Skip to main content

State Overpays $21.2M In Unemployment Benefits Due To April Tech Glitch

July 15, 2020 3:45p

(WPR)---A new report from the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau found the state overpaid an estimated $21.2 million in unemployment benefits in April.

This spring, the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development reported that a technology error caused the agency to overpay some unemployment insurance benefits on April 29. DWD said many of the overpayments scheduled for direct deposit were recovered after the error was discovered.

The new report said DWD officials recovered $19.6 million in overpayments on April 29. But the report found the agency also made an estimated $1.5 million in overpayments through debit cards and "may have overpaid additional amounts to an unknown number of individuals" that day.

The report also found DWD likely overpaid $101,300 in benefits on April 28.

The bureau said DWD’s correction on April 30 also may have caused an unknown number of individuals to be overpaid or underpaid the appropriate unemployment benefits. The report recommended the agency determine how many individuals were impacted by the incident and work to correct their benefit payments.

In a press release on Wednesday, DWD Secretary Caleb Frostman thanked the Legislative Audit Bureau for the report.

"The issues we have discovered since the April incident have emphasized the importance of improving our (unemployment insurance) policies and procedures. The Department immediately began our own internal investigation to identify and address outstanding issues and developed new written policies that ensure we verify the accuracy of payment files before sending them for distribution," Frostman said in the release.

The report found the agency’s new policies did ensure the accuracy of payments made. But the bureau said the policies "do not require it to ensure a payment file includes all benefits payments that should be made on a given day." It recommended updating the policies to ensure participants are receiving the benefits they are entitled to.

-0-