Thousands of unemployed Americans told to return overpayment of compensation
BATON ROUGE, Louisiana — A programming mistake caused more than 4,000 out-of-work Louisiana residents to get notices saying they’d been overpaid thousands of dollars in unemployment compensation and had to return the money, officials say.
“I apologize,” Louisiana Workforce Commission Ava Dejoie told The Advocate. She said incorrectly programmed computers miscalculated benefits and automatically sent the notices to people who applied on two days in March.
The commission has sent nearly 8,500 “cancellation adjustment notices” to more than 4,300 people, commission media office staffer Frededreia “Dede” Dunham wrote in an email Friday to The Associated Press. Most people got two overpayment notices, one for state payments and one for federal payments, she said.
“There are around 20 overpayment cases that have not been canceled yet. There are variations within these cases which require further steps to be taken before canceling,” she wrote.
Dejoie said the erroneous notices were sent Sept. 9 and 10 to people who applied for benefits on March 29 and 30.
Article continues after this advertisementKatherine Stephens, a legislative worker laid off in April, told WBRZ-TV that after her benefits stopped last week, she found a statement on the commission website saying she’d been overpaid. Her calls to the commission were not returned.
Article continues after this advertisementShe got two letters Monday, one saying she owed the state $4,278 and $9,600 to the federal government.
“They’re essentially asking me for $14,000, and I have 15 days to either pay it or appeal,” she said.
The commission set up an email account for people dealing with the problem, a news release said.