Virginia says it will stop cutting off unemployment benefits without investigations
Facing the threat of a class-action lawsuit, Virginia officials said this week they will stop halting unemployment benefits after theyve been started without first conducting a review.
The Charlottesville-based Legal Aid Justice Center says the decision means payments will resume for thousands of unemployed Virginians who had their benefits cut off after, for instance, an employer disputed their eligibility for benefits or reported they refused a job offer.
The policy until now has been that a mere report by a former employer would trigger the Virginia Employment Commission to cut off someones benefits, said Pat Levy-Lavelle, a lawyer with the center that has been representing people seeking jobless benefits. Whereas now a report puts a case on list for adjudication but doesnt in and of itself trigger cutoff of benefits.
The Virginia Employment Commission has struggled to keep pace with a flood of applications for jobless benefits since the coronavirus pandemic began. U.S. Department of Labor data shows Virginia is slower than any other state in the country when it comes to reviewing eligibility issues.
Read more: https://www.virginiamercury.com/2020/12/11/virginia-says-it-will-stop-cutting-off-unemployment-benefits-without-investigations/