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Florida Officials Seek To Replace Jobless Benefits System

In this Jan. 11, 2019 photo, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Florida's 2019 Legislative session is set to begin with a new governor, new Legislative leaders and new priorities. On Gov. Ron DeSantis list include environmental protections and a ban on sanctuary cities.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
In this Jan. 11, 2019 photo, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Florida's 2019 Legislative session is set to begin with a new governor, new Legislative leaders and new priorities. On Gov. Ron DeSantis list include environmental protections and a ban on sanctuary cities.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

TALLAHASSEE - Florida officials are recommending that the state's antiquated unemployment processing system be replaced after a review confirmed what had long been known: a broken system full of glitches that was incapable of handling the unprecedented deluge of jobless claims spawned by the coronavirus outbreak.

The state's Department of Economic Opportunity is recommending that the current system, known as CONNECT, be discarded and replaced with a more robust and modern system that employs cloud technology.

The state's Department of Economic Opportunity, the agency that oversees the state's unemployment system, is asking lawmakers to approve more than $73 million over the next two years to modernize a system that left hundreds of thousands of jobless Floridians without unemployment checks for weeks and sometimes months.

The director of the agency, Dane Eagle, told lawmakers Monday that Florida was not alone in its struggles.

But as the unemployment rate surged when businesses closed, Florida was among the slowest states - if not the slowest - in getting unemployment checks to those with no other income to pay mortgages, rents and other necessities.

Gov. Ron DeSantis, who likened the benefits claim system to an "old jalopy" breaking down at the Daytona 500, ordered the inspector general to investigate. The Economic Opportunity Department launched a review of its own, and the results were presented Monday to the legislative select committee on pandemic preparedness and response.

The report makes clear that the system was neither prepared nor responsive at a time of crisis, when some 1.3 million Floridians, at the peak of unemployment in April, tried to access benefits through online portals that continually crashed or phone systems that only added to frustrations.

The long awaited inspector general's report could be released in a matter of weeks. The inspector general's findings are current being reviewed by economic opportunity officials.

The department is also asking lawmakers for authority to establish an Office of Accountability and Transparency, but it was unclear in a presentation submitted to the pandemic committee exactly what its role would be. In addition, it wants to create a Reemployment Assistance Modernization Strategic Planning Office to oversee the modernization effort.

Since the start of the pandemic, more than 3.1 million people have filed unemployment claims in Florida. The state has paid out more than $23.1 billion in benefits - less than a fourth of that from the state's reemployment assistance program.

The new money requested by the Economic Opportunity Department adds to the $39 million COVID-19-related outlays in its current year budget. The $73 billion being requested for the next two years would nearly double the department's budget during the same time period. A more modest $8 million is also being requested to supplement the department's typical annual budget of $41.3 million in the three years after.

Before the pandemic, the Reemployment Assistance System budget was about $12 million annually.

Meanwhile, the state's Unemployment Benefit Trust Fund has been dramatically depleted. Its balance is now just $777 million -- less than a fifth of the $4 billion it had before the pandemic.

The Associated Press is a wire service to which WUFT News subscribes.