![]() The Administration Branch provides administrative support to the Department including business operations planning and support services, human resource services for EDD employees, and accounting for the Department's annual budget. Policy, Accountability, and Compliance Branch.Supporting state activities and benefit programs by collecting and administering employment-related taxes (UI, SDI, Employment Training Tax, and Personal Income Tax withholding).Helping unemployed and disabled workers through the administration of the UI and SDI programs.Assisting disadvantaged recipients in becoming self-sufficient.Administering the federally-funded workforce investment programs for adults, dislocated workers, and youth.Assisting employers with their labor needs.One of the largest state departments, the EDD has employees located at hundreds of service locations throughout California who provide many important services to millions each year, including: As the state's largest tax collection agency, the EDD also handles the audit and collection of payroll taxes and maintains employment records for more than 17 million California workers. EDD was mailing nearly 600,000 documents a day during the height of the pandemic.The Employment Development Department (EDD) offers a wide variety of services to millions of Californians under Unemployment Insurance (UI), State Disability Insurance (SDI), workforce investment ( Jobs and Training), and Labor Market Information programs. EDD prepared, printed and mailed 45 million documents to customers through the most recent fiscal quarters. ![]() Over 20 million people filed over 60 million unemployment, disability insurance, and paid family leave claims over the past decade. Setting up designated regional contacts for each division of the state and working with any agency that needs assistance with an unemployment insurance fraud case.Ĭontinuing to issue consumer scam alerts throughout the pandemic that warn about cell phone and email phishing schemes designed to steal personal information.ĮDD runs one of the nation’s largest public benefit systems. Working with the California Office of Emergency Services Fraud Task Force on over a thousand active investigations, arrests, and prosecutions across California.Ĭreating law enforcement investigative guides and offering technical assistance to law enforcement partners who are working fraud investigation cases. Working with Bank of America to issue chip-enabled debit cards that enhance security and to strengthen fraud-prevention strategies. Fraud can be reported by selecting Form 1099G in Ask EDD or calling 1-86. Setting up the 1099-G call center to help victims of identity theft deal with any tax related questions-work that answered 24,000 calls. ![]() Stopping over $125 billion in attempted fraud by deploying a new identity verification system, ID.me, in 2020 and partnering with Thomson Reuters to help detect and prevent UI and PUA fraud. Other actions California has taken to strengthen its fraud fighting include: Within the past 15 months, total investigations, prosecutions, and dollars seized in the counties reporting information to the state include: Today’s billion-dollar recovery furthers the monumental efforts of EDD and the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services to investigate and prosecute criminals who defrauded federal emergency unemployment benefit programs. “We will continue working with law enforcement to put fraudsters behind bars and recover every stolen dollar that we can,” Scott stated. Working with EDD, he has leveraged his experience to deliver leads and evidence to aid prosecutions and strengthen ongoing investigations. Scott aids the state’s work with law enforcement to combat fraud-including supporting state, federal, and local investigations and prosecutions. In July 2021, California hired McGregor Scott as EDD Fraud Special Counsel. Most of the recovered funds will return to the federal government because the fraudulent claims are from the emergency federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which was the primary target of fraud nationwide. The recovered funds were located on approximately 780,000 inactivated benefit cards. SACRAMENTO – In another major step toward continuing to investigate fraudsters and recover unemployment insurance funds, the California Employment Development Department (EDD) today announced it has recovered $1.1 billion in unemployment insurance funds. Recovery follows EDD’s recent thwarting of 47,000 potentially fraudulent claims worth up to $560 million ![]() “Fraudsters and criminal organizations ripped off California, along with every other state, during one of the worst crises in history – we’re taking aggressive action to return that money to the taxpayers,” said Governor Newsom. ![]()
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