Labor Dept. offers $427M grants to states for unemployment insurance program enhancements

The U.S. Department of Labor today announced three new funding opportunities that will make up to $327 million in grants available to states to strengthen the integrity and resilience of their unemployment insurance programs.

Funded by the American Rescue Plan Act, the grants will allow states to develop multi-faceted strategies to combat fraud and modernize systems and provide funding for a range of projects. The department informed states today in an Unemployment Insurance Program Letter.

Administered by the Employment and Training Administration, the grants will allow states do the following:

  • Prevent and detect fraud by strengthening programs’ ability to verify individuals’ identification and employ recommended strategies.
  • Increase resources to improve overpayment recovery.
  • Adopt new strategies to modernize and redesign states’ UI programs.
  • Implement recommendations the states developed through the department’s Tiger Team initiative.

The department will also make $100 million in ARPA funds available to states to implement identification verification systems, including online verifications through the General Service Administration’s Login.gov and in-person verification at participating U.S. Postal Service retail locations nationwide. For states that participate, the department will fund transaction costs and work with these states to determine if their UI systems need standardized mechanisms to verify identification.

States choosing to participate in any of the grant opportunities announced in today’s Unemployment Insurance Program Letter must agree to share confidential Unemployment Compensation data with the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General for the purposes of audits and fraud investigations.

In addition, the enactment of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 reduced ARPA funding for modernization of the UI program from $2 billion to $1 billion. The department is currently deploying the remaining funds available to prevent and detect UI fraud, promote equitable access to the UI programs and ensure timely payment of benefits, as part of a government-wide focus on combating identity fraud in government programs.

The department’s Office of Unemployment Modernization continues to provide direct assistance to help states modernize their UI programs and safeguard them against fraud, while improving equitable access to benefits.

Public Release.