Oregon
Oregon’s unemployment insurance, paid leave programs will go offline to prep for new website
A screenshot of Oregon’s paid leave website. The Oregon Employment Department is upgrading its online system to apply for unemployment insurance to Frances Online.
Oregon Employment Department
Oregonâs online system to apply for unemployment insurance is getting an upgrade, a move years in the making as evidence mounted that the Employment Departmentâs outdated technology was too rigid and confusing for modern-day benefits.
On Monday, people seeking unemployment benefits will begin using Frances Online, a new system built for the state. Employers and the stateâs paid leave program already use Frances.
âThe new system is going to be a lot more flexible and a lot more agile,â Lindsi Leahy, the unemployment insurance director, said in an interview. âIt has more security features and itâs really going to provide increased customer service for our claimants.â
In preparation for the launch, the departmentâs old and new online systems, along with the customer service phone lines, will go offline at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Phone lines and the online portal will reopen at 8 a.m. Monday.
People seeking new unemployment claims must apply by 5 p.m. Tuesday in the old system or wait until Frances goes online. Those with existing claims must submit weekly material in the old system by 5 p.m. Wednesday to avoid a disruption in benefits.
âIf they happen to miss those deadlines, they can go ahead and file after the system comes back online on March 4,â Leahy said. âBut their benefits will be delayed because they filed after the deadline.â
Officials said the stateâs $106 million, multiyear effort to upgrade the Oregon Employment Departmentâs technology should help alleviate some â but not all â of the issues identified through public feedback and official state audits.
âLong-term, we will see a lot of efficiencies from the new system after everybody learns it,â Employment Department Director David Gerstenfeld said in an interview. âBut the bottom line is we still will need more staff.â
The department has come up against tight funding over the years, he said, as it has tried to add features to increase accessibility, like offering websites in multiple languages.
âThe federal funding levels nationally for state unemployment insurance programs for decades has just not been enough,â Gerstenfeld said.
Past audits from the Oregon secretary of stateâs office have detailed the need for more staff. Audits in 2012 and 2015 also made note of the confusing online system, saying the technology dating back to the 1990s had a hard time handling complex claims and rule changes.
A 2022 audit detailed how the system failed to get out timely payments when the pandemic pushed Oregonâs unemployment rate to historic highs.
âOregon Employment Departmentâs antiquated computer systems could not easily handle the many program changes implemented during the pandemic,â the auditors wrote. âAnd the agencyâs phone-based approach, while generally adequate in normal times, could not accommodate the wave of phone calls OED received.â
The department has settled one lawsuit regarding the rate at which it issued decisions and paid benefits when the pandemic hit. It settled another suit over how the agency communicated about benefits. And there is a lawsuit pending that claims the agency didnât communicate properly about overpayment of benefits.
While the need for more staff â especially ones who can research and communicate with claimants about complex cases â will likely persist, Gerstenfeld said the new online system will solve some of the frustrations users and audits have reported.
Frances offers more self-serve options, he said, like the ability to chat with unemployment insurance staff and a secure messaging feature to ask and answer questions about specific claims.
After staff and the public become familiar with the website, Gerstenfeld hopes it will cut down on the number of phone calls seeking online help. That could make more staff available to talk with Oregonians who have complicated claims.
Frances Online also offers a one-stop site for communication about claims, a feature that didnât exist before. In general, officials said, the new website is easier to understand and navigate.
Still, in the interim, Gerstenfeld acknowledged the transition could be bumpy.
For the migration to Frances Online, he said the department is using one-time funds to hire 40 temporary staff. But that wonât solve long-term issues, he said.
âThe customer expectations that the public has â and that we have â have gone up immensely,â Gerstenfeld said. âWe have more access points, more languages, better expectations about tools and timeliness of responses. And the funding that was inadequate before has just gotten more and more inadequate.â
Oregon
Oregon Ducks Safety Target Elijah Butler Nearing Crucial Point in Recruitment
The Oregon Ducks are set for one of the biggest timelines of their recruiting cycle, as many top targets are nearing commitments. This time around, the Ducks have a ton of top targets still remaining on their board compared to past seasons, as the Ducks have eight total commitments at this time.
Oregon coach Dan Lanning and his staff still need to land a safety commitment, but three-star safety Elijah Butler out of Maryland recently included the Ducks in his final six schools.
Oregon Target Elijah Butler Makes Exciting Recruiting Announcement
Butler announced his top six schools ahead of a crucial part of his recruitment, according to a graphic by Leyton Roberts. The Ducks made the cut alongside the Maryland Terrapins, Virginia Tech Hokies, Auburn Tigers, Florida Gators, and the Alabama Crimson Tide. The talented prospect would be a great addition for any of these teams, as they could all use a safety prospect at this point in the recruiting timeline.
Butler is from the state of Maryland, which makes the Terrapins one to watch.
It is also worth noting that he has been labeled as one of the best players in the state of Maryland, as he currently ranks as the state’s No. 9 prospect, according to Rivals. This is important as the Terrapins have always made solid attempts to land their in-state stars, including last season when they landed one of the better players in the state’s history, Zion Elee.
As of now, the prospect hasn’t been predicted to land with any of these schools, which means it is likely still a tight race entering the official visit schedule. He has yet to schedule an official visit with all of the schools he has listed in his top six, as he is still missing three key official visits. Butler has scheduled official visits with Alabama, Auburn, and Florida, according to 247Sports. This means he still needs to set one with Oregon, Virginia Tech, and Maryland if he wants to take one to each school.
If the Ducks are able to get Butler on a visit, then they would likely be in a more favorable position to land his commitment, as it currently. seems they are one of the trailing teams from this list. It seems highly unlikely that the Ducks will gain his commitment unless they get him on an official visit, which is still possible at this point, as plenty of top prospects across the nation are still scheduling their official visits.
As of now, the Ducks have 27 prospects set to take an official visit, according to 247Sports. Among all of the prospects who have scheduled a visit thus far, only one of the players is listed as a safety. That player is a three-star target, Junior Tu’upo. This leads one to believe that the Ducks could try to get Butler on a visit, or at a minimum, pitch their program to the prospect from St Frances Academy.
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Oregon
Oregon work zones see record high in crashes and fatalities
Oregon
Small Oregon town residents’ trust shaken as state sues disaster nonprofit founder
BLUE RIVER, Ore. (KATU) — The founder of a former disaster relief nonprofit is being sued for allegedly diverting nearly $837,000 in donations and grants for personal gain.
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield filed the lawsuit Thursday against the founder and executive director of Cascade Relief Team (CRT), Marcus Brooks. In the complaint, Rayfield calls CRT “a sham.”
Brooks is accused of stealing donations and government grants meant for disaster relief following wildfires and flooding in 2020, and using it for personal expenses including casino visits, travel, vehicles, and more.
CRT was founded in 2020 and was hired for cleanup and relief services following the Labor Day Wildfires that burned over 1 million acres across Oregon.
In Blue River, an unincorporated community in the McKenzie River Valley, the 2020 Holiday Farm Fire destroyed nearly 800 homes and burned more than 173,000 acres.
I am angry that my community was taken advantage of
Just months after the fire, long-time Blue River resident Melanie Stanley said CRT stepped in and promised help to the community.
“For us, it was…like a savior at that point,” Stanley said.
Stanley was the manager for the Blue River Resource Center and worked for Brooks to help facilitate recovery efforts. She said CRT operations slowly became questionable.
“None of us knew the level at which all of this stuff that finally came out was at,” Stanley said. “We knew that there was some stuff that had started to look hinky or feel hinky, or there was just some lack of communication that was happening. There were some other things that were happening, and so we just all were kind of guarded.”
In fall of 2023 the nonprofit was reported to have run out of money, and Brooks allegedly fired staff without disclosing the organization’s financial conditions and did not notify donors or beneficiaries. Stanley was one of those people fired.
The state now claims the funds that were meant to go towards communities like Blue River, never made it out of Brooks’ hands, including donations given by Blue River neighbors.
“I am angry that my community was taken advantage of, and I am angry that they now have to worry about trusting when something else happens, because we know something else is going to happen,” Stanley said. “We hope to God it’s never anything as big or as bad as what has happened, but you know, we also have learned that groups like Locals Helping Locals…they are our foundation, and they are because they’re us.”
The state is seeking to recover the money, permanently bar Brooks from serving in a leadership role at a charitable organization and dissolve the nonprofit.
Stanley said Brooks’ actions have tainted reputations.
“We as a community and as the people from the community who helped kind of put all of these things together, we did what was asked of us,” Stanley said. “We did help clean things, and we did help get things to provide, you know, more progress and get things moving forward, and we did good work, and so I just really hope that this is not overshadowed.”
According to Stanley, Blue River’s recovery now stands at 50%.
“We will be very picky from here on out about who and what groups gets let in to help with anything,” Stanley said. “And sadly, it may be to our detriment, but he did more damage now, as far as reputations go, and for that I’m angry. I’m very angry.”
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