Kansas advances bill to overhaul unemployment system; staffing surge promised

photo by: John Hanna/Associated Press

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly answers questions during a news conference, Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021, at the Statehouse in Topeka.

Updated at 2:28 p.m. Thursday

TOPEKA — Republican lawmakers moved forward Thursday with legislation to overhaul Kansas’ troubled unemployment system after Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly announced plans to more than double the number of staff who help the jobless and make them available on weekends.

The state House approved a bill drafted by Republican members to give the GOP-controlled Legislature more oversight of the modernization of the state Department of Labor’s unemployment system and require computer upgrades to be completed by the end of 2022. The House’s 87-36 vote sent the measure to the Senate.

House Republicans say the measure would more quickly modernize an outdated unemployment system. The department has said the House bill’s two-year timeline for the technology upgrade is unrealistic.

Labor union leaders contend the bill does nothing for workers.

Legislators in both parties say they have been flooded with calls and emails from unemployed people who are struggling to get benefits and can’t get through to the Department of Labor. The state has acknowledged a flood of fraudulent claims and attempts by scammers and internet bots to access the unemployment system.

Kelly’s announcement Wednesday that the Department of Labor would bring on 500 additional “surge” workers to staff its unemployment call center came after the only Democrat in the state’s congressional delegation, Rep. Sharice Davids, sent Kelly a letter calling on her to act. The department said the first 77 workers will start next week; others will come on board through mid-April.

“We’re still looking for solutions,” Kelly told reporters during a Statehouse news conference. “We’re going to be scaling up.”

Kelly and the department said the call center also would be staffed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, starting this weekend, and that the state would upgrade its computer servers later this month so it could handle more calls.

Davids’ called for “immediate action” tapping federal COVID-19 relief funds in her letter to Kelly, The Kansas City Star reported. Davids, representing the Kansas City area, is the state’s second most-prominent Democratic official behind Kelly.

Top Republican lawmakers on Thursday were pleased that Kelly was ramping up staffing but argued that her administration has been slow to act.

Senate Majority Leader Gene Suellentrop, a Wichita Republican, suggested the problems with providing legitimate benefits would have been less severe had the Department of Labor been more aggressive earlier about combatting fraud.

“They’ve got to do something to fix this,” said House Majority Leader Dan Hawkins, another Wichita Republican.

The Department of Labor began the pandemic last spring with 20 staffers to help jobless workers and has increased that to more than 450, Kelly said. But it received more than 358,000 calls a day last week, an average of four per second, the department said.

“The staff at the Department of Labor is working around the clock,” Kelly said.

COMMENTS

Welcome to the new LJWorld.com. Our old commenting system has been replaced with Facebook Comments. There is no longer a separate username and password login step. If you are already signed into Facebook within your browser, you will be able to comment. If you do not have a Facebook account and do not wish to create one, you will not be able to comment on stories.