Unknown unemployment fraud compounded by delinquent report: GOP Senators
say
Send a link to a friend
[November 24, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – The Illinois
Department of Employment Security is nearly a month late in filing a
report about the state’s unemployment trust fund, according to the
Illinois Senate Republican Caucus.
A spokesperson for IDES didn’t immediately respond to a request for
comment.
The Republicans said the legislative leaders received a letter from the
Illinois Comptroller that IDES failed to submit necessary financial
information on the trust fund’s financial activities and is nearly a
month delinquent.
“If regular Illinois businesses and families miss financial reporting
they are fined and can even face criminal penalties,” said Illinois
Senate Republican Leader Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorn Woods. “The governor
is not above the law. The UI Trust Fund is deeply in debt and without
this report, we have absolutely no idea how big the problem really is.”
Neither the Illinois Comptroller, the House Speaker or Senate
President’s office immediately returned a message seeking comment.
“The people of Illinois deserve answers as to why his agency is refusing
to provide basic financial numbers on where Illinois taxpayer and
federal dollars are going. What is the governor hiding,” McConchie said
in a statement.
One unanswered question is how much fraud has been paid out in total.
[to top of second column]
|
In the spring, the Illinois Department of Employment Security said
they’ve stopped 1.7 million fraudulent claims. But officials couldn’t
quantify how much has been paid out.
An Auditor General’s report of the previous fiscal year that included
the first few weeks of the pandemic show IDES paid nearly $97 million
for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance over the minimum and did not
validate wages of all claimants. The report also showed IDES paid more
than $41.6 million in benefits to more than 4,500 claimants whose
identities were not validated and paid more than $2.6 million to those
whose birthdates were the same day or later than the date of the claims.
More than $343,000 was sent to 35 claimants who were deceased
Republicans said a full accounting of all the fraud there’s been “cannot
be calculated because IDES has not made any figures available or
submitted this annual report.”
“It is tremendously unfair to penalize Illinois businesses for fraud
perpetrated by criminals and ineptness from the administration in
dealing with the fraud,” said state Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris.
Illinois’ unemployment trust fund is nearly $5 billion in debt and the
interest on that debt is costing tens of millions of dollars. Business
groups say if the debt is not paid down using unspent COVID-19 aid from
federal taxpayers, there will be increased taxes on job creators.
Illinois was recently ranked the worst tax-friendly state by Kiplinger. |