State Sending ‘Unclaimed’ Money Back To Record Numbers Of Residents
“I’m very happy with the progress that we’ve made so far this year to modernize the unclaimed property system and streamline the processing of claims,” Russell said. “It’s been a ton of work for our team but well worth it.”
The 72,981 people who recovered their money over the past fiscal year is a huge improvement for the program, which traditionally required individuals to locate their missing assets on a state website, known as the CT Big List, and to file a formal claim with the treasurer’s office.
During each of the previous 23 years, that process resulted in fewer than 16,000 people on average successfully retrieving their money from the state.
The Connecticut Mirror published a story in early 2022 that highlighted how the unclaimed property program returned less than 37% of the money it required banks, utilities, insurance companies and other financial institutions to turn over to the state during the course of two decades.
That investigation also revealed that the Treasurer's office had failed to disclose millions of checks, refunds and other assets that were valued under
As a result of that reporting, state officials sought to reform parts of the program in order make it easier for people to identify and recover the money that belongs to them.
That was a significant change and one that brought
But many people, including Wooden, suggested that legal change would do little in practice without lawmakers also giving the treasurer's staff access to state tax records and other existing government data that could help them locate people.
Lawmakers declined over the past two sessions to pass bills that would ensure the Treasurer's office had access to that type of detailed information.
But Russell, the current treasurer, said that did not prevent his team from finding other ways to verify the owners of unclaimed property that is valued under
He said the treasurer's office used LexisNexis, a company that maintains a variety of information about individuals and organizations, to check people's names, addresses and other personal information like
"In early June, we were able to run the first batches of automatic payments," Russell said. "Several internal processes had to be adjusted to accomplish this, and a lot of testing and preparatory work was done by our unclaimed property team. But it allowed us to send thousands of checks of unclaimed property back to its owners without requiring physical paperwork on their end."
The treasurer's office also collaborated with the state
By automating those processes, Russell said, the treasurer's office has been able to focus more of its resources on assisting people who file claims for unclaimed property valued above
"We’re excited by the progress that’s been made so far and are eager to build on it to further modernize the unclaimed property system and streamline the returning of funds to their rightful owners," Russell said.
The number of people who cashed in on the unclaimed property program last year is one statistic. But it's not the only metric that the treasurer's office judges itself on.
The office also monitors how much of the unclaimed money it returns to people every year, and when it comes to that figure, there's been less progress.
The most recent annual report for the unclaimed property program shows the state returned roughly
Lizzi recognized that not all of the money can be returned because in many instances there isn't enough information included with every asset to find the true owner.
Still, Lizzi believes the program should be able to return a larger portion of the money in its possession, considering the state currently maintains a website that contains an estimated 9.9 million owners and
Lizzi helped to convince a bipartisan group of lawmakers on the Legislature's
That bill would have required the treasurer to list more specific details about each piece of unclaimed property on the CT Big List. It would have authorized data sharing between the Treasurer's office and the state
The legislation was never taken up by the
"More reform is needed," said Lizzi, who lives in
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