TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers hope that a legislative audit to be released later this week will provide an estimate of how much the state has paid out in fraudulent claims for unemployment benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Republicans in the GOP-controlled Legislature remained frustrated Monday with the lack of an estimate from the state Department of Labor for the potential cost of bogus unemployment claims. Their focus on potential fraud has intensified in recent weeks, and they’ve expressed concern that employers, who pay taxes to finance benefits, will be stuck with covering the cost of bogus claims until scammers are caught.
Potential fraud is among multiple problems the Department of Labor has faced in administering both regular and extra pandemic unemployment benefits. Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly and department officials have blamed problems on decades-old computer technology.
The department shut down its unemployment system from Jan. 30 to Feb. 2 so that it could install new security protocols aimed at preventing fraud. It reported last week that it was blocking the equivalent of three fraudulent log-in attempts a second by scammers or internet bots, but it hasn’t given legislators a dollar figure on how much the state might have lost to fraud so far.
The Legislature’s nonpartisan auditing division plans on Wednesday to release the first of two reports on the problems at the Department of Labor, focusing on the types of fraud it has encountered. The second report is due in June.
“We have not been to get really good estimates from the Department of Labor,” said Republican Rep. Kristey Williams, of August, the chair of the legislative committee that oversees the auditors’ work. “This is going to give us a good baseline to work from.”
Republican legislators have been at odds with Kelly for months over the state’s response to the pandemic since COVID-19 reached Kansas in early March 2020. Kelly last week attributed GOP lawmakers’ intensifying criticism of the Department of Labor to an effort to “just laying the groundwork” to try to prevent her reelection in 2022.
Unemployment claims spiked last spring after Kelly imposed a statewide stay-at-home order, and then again late in the year when Kansas saw its worst surge in new cases of the pandemic. GOP legislators worry that the state became a target for scammers.
GOP lawmakers also have criticized Kelly over what they see as too slow a distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.
The state Department of Health and Environment reported Monday that 339,190 Kansas residents have received at least the first of two required doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, up 14,555 or 4.5% from Friday. That means 11.6% of the state’s 2.9 million residents have received at least one shot.
The health department also said more than 483,000 vaccine doses have been administered, or 80.4% of the 601,000 the state has received. But University of Kansas Health System officials said in an online briefing Monday that vaccines are not being distributed quickly across the U.S. for people to stop wearing masks, possibly into next year.
“If we could get 90% of Americans vaccinated in a short time frame, then we probably wouldn’t have to wear masks into 2022,” said Dr. Steve Stites, the health system’s chief medical officer. “The problem is our vaccine rollout is going slower than we hoped.”
Kansas has seen a general decline in the average number of new COVID-19 cases a day in recent weeks. The state averaged 609 new cases a day for the seven days ending Monday, its lowest figure since early October 2020, according to state health department data.
The state added 883 new confirmed and probable cases since Friday to its total for the pandemic, bringing it to 291,715, or one case for every 10 residents. The health department also reported 29 additional COVID-19 deaths since Friday, making the pandemic total 4,643, or one for every 628 residents.
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