HR-1163-118
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Jason Smith (R-MO)
What it does
This bill would address fraud and overpayments in pandemic-era unemployment insurance (UI) programs. It would allow states to keep a share of recovered fraudulent overpayments (25%) and regular overpayments (5%) to fund fraud-fighting activities. It would also extend the window for states to recover pandemic UI overpayments from 3 to 10 years, extend the federal statute of limitations for UI fraud charges from 5 to 10 years, and repeal a prior funding provision for UI program integrity, redirecting unspent funds to the Unemployment Trust Fund.
Who benefits
State unemployment agencies, which would receive financial incentives and more time to recover overpayments. State and federal fraud investigators and prosecutors, who would gain extended legal timeframes and hiring flexibility. Taxpayers broadly, to the extent that recovered funds reduce losses from fraudulent claims. Workers whose unemployment accounts were compromised by identity theft or fraud during the pandemic. State UI system administrators, who could use recovered funds to modernize technology and hire staff.
Who is hurt
Individuals who received pandemic UI overpayments — whether due to fraud, error, or system failures — who would face a longer 10-year window during which they could be pursued for repayment. People who were victims of identity theft and had fraudulent claims filed in their names, who may face administrative burden in proving they did not receive the funds. Organizations or contractors that received prior CARES Act funding for UI program integrity activities, as that funding stream would be repealed. States that had already planned spending around the existing CARES Act integrity funds.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government lost an estimated $60 billion or more to pandemic UI fraud — one of the largest instances of government program fraud in U.S. history — and that existing law gives states too little time and too little financial incentive to recover those funds. By allowing states to keep 25 cents of every fraudulent dollar recovered, the bill would create a direct, self-funding mechanism for states to hire investigators, upgrade outdated technology, and pursue bad actors. Extending the recovery and statute of limitations windows to 10 years is necessary, supporters contend, because fraud schemes are often complex and take years to unravel. The bill also protects honest taxpayers by ensuring that money stolen from public programs is returned to those programs, and it protects legitimate workers whose identities were stolen to file false claims by giving authorities more time and resources to identify and prosecute the perpetrators.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending the repayment window to 10 years would expose millions of ordinary workers — many of whom received overpayments due to government error or confusing pandemic-era rules, not intentional fraud — to a decade of financial uncertainty and potential clawback demands. Critics contend that state agencies, not claimants, were often responsible for overpayments because of rushed program rollouts and inadequate verification systems, making it unfair to burden individuals with prolonged liability. Repealing the existing CARES Act integrity funding, opponents argue, removes a dedicated, already-appropriated resource and replaces it with an uncertain, performance-based incentive that may not materialize quickly enough to address ongoing fraud. Some also raise concerns that the noncompetitive hiring flexibility for temporary staff, if extended without sufficient oversight, could reduce accountability in how fraud investigations are conducted and who is targeted.