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Ohio Beefing Up Unemployment Office

Spiritus Tattoo, a tattoo parlor in Clintonville, is closed as a non-essential business. A sign posted on the storefront window cautions would-be criminals that all valuables have been removed.
Cindy Gaillard
/
WOSU
Spiritus Tattoo, a tattoo parlor in Clintonville, is closed as a non-essential business. A sign posted on the storefront window cautions would-be criminals that all valuables have been removed.

The office that oversees unemployment benefits in Ohio is adding employees to keep up with demand.

Ohio Department of Job and Family Services director Kim Hall says the agency has added more employees to help unemployed Ohioans.

At times, filers have experienced frustration over not being able to file for benefits or get questions answered. However, Hall says changes are being made to make it more user friendly.

“We recently added 300 call center agents and adjudicators to our team to help with the historic volume of calls and claims and we are in the process of bringing on 300 more," Hall says.

Hall says more than 4,000 Ohioans have used the new service that allows them to text weekly claims to the department.

A law signed earlier this month would allow Ohio Auditor Keith Faber to review the unemployment application system and recommend changes to the process. Hall says her agency is cooperating with those efforts to further improve services for unemployed Ohioans.

Since the pandemic began in March, Ohio has paid 821,000 regular unemployment claims and 608,000 for federally funded Pandemic Unemployment Assistance to people who don’t normally qualify for jobless benefits.

Jo Ingles is a professional journalist who covers politics and Ohio government for the Ohio Public Radio and Television for the Ohio Public Radio and Television Statehouse News Bureau. She reports on issues of importance to Ohioans including education, legislation, politics, and life and death issues such as capital punishment.
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