Trump administration ‘neglected’ California’s efforts to combat unemployment fraud, EDD head says
President Donald Trump’s administration “neglected” state efforts to combat domestic and foreign criminals collecting billions of dollars fraudulently from overwhelmed unemployment systems, California’s
“We object to the chair’s mischaracterization of California’s response to the unemployment insurance fraud attacks and the chair’s failure to acknowledge the inadequate response by the Trump Administration” Farias wrote in a four page letter to Comer.
Comer is chairman the
Farias contended it was President Donald Trump’s administration “which left neglected state UI systems fighting domestic and international criminal enterprises effectively on their own.”
Their fight is shaping up as a highly partisan battle.
“I believe with all my heart that we have a duty to have the backs of the American taxpayer. That is something that has been left out of the mix over the last several years in Congress,” he said Monday.
It’s unclear who was most to blame for the initially slow response to the fraud, and chaos, that the system endured as the COVID pandemic exploded in 2020. The
Plagued by fraud
Unemployment agencies throughout the country made it a priority to get the benefits out quickly to those in need. But in doing so, they exposed their systems to massive fraud.
Regular unemployment Insurance is a joint federal-state program. There are some federal regulations that govern the program and there are some state specific ones as well.
But with PUA, states were required to build and launch what the federal program called for, funded entirely by federal funds, not the employer contribution funds that pay for regular UI benefits. States administered the PUA program according to the requirements of the program set by the federal government.
Comer blasted state officials for the mess.
“Governor (Gavin)
He said that “Despite the unexpected and unprecedented nature of the coronavirus pandemic, California’s problems cannot be blamed on COVID alone.”
He cited a
EDD fights back
“The Trump administration expressed no interest in establishing such coordinated national response when these programs were initiated in 2020, leaving states to fend for themselves against a clear pattern of sophisticated, international criminal syndicates at work,” she wrote.
She cited an August, 2020, report from the Labor Department’s Inspector General, a nonpartisan watchdog.
The report showed that on
And that office suggested “timely, additional guidance could assist states in better protecting funds against fraud, waste, and abuse. Further, ETA has directed states to leverage their existing program integrity systems to include (new) programs, but ETA can do more to ensure adequate program assessment.” ETA is the
On
But Farias told Comer that the federal agency did not act to develop any sort of coordinated national response to detect or prevent the fraud. And federal money to help fight fraud was not available until
Nevertheless, Farias said,
As of November, EDD reported 1,713 investigations into fraud have been opened in the past three years. There have been 296 convictions and more than
Farias, appointed to her current job last year by Newsom, praised the Biden administration, which took office in
Last year, the department named a chief prosecutor to lead a team to probe major fraud targets.
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