation 鈥 OED director David Gerstenfeld acknowledged it can be hard for out-of-work Oregonians to know which program they鈥檒l fall under. Gerstenfeld said OED intends to ensure people who need help will be connected to the program they鈥檙e eligible for.
鈥淚f they are able to qualify for regular unemployment, then we are required to pay them under that program,鈥 Gerstenfeld said.
Claims that are complicated, or otherwise raise initial flags often end up in what鈥檚 called 鈥渁djudication鈥 where they鈥檙e investigated, sometimes holding up payment for months. It can also be difficult for people to even know what category they鈥檙e in if their job situation is being affected by both the pandemic and wildfires, for instance.
鈥淲e have the extra complication right now, where a lot of people that normally wouldn鈥檛 be able to get regular unemployment are already receiving Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits. So if people are unemployed because of COVID-19 ... they will likely continue to receive benefits under that program,鈥 Gerstenfeld said.
OED has posted a to its web site, in part to answer questions from people who were already unemployed, but may have lost important documents 鈥 or even their entire home 鈥 as wildfires forced evacuations and destroyed property.
Gerstenfeld said his agency is working as quickly as possible to make the Disaster Unemployment Assistance, or DUA, funds available.
鈥淒UA is really one more safety net for the people who aren鈥檛 eligible for any of those programs 鈥 It鈥檚 hard to give one list of criteria for what program people might be in,鈥 Gerstenfeld said.
DUA is not exactly a 鈥渘ew program.鈥 It鈥檚 been available for many years for states experiencing disasters, and its structure was the model for the PUA program, for people who lost their jobs due to the pandemic but don鈥檛 qualify for regular unemployment.
OED is working on several new initiatives even as it鈥檚 trying to resolve a hefty backlog of claims and stand up a relief program for wildfire survivors.
Gerstenfeld offered a bit of good news on that front. His agency is in negotiations with a vendor to carry out a long-planned upgrade to its claims systems. OED鈥檚 current system has been in place for decades and has been identified as a factor in the agency鈥檚 difficulty in quickly resolving claims over the spring and summer.
While the agency has been soundly criticized for moving too slowly, Gerstenfeld said his technology staff appears to be ahead of schedule with one of its tasks. OED was pressed by legislators recently to implement Senate Bill 1701, a law they passed in a special session this year to allow people to earn more money without losing unemployment benefits. Gerstenfeld said that IT workers had a chance to make headway on SB 1701 in their downtime while implementing yet another program 鈥 the federal Lost Wages Assistance program. Gerstenfeld that the program, which offers an additional $300 of unemployment benefits to eligible people, is on schedule to start delivering benefits by the end of the month.
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