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| | SR0449 | | LRB102 19295 MST 28061 r |
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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, A new coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) |
3 | | was discovered in China at the end of 2019 and rapidly spread |
4 | | around the globe; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, The Trump Administration declared a public health |
6 | | emergency on January 31, 2020 in response to COVID-19; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, The World Health Organization characterized the |
8 | | outbreak of the COVID-19 as a pandemic on March 11, 2020; and |
9 | | WHEREAS, Governmental efforts to contain and restrict the |
10 | | spread of COVID-19 led to widespread economic dislocation and |
11 | | unemployment; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, President Trump signed the Families First |
13 | | Coronavirus Response Act on March 18, 2020, providing $1 |
14 | | billion to the states to use in the administration and |
15 | | processing of their unemployment claims; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, President Trump signed into law the Coronavirus |
17 | | Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act on March 27, |
18 | | 2020, providing $250 billion to expand unemployment benefits, |
19 | | extending benefits to more workers, increasing weekly |
20 | | payments, and prolonging eligibility for unemployed workers; |
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1 | | and |
2 | | WHEREAS, The CARES Act also created a $150 billion |
3 | | Coronavirus Relief Fund for state, local, and tribal |
4 | | governments; these funds could be used by states for |
5 | | unemployment costs caused by COVID-19; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, President Trump took executive action to bolster |
7 | | unemployment benefits in August, authorizing the expenditure |
8 | | of up to an additional $44 billion; and |
9 | | WHEREAS, The federal government provided states additional |
10 | | flexibility in the administration of many programs, including |
11 | | the unemployment insurance program; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, The American Rescue Plan Act provided additional |
13 | | federal aid and extended a number of unemployment programs, |
14 | | including the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) Program |
15 | | through September 6, 2021; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, States, while receiving federal financial |
17 | | assistance, are ultimately responsible to run their own |
18 | | unemployment programs; and |
19 | | WHEREAS, Illinois experienced significant unemployment due |
20 | | to the pandemic and the resultant governmental actions; after |
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1 | | an initial spike in unemployment claims to over 970,000 in |
2 | | April 2020, the number of unemployment claims declined through |
3 | | October 2020 and have remained through June 2021 within a band |
4 | | of 430,000 and 480,000 per month, approximately double the |
5 | | pre-pandemic rate; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, Illinois has had consistently higher unemployment |
7 | | rates during the pandemic than any of its neighboring states; |
8 | | in June 2021, Illinois's unemployment rate was 7.2%, Indiana's |
9 | | was 4.1%, Iowa's was 4.0%, Kentucky's was 4.4%, Missouri's was |
10 | | 4.3%, and Wisconsin's was 3.9%, according to data released by |
11 | | the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security |
13 | | had 1,041 employees in April 2020, according to the Better |
14 | | Government Association, a decline from January 2019 when |
15 | | Governor Pritzker assumed office; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security, |
17 | | using federal funds, initially contracted with Deloitte to |
18 | | hire an additional 500 individuals to assist with the |
19 | | increased call volume; and |
20 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security, |
21 | | in conjunction with Deloitte, took two months to set up the |
22 | | Pandemic Employment Assistance Program provided for by the |
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1 | | CARES Act; the implementation of the Pandemic Unemployment |
2 | | Assistance program in Illinois lagged most other states; and |
3 | | WHEREAS, From March 21, 2020 through June 13, 2020, the |
4 | | Illinois Department of Employment Security received an average |
5 | | of 200,000 unique callers per week but, on average, only |
6 | | answered 10% of them; at its lowest point during that period, |
7 | | only 5% of calls were answered; and |
8 | | WHEREAS, Many Illinois residents have been targeted and |
9 | | victimized by fraudulent unemployment claims made in their |
10 | | names; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, It has proven extremely difficult for claimants |
12 | | and fraud victims alike to contact the Illinois Department of |
13 | | Employment Security; many waited months to receive a call |
14 | | back, leaving them in financial limbo and accentuating the |
15 | | challenges of navigating the COVID-19 pandemic; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, According to the Better Government Association, |
17 | | the Illinois Department of Employment Security had only been |
18 | | issuing approximately 1% of its unemployment checks within |
19 | | seven days of the application for benefits through September, |
20 | | resulting in Illinois being the slowest state in the nation |
21 | | and one of only ten states that fell below 10%; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, The Better Government Association further |
2 | | reported that Illinois failed to achieve federal standards for |
3 | | its unemployment program in five out of 10 performance |
4 | | measures; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, The Chicago Tribune reported that, despite the |
6 | | federal government in April 2020 "strongly" recommending that |
7 | | the state use additional fraud-prevention tools, the Illinois |
8 | | Department of Employment Security failed to implement the |
9 | | recommended anti-fraud tools; and |
10 | | WHEREAS, The Auditor General released a financial audit of |
11 | | the Illinois Department of Employment Security on July 28, |
12 | | 2021; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, The financial audit of the Illinois Department of |
14 | | Employment Security only covered fiscal year 2021, from July |
15 | | 1, 2019 through June 30, 2020, and only overlapped with the |
16 | | Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program for seven weeks, from |
17 | | May 11, 2020, through June 30, 2020; and |
18 | | WHEREAS, The Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program has |
19 | | been repeatedly extended and now continues through September |
20 | | 6, 2021; and |
21 | | WHEREAS, The financial audit released by the Auditor |
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1 | | General only examined approximately 10% of the time period |
2 | | covered by the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program; and |
3 | | WHEREAS, The financial audit stated that, during these |
4 | | seven weeks, the Illinois Department of Employment Security |
5 | | failed to accurately document eligibility, resulting in |
6 | | potentially ineligible claimants receiving benefits totaling |
7 | | $154,906,354, which included: |
8 | | (1) Failing to validate the identities of 4,579 |
9 | | claimants before paying them $41,697,272; |
10 | | (2) Paying both Pandemic Unemployment Assistance and |
11 | | regular unemployment insurance benefits to 638 claimants, |
12 | | resulting in the claimants receiving benefits under both |
13 | | programs; |
14 | | (3) Paying benefits to 266 claimants that had |
15 | | birthdays the same day as or after the date of the claim |
16 | | submission with at least one claimant with a recorded |
17 | | birth date in 2029; and |
18 | | (4) Paying benefits to 35 deceased claimants; and |
19 | | WHEREAS, The financial audit additionally found that the |
20 | | Illinois Department of Employment Security had, prior to July |
21 | | 1, 2020: |
22 | | (1) Paid Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits to |
23 | | 63 claimants who were 90 years old or older; |
24 | | (2) Paid Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits to |
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1 | | 164 claimants who were between the ages of birth and 13 |
2 | | years of age; and |
3 | | (3) Paid Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits to |
4 | | 31 claimants who submitted multiple Social Security |
5 | | numbers and multiple claimant IDs; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security |
7 | | has acknowledged paying out $14.8 million in fraudulent claims |
8 | | to individuals who had either failed to report or |
9 | | underreported earnings; and
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10 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security |
11 | | has refused to release any numbers pertaining to identity |
12 | | theft-related unemployment fraud; and
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13 | | WHEREAS, An official with LexisNexis Risk Solutions |
14 | | testified at a hearing of the House Cybersecurity Committee |
15 | | that Illinois had lost an estimated $1 billion to unemployment |
16 | | insurance fraud; and
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17 | | WHEREAS, Illinois' Unemployment Trust Fund faces a |
18 | | multibillion dollar deficit, which will fall on small business |
19 | | owners across the state; therefore, be it
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20 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL |
21 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that the Auditor General is |
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1 | | directed to conduct a full financial and performance audit of |
2 | | the Illinois Department of Employment Security's |
3 | | administration of the state's unemployment programs for the |
4 | | period between March 1, 2020 and September 6, 2021; and be it |
5 | | further |
6 | | RESOLVED, That the audit include, but not be limited to, |
7 | | the following determinations: |
8 | | (1) A review of the application and review processes |
9 | | and the payment of benefits to individuals; it shall focus |
10 | | on any fraud or inefficiencies that could be eliminated to |
11 | | contain costs and improve the delivery of benefits to |
12 | | eligible individuals; |
13 | | (2) A detailed account of the funds wrongfully |
14 | | disbursed to ineligible and fraudulent claimants; |
15 | | (3) The types of unemployment fraud schemes the |
16 | | Illinois Department of Employment Security has experienced |
17 | | and what steps and procedures it has taken to detect and |
18 | | respond to fraudulent unemployment claims and whether it |
19 | | has cooperated with the Illinois Attorney General or |
20 | | federal authorities to detect, counter, and prosecute |
21 | | fraud; |
22 | | (4) Whether the Illinois Department of Employment |
23 | | Security has complied with all state and federal statutory |
24 | | and administrative requirements for processing and |
25 | | auditing unemployment claims; |
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1 | | (5) An examination of the Illinois Department of |
2 | | Employment Security's decision not to implement additional |
3 | | fraud-prevention tools in April 2021 as recommended by the |
4 | | federal government and a report on whether the state has, |
5 | | since that time, come into compliance with federal |
6 | | recommendations; |
7 | | (6) What factors caused and continue to cause delays |
8 | | in the Illinois Department of Employment Security's |
9 | | processing of unemployment claims, looking particularly at |
10 | | administrative decisions, technology, and staffing, and |
11 | | what steps it has taken to alleviate these delays; |
12 | | (7) What third-party contractors did the Illinois |
13 | | Department of Employment Security utilize during this time |
14 | | period and were any of these contracts no-bid contracts; |
15 | | did a third-party contractor calculate weekly benefit |
16 | | amounts for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance claimants |
17 | | and, if so, were there any procedures to verify the |
18 | | accuracy of their calculations; did third-party |
19 | | contractors meet the performance measure established by |
20 | | the Department prior to the issuance of the contracts; and |
21 | | (8) A detailed report that includes a full summary of |
22 | | the average case processing time, the timeliness of |
23 | | benefit payments, and the accuracy of these payments; and |
24 | | be it further |
25 | | RESOLVED, That that the Auditor General commence this |
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1 | | audit as soon as possible and report his findings and |
2 | | recommendations upon completion in accordance with the |
3 | | provisions of Section 3-14 of the Illinois State Auditing Act; |
4 | | and be it further |
5 | | RESOLVED, That the Illinois Department of Employment |
6 | | Security and the Office of the Governor cooperate fully and |
7 | | promptly with the Auditor General in the conduct of this |
8 | | audit; and be it further
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9 | | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be |
10 | | delivered to the Auditor General, the Illinois Department of |
11 | | Employment Security, the Office of the Governor, and the |
12 | | Legislative Audit Commission.
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