Nearly one million unemployed Californians could have their claims disqualified starting today, according to a news release from the stateâs Employment Development Department (EDD).
Late last year, EDD froze around 1.4 million accounts over concerns for fraud. As of Feb. 11, nearly 388,000 of those applicants have been verified by EDD. The remaining accounts are now subject to disqualification.
But, this figure doesnât account for how many applicants have attempted to verify their identity and been unable to get through EDD’s identity verification system.
To be verified, applicants need to provide EDD with specified identity confirmation materials, like a valid driver’s license or passport. But ID.me, the primary platform EDD uses for verification, has had notoriously long wait times. EDD even extended the length of time applicants had to verify their identities from 10 to 30 days in an acknowledgement of those delays.
EDD recently suspended 1.4 million potentially fraudulent claims, asking claimants to validate their identity or eligibility before payments could resume. Claimants directed to IDme for ID verification have 30 days to respond from the date of their verification notice.
— EDD (@CA_EDD) January 31, 2021
Of the applicants who received verification notices via their Unemployment Insurance (UI) Online accounts, EDD says about half havenât even opened the messages.
But multiple advocates say that’s because many people donât regularly monitor the inboxes where EDD is sending these alerts, or even know they’re there.
âThey are unaware that thereâs an inbox in there,â said Amos Lim, a community advocate with Chinese for Affirmative Action. âSo EDD sends them a message and they donât know until, you know, another big issue crops up or payments stop, and then we’ll get a call saying, âHelp! Help! Iâm not getting payment anymoreâ.â
In these cases, Lim said he gets permission to log into the clientâs account and often finds dozens of unread emails, if not more.
EDD has said that it is also texting applicants to encourage them to verify, but Daniela Urban, founder of the Center for Workersâ Rights, says there are access barriers with that method as well.
âSo if [the verification link] gets texted to you, you need to be able to open that on a smartphone,â and not all of her clients have them, she said. That’s left some applicants waiting for verification codes to come in the mail.
Thanks! I did not complete the https://t.co/7md9rJVeuv app because they snookered me by not telling me they would be texting my LANDLINE, which of course cannot accept texts. The edd in CA says they will mail me the code, as they did last year so figured they were doing that.
— John Sheridan (@JohnSherArt4109) February 12, 2021
For people who were part of the big account freeze and are worried they may be at risk of disqualification, Urban suggests mailing or faxing acceptable identity documents to EDD as soon as possible.Â
âTo at least allow them to say that they have substantially complied with the request for identity verification, even though they didn’t comply through the method that EDD was requesting,â Urban said.
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