Form ETA-9055 Benefits Time Lapse & Quality

Benefits Timeliness and Quality Review System

SectionV_Benefits_TimeLapse_and_Quality_ETA 9055

ETA 9055

OMB: 1205-0359

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UI REPORT HANDBOOK NO. 401

ETA 9055 - APPEALS CASE AGING


ETA 9055 - APPEALS CASE AGING

Section V-5



  1. Facsimile of Form

ETA 9055L - LOWER AUTHORITY APPEALS, CASE AGING

STATE

REGION

REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING




Time Lapse Days

Appeals

Total Pending Cases


<=25


26-40


41-90


 91-120


121-180


181-360


 >360


 

Time Lapse (Days)

Average Age


Median Age



Comments:

ETA 9055H - HIGHER AUTHORITY APPEALS, CASE AGING

STATE

REGION

REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING




Time Lapse Days

Appeals

Total Pending Cases


<=40


41-70


 71-120


121-180


181-360


 >360


 

Time Lapse (Days)

Average Age


Median Age



Comments:
OMB No.: 1205-0359 OMB Expiration Date OMB Burden Hours: 1 hour


OMB Burden Statement: These reporting instructions have been approved under the Paperwork reduction Act of 1995. Persons are not required to respond to this collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. Public reporting burden for this collection of information includes the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Submission is mandatory under SSA 303(a) (6). Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to the U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Unemployment Insurance, Room S-4524, 200 Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC, 20210.

  1. Purpose

The ETA 9055 report gathers monthly information on the inventory of lower authority and higher authority single claimant appeals cases that have been filed but not decided. Appeals case aging provides information about the number of days from the date an appeal was filed through the end of the month covered by the report. Also included are the average and median ages of the pending single claimant appeals cases.

  1. Due Date and Transmittal

The report is due in the ETA National Office on the 20th of the month following the month to which the data relates. This report will be transmitted electronically.

  1. General Reporting Instructions

Appeals Case Aging measures require states to report data on the universe of all single claimant appeals cases that have not been decided prior to the end of the reporting period. Edit checks can be found in Handbook 402, Unemployment Insurance Required Reports User’s Manual, Appendix C.

    1. Pending Lower Authority Single Claimant Appeals Case Aging.

      1. Includes all lower authority single claimant appeals cases, including those remanded by the higher authority for a hearing and decision and reopened appeals cases not decided at the end of the month.

      2. Excludes episodic claims programs such as Extended Benefits, Disaster Unemployment Assistance, and Trade Readjustment Allowances. Also excludes pending multi-claimant appeals cases (See F.3.d. below for further instructions about pending multi-claimant appeals cases).

    2. Pending Higher Authority Single Claimant Appeals Case Aging.

      1. Includes all higher authority single claimant appeals cases, including remanded and reopened appeals cases, not decided at the end of the month. An appeals case that has been remanded to the lower authority for additional evidence and will be returned to the higher authority for a decision is reported in this inventory. An appeals case that has been remanded to the lower authority for a new hearing and decision is not a pending higher authority appeals case and should not be counted as such.

      2. Excludes episodic claims programs such as Extended Benefits, Disaster Unemployment Assistance, and Trade Readjustment Allowances. Also excludes pending multi-claimant appeals cases (See F.3.d. below for further instructions about pending multi-claimant appeals cases).

  1. Definitions

Definitions, unless otherwise specified in these instructions, will follow the definitions for the ETA 5130 found elsewhere in this handbook.

    1. Pending Single Claimant Appeals Case Age.

The age of an appeals case is the date of the last day of the month being reported minus the date the appeal was filed.

    1. Average Age of Pending Single Claimant Appeals Cases.

The total age of all pending appeals cases (lower or higher authority) divided by the total number of pending lower or higher authority appeals cases.

    1. Median Age of Pending Single Claimant Appeals Cases.

If all of the pending appeals cases (lower or higher authority) are ranked from the lowest to the highest age, the median is the age of the case at the midpoint of the ranked cases. If there are an odd number of cases (n), the median is the age of the [(n+1)/2]th case. If there are an even number of cases (n), the median is the value midway between the age of the (n/2)th case and the [(n/2)+1]th case.

  1. Item by Item Instructions

Enter the number of single claimant appeals cases that fall within each category.

    1. Age of Pending Lower Authority Single Claimant Appeals Cases.

      1. Total Pending Lower Authority Single Claimant Appeals Cases. Enter in the “Total” column of Section A, the total number of pending lower authority single claimant appeals cases and the individual totals for each pending appeals case age interval.

    2. Age of Pending Higher Authority Single Claimant Appeals Cases.

      1. Total Pending Higher Authority Single Claimant Appeals Cases. Enter in the “Total” column of Section B, the total number of pending higher authority single claimant appeals cases and the individual totals for each pending appeals case age interval.

    3. Comments.

Explain in the comments area significant variations in case aging in lower and higher authority appeals cases not decided from levels in the prior period or the same period one year ago. In response to Item d. below, describe in the “Comments” section the inventory, if any, of pending multi-claimant appeals cases at the end of the reporting period. Pending multi-claimant appeals cases should not be reported in Section A or B.

      1. Administrative Factors. Describe administrative factors, such as changes in operating procedures, issuance of rules and regulations, staff turnover, change in administrative policies, and increase or decrease in initial determinations, which may affect data reported in such a way that they will lack comparability with the data on prior reports or on current reports submitted by other state agencies.

      2. Legal Factors. Describe legal factors, such as new laws or amendments or change in interpretation of existing laws, which may affect the data reported in such a way that they cannot be compared with data from prior reports or on current reports from other state agencies.

      3. Economic Factors. Describe economic factors which may affect data reported.

      4. Pending Multi-Claimant Appeals Cases. Describe the inventory of pending lower and higher authority multi-claimant appeals cases.

For example:

At lower authority there are 3 groups of multi-claimant appeals cases pending; in one group, there are 150 claimants, in a second group, there are 40 claimants, and in a third group, there are 500 claimants. At higher authority, there is one group of multi-claimant appeals cases pending, and in that group, there are 250 claimants.


Section V-5--5

08/ 2019

File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
File Title401 Handbook 6th Edition
AuthorQuynh Pham-ETA
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2023-07-30

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