Submitted by ipmcc t3_10az5jq in Pennsylvania
I was informed I was being laid off three weeks before the effective date. I worked out my last three weeks, but I was implored over and over to apply for UC as quickly as possible, so I applied right after I found out I was being laid off. This apparently made the UC system explode. I've had to reapply, and the system is just so completely not designed to handle my situation it's laughable. (...if it weren't even more cry-able.)
I've made hundreds of calls to the UC phone number -- busy signal (or message that they're closed) every single time. I've tried to use their online appeals system, but it won't let me, because it's waiting to hear back from my prior, out-of-state employer, who has since gone out of business, and will never get back to them. I've emailed half a dozen times, with only automated responses to the effect of 'Your email will be answered in the order received'.
I'm an experienced engineering manager with 25+ years of experience in the industry, so the system is obviously not designed for my situation in which getting a job often takes months of interviews (even with a single opportunity), or long drawn-out "exec search" processes. I'm not crying poor here, but I've paid into the system for all those years, I have bills to pay, and I was legitimately laid off, so I feel like I have every right to claim UC. Is there someone who knows how this all works, whom I can enlist/pay to help me wade through this morass?
Is this system horrible for everyone? Or just me?
I know the sub bans solicitation of services, so DMs are fine, if necessary.
C4bl3Fl4m3 t1_j4782dy wrote
This is general advice for whenever you keep banging your head against a brick wall re: anything dealing with gov't.
Contact your applicable representatives. Esp. your House rep. They hire people for their office that are there explicitly to help constituents navigate gov't problems. Sometimes when nothing's happening for you, a call from a rep's office is just the push the relevant agency needs to really start getting things done, because now they know they're being watched and being held accountable. Plus, these agencies are sometimes used to working with these folks and the wheels are already greased for them.
This has worked for my PA mother with tax issues (she was called back by someone working for her rep that explicitly handles tax problems and only tax problems and they got things sorted out), this has worked for my partner in VA when the state tried to pull some blatantly illegal shit with layoffs/firing during COVID because that particular agency was being run like a corporation and didn't want to follow the emergency laws that the legislature passed.
Your reps are there to help you and make gov't work for you. It's what your tax dollars are paying them for. Utilize them.
Good luck!