The tech sector being the tech sector, I was laid off a few times during my career. Each time I collected unemployment benefits.
Massachusetts being Massachusetts - vax registration snafu aside, a first-rate place to live - the benefits were pretty good. The benefit in Massachusetts is, in fact, the highest in the country. (You can collect 50% of your weekly salary, capping out at over $800 per week. Massachusetts also has the longest duration of collectability. You can collect for 30 weeks. Other states have ridiculously skimpy benefits. Like Mississippi, which maxes out at $235/week. And Georgia, where you can only collect for 12 weeks.)
Anyway, while it's never all that great to be unemployed and in need of work, even if you were waving your arms begging to get the boot, to be able to have some income in coming is a big relief. And it's actually gravy if you're also collecting severance. (Not sure about all states, but in Massachusetts if your severance is set up a certain way, you can simultaneously collect unemployment benefits.)
I don't remember much about the sign up process. I think that one time, I had to register in person. Obviously, they didn't take your word for it when it came to employment status. They checked the list your now-former company had provided. And that was about it.
It was easy to register for benefits. And as long as you did a couple of things a week that qualified as job-search, you just had to check in via phone or, later (I think), online to keep re-upping. Massachusetts also had a nifty little thing where, if you had a short term freelance gig, you could suspend benefits for any week you were working, without having to reapply and without losing out on the number of weeks you were qualified for.
Not that I necessarily recommend being unemployed (actually, I do, but that's another story), but if you have to be unemployed, being unemployed in Massachusetts is as good as it gets.
Which, of course, makes us a target for fraudsters. But in this, we're not alone. A lots of states have been paying bad actors - no, not Hollywood bad actors: bad people - who are taking advantage of everything being automated to collect in someone else's name.
The U.S. Justice Department is investigating unemployment fraud by “transnational criminal organizations [that would be China, Russia and Nigeria], sophisticated domestic actors, and individuals across the United States,” said Joshua Stueve, a spokesman for the department's criminal division.
The Labor Department inspector general’s office estimates that more than $63 billion has been paid out improperly through fraud or errors — roughly 10% of the total amount paid under coronavirus pandemic-related unemployment programs since March...
California has been the biggest target, with an estimated $11 billion in fraudulent payments and an additional $19 billion in suspect accounts. Colorado has paid out nearly as much to scammers — an estimated $6.5 billion — as it has to people who filed legitimate unemployment claims.Other estimates, according to AP reporting across the states, range from several hundred thousand dollars in smaller states such as Alaska and Wyoming to hundreds of millions in more populous states such as Massachusetts and Ohio. (Source: Boston Globe)
The bad guys are taking advantage of the huge increase in applications for unemployment benefits since the pandemic struck, and the "antiquated benefit systems that are easy prey for crafty and persistent criminals."
In its own survey of state governments, the AP found that many are not publicly disclosing the level of fraud. Some officials expressed concern that providing any information, no matter how general, could provide criminals an opening to exploit their systems further.There are a ton of folks out there who could use some help. The billions being scammed on unemployment should be going to them, not to the scam artists.
President Joe Biden's administration is pledging to cut down on unemployment fraud even as it tries to extend benefits through September. As part of previous legislation, the administration is sending states $200 million to fight it.
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