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I've been dealing with this same nightmare for the past month! The DEO phone system is absolutely broken and it's clear they're hoping we'll just give up. After reading through all these helpful responses, I wanted to share what's been working for me lately: I've had the most success calling between 7:28-7:31am on Tuesday through Thursday mornings. It still takes multiple attempts (usually 8-12 tries), but I've managed to get through 3 times in the past 2 weeks using this window. The key is to call RIGHT before they officially open at 7:30am and be ready to immediately navigate through the menu options. Also, definitely check your "Determinations and Pending Issues" section in CONNECT like others mentioned - mine showed a similar "able and available" flag that I didn't even know existed. Once I knew what the specific issue was, the agent was able to address it directly instead of us both guessing what was wrong. The system is absolutely infuriating, but don't give up! Your benefits are there waiting for you - it's just a matter of getting past their deliberately difficult barriers. Keep trying the early morning calls and consider the Inspector General complaint route if you're still stuck after a few more attempts.
This is such valuable timing info - thank you @Emma Taylor! I'm going to set my alarm for 7:25am tomorrow and try this strategy. It's encouraging to hear you've gotten through multiple times recently using this approach. Quick question - when you call in that 7:28-7:31 window, do you still get the "all representatives are busy" message initially, or does it actually put you in a queue? I want to make sure I'm not giving up too early if I hear that message. Also, did checking your determinations section help you prepare for the conversation with the agent? I found mine shows the same "able and available" issue that others have mentioned, so hopefully knowing that upfront will make the call more productive when I finally get through!
I'm so glad to see this thread and all the helpful advice! I've been dealing with the exact same issue for almost 4 weeks now - my claim has been stuck in "pending" status and I get disconnected every single time I call. It's incredibly frustrating and honestly feels like they're deliberately making it impossible to get help. I'm definitely going to try the 7:29am calling strategy that several people have mentioned, and I'll also check my determinations section to see if there's a specific issue listed like the "able and available" flag others have found. It's ridiculous that we have to become detectives just to figure out what's wrong with our own claims! Has anyone had success with the email option through CONNECT? I sent a message 5 days ago but haven't heard anything back. At this point I'm willing to try every suggestion in this thread - the CareerSource visit, the Inspector General complaint, everything. It's so wrong that people who've lost their jobs have to jump through all these hoops just to get the benefits we're entitled to. Thank you all for sharing your experiences and strategies. At least now I know I'm not alone in this mess and there might actually be light at the end of the tunnel!
I'm dealing with this exact situation right now! Got laid off in late November with 14 weeks of severance pay and my claim has been stuck in adjudication for almost 6 weeks. Reading through everyone's experiences here has been SO helpful - I was starting to panic that something was seriously wrong with my claim. A few things I've learned that might help others: 1. I called the DEO customer service line at exactly 7:30 AM on a Tuesday and actually got through after being on hold for 2 hours. The agent confirmed that my adjudication is specifically for the severance pay calculation and that I should expect benefits to start automatically once my 14-week period ends. 2. I've been using a spreadsheet to track exactly when each week of my severance period ends - it helps me stay sane knowing there's an actual end date to this waiting. 3. During this time I've been doing freelance graphic design work and reporting it on my biweekly claims. As long as you report ALL income honestly, it shouldn't hurt your claim. The most frustrating part is how the DEO website makes it seem like you'll get benefits right away, but then you find out about these waiting periods through trial and error. At least we have this community to help each other figure out the real process! Keep hanging in there everyone - we'll get through this bureaucratic nightmare together.
Thank you so much for sharing your experience and actually getting through to DEO! It's reassuring to hear that an agent confirmed your adjudication is just for severance calculation and that benefits will start automatically. I'm definitely going to try the 7:30 AM call strategy - 2 hours on hold sounds brutal but worth it for actual answers. The spreadsheet idea for tracking the severance period is smart too, I think having that visual countdown will help with the anxiety of not knowing when this will end. It's crazy how we're all figuring out the same workarounds independently - DEO really needs to make this process clearer from the start. Thanks for the encouragement, it helps to know we're all navigating this together!
I went through this exact same situation last year with a 12-week severance package! The waiting period is definitely frustrating, but here's what I learned: DEO treats your lump sum severance as if you're receiving weekly paychecks for the duration it's meant to cover. So yes, you'll likely need to wait the full 13 weeks before benefits start. The key things to remember: 1) Keep claiming your weeks religiously - even though you won't get paid for those weeks, you MUST claim them to maintain eligibility, 2) Use this time to stay on top of your work search requirements (5 activities per week), and 3) The adjudication process is reviewing your severance documentation to calculate exactly when your benefits can begin. I know it's incredibly stressful not knowing when money will start coming in, but once that 13-week period ends, your benefits should kick in automatically if you've been claiming consistently. The system is definitely not user-friendly, but you're doing everything right by staying proactive about it. Hang in there - February will come faster than you think!
This entire thread has been a lifesaver! I've been stuck in adjudication purgatory for almost a month and was starting to lose hope. Reading through everyone's experiences and seeing the actual success stories from @Liam Brown, @Butch Sledgehammer, and @Marcelle Drum has completely changed my approach. I've been doing the classic mistake of just repeatedly calling the general helpline hoping for different results. The systematic documentation strategy that everyone's describing makes so much sense - creating a paper trail that shows the inconsistencies and proves you've been working within their system. I'm planning to combine several approaches mentioned here: 1. Detailed email to [email protected] with a comprehensive spreadsheet of all my interactions 2. Submit complaint through Customer Feedback portal simultaneously 3. Have the ombudsman email as backup ([email protected]) 4. Contact state rep if needed The fact that multiple people got actual results with this organized approach gives me real hope. It's absolutely insane that we have to become forensic investigators of our own cases, but if that's what breaks through this broken system, then that's what we'll do. Starting my documentation tonight and will definitely update with results. Thank you all for sharing real solutions - this community is what's getting us through this nightmare! 💪
@CyberSiren I'm so glad this thread has been helpful for you too! It's amazing how this community has essentially reverse-engineered the best way to navigate DEO's broken system. Your 4-step plan looks solid - I especially like that you're being strategic about having backup options ready instead of just trying one thing at a time. One thing I'd suggest based on what others have shared: when you create your spreadsheet, maybe add timestamps too (not just dates but actual times of calls). It really drives home how much effort you've been putting in and can help show patterns like "always told to call back later" or "consistently put on hold for 30+ minutes." The more detailed your documentation, the harder it is for them to dismiss your case. It's honestly outrageous that we've had to become amateur paralegals just to get our own benefits processed, but seeing all these success stories gives me hope that persistence really does work. The fact that @Liam Brown, @Butch Sledgehammer, and @Marcelle Drum all got results with organized approaches proves there ARE people in the system who can help - we just have to reach them the right way. Definitely keep us posted on how your systematic approach works out - I think your experience could help so many others who find this thread! We re'all rooting for you! 🤞
I've been lurking in this thread for a while because I'm dealing with the same adjudication nightmare - going on 5+ weeks now with no resolution. Reading everyone's experiences has been both frustrating and incredibly helpful. The systematic documentation approach that @Liam Brown, @Butch Sledgehammer, and others have shared is exactly what I needed to see. I've been making the same mistake as many others - just calling randomly and hoping for different results each time. The spreadsheet idea with detailed timelines showing all the conflicting information is brilliant. Based on all the success stories here, I'm going to try the comprehensive approach: detailed email to [email protected] with my interaction timeline, simultaneous Customer Feedback complaint, and keep the ombudsman office ([email protected]) as backup. It's absolutely ridiculous that we have to become case investigators just to access our own benefits, but this community sharing real solutions gives me hope. The pattern is clear - organized persistence with proper documentation gets results where random phone calls don't. Starting my spreadsheet tonight and will definitely update with results. Thank you all for turning this broken system into something we can actually navigate! This thread should be pinned as a resource for anyone dealing with DEO adjudication issues.
I just went through this exact same situation two weeks ago and it was absolutely maddening! Here's what finally worked for me after trying everything: Call Way2Go at 1-833-888-2780 at exactly 7:00 AM (set your alarm for 6:58) and immediately ask to speak to a supervisor about "emergency expedited delivery due to financial hardship." Don't waste time with regular reps - they often can't authorize expedites. The supervisor was able to overnight my card for $25 which came out of my loaded benefits. I had it the next morning! Also, before you call, log into CONNECT and screenshot your payment confirmation showing the funds were deposited - sometimes they try to claim payments haven't processed yet. And triple-check that your mailing address in CONNECT exactly matches what Way2Go has on file - even apartment numbers being slightly different can cause huge delays. I know how stressful it is having your money sitting there while bills pile up, but don't give up! The system is broken but you CAN get through it faster with the right approach. You've got this!
This is such detailed and actionable advice - thank you for breaking it down so clearly! The 6:58 alarm tip is genius, and I love that you emphasized going straight to a supervisor instead of wasting time with regular reps. Taking a screenshot of the payment confirmation is brilliant too - I never would have thought of that but you're absolutely right that they might try to claim the payment didn't go through. I'm definitely going to follow your exact strategy tomorrow morning. It's so reassuring to hear from someone who just went through this recently and got it resolved in one day with the overnight option. The $25 is totally worth it compared to the stress and late fees I'm dealing with. Really appreciate you sharing what worked - this gives me so much hope that I can actually get this nightmare resolved quickly!
I'm dealing with this exact same nightmare right now! Just got my benefits approved and paid out yesterday but still no Way2Go card in sight. Reading through everyone's advice here has been incredibly helpful - way more useful than anything I could find on the official DEO website. I'm definitely going to try the 7am supervisor strategy that multiple people mentioned, plus contact my local CareerSource office as backup. The stress of having approved benefits just sitting there inaccessible while rent is overdue is absolutely crushing. It's insane that in 2025 we still have to become experts at navigating phone trees and bureaucratic loopholes just to access our own money. Thank you to everyone who shared their experiences and specific tips - this community support means everything when the actual system fails us completely. Going to set my alarm for 6:58am and attack this first thing tomorrow morning!
I'm in the EXACT same situation - got paid yesterday but no card yet and bills are piling up! This thread has been a lifesaver with all the specific strategies. I'm also setting my alarm for 6:58am tomorrow to try the supervisor route. One thing I learned from calling today is to also ask for a "reference number" for your expedite request so you can follow up if needed. Let's both try tomorrow morning and see how it goes - we can share what works! The stress is so real when your money is just sitting there mocking you while late fees rack up. Hang in there, we've got this! 💪
Grant Vikers
I'm so sorry you're dealing with this - it's incredibly frustrating! I went through the exact same thing about 6 months ago and it took nearly a month to get my card. A few things that helped me: First, definitely try the 0 button trick that others mentioned, but also try calling right after lunch around 1-2pm - I found their call volume was lower then compared to mornings. Second, when you do get through, ask specifically about "expedited delivery due to delayed initial mailing" - that phrase seemed to unlock faster shipping options. Third, if you're really desperate, you can sometimes get a temporary cash advance at certain check cashing places if you show them your CONNECT account with the processed payments, though they charge fees. It's ridiculous that we have to jump through all these hoops, but hang in there - once you get the card situation sorted, the rest of the process gets much easier. Also, definitely set up direct deposit immediately once you get your card to avoid this nightmare for future payments!
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Chloe Boulanger
•@Grant Vikers That s'really helpful advice about calling after lunch around 1-2pm! I hadn t'thought about trying different times of day beyond the early morning rush. The expedited "delivery due to delayed initial mailing phrase" is gold - I m'definitely using that exact wording when I get through to someone. I had no idea about the check cashing advance option either, though hopefully I won t'need to resort to that with fees involved. Thanks for mentioning the direct deposit setup too - I keep seeing people mention that and it sounds like the way to go once this card nightmare is finally resolved. It s'crazy that we all have to become experts in navigating this broken system, but I really appreciate you sharing what worked for you! Going to try all these strategies and hopefully join the success stories soon.
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Ruby Knight
I'm going through this exact same situation right now and this thread has been a total lifesaver! Been waiting 2.5 weeks for my Way2Go card with payments showing as processed in CONNECT. I tried calling their customer service line yesterday and got completely trapped in that ridiculous automated system asking for card info I obviously don't have yet. Just tried the goprogram.com registration trick with my SSN and it actually worked - such a relief to finally see my payments are actually loaded! I'm definitely calling tomorrow morning at 8am sharp and trying the 0 button spam method. It's absolutely mind-blowing that we need these community-discovered workarounds just to access our own benefits, but I'm so grateful everyone is sharing what actually works. The fact that Florida's unemployment system is this broken is infuriating, but at least this community has cracked the code on navigating the chaos. Will definitely update with my results to help the next person stuck in this nightmare!
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Diego Flores
•@Ruby Knight I m'so glad you found this thread helpful! I was in your exact situation just a few weeks ago and it s'incredibly frustrating. That goprogram.com trick really is a game changer - at least now you have confirmation your money is there while dealing with this card delivery mess. When you call tomorrow at 8am, don t'get discouraged if it takes multiple attempts with the 0 button method - I had to call back 4 times before finally getting through to a human. Also, have all your info ready SSN, (address, payment dates because) they ll'want to verify everything before helping. If the morning call doesn t'work out, definitely try that afternoon 1-2pm time slot that @Grant Vikers mentioned - I ve heard'that can be less busy too. Keep that backup Conduent number handy just in case! It s absolutely'ridiculous that accessing our own benefits requires this level of detective work, but this community has really figured out how to beat the system. Fingers crossed you get your replacement expedited tomorrow - please come back and let us know how it goes!
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