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Jan 2, 2022

Has Anything Really Changed?

      I looked back at the numbers on posts on I made on this blog in 2021. The one that was the most read was the one announcing that Andrew Saul had been fired as Commissioner of Social Security. Coming in second was this post from March 8, 2021 which may still have relevance:

     An anonymous e-mail I received:

Hi Charles - I have been reading your blog for years.

I'm a field office manager and felt compelled to share what management has sustained for nearly twelve months.

First off - kudos to SSA for putting somewhat of plan together by sending everyone home after cancelling telework...of course. Since that time things have gotten just awful and unsustainable. 
We don’t have centralized print so management is asked to go in and pack every letter daily. Many ma agents don’t have updated mail machines so we must weigh envelopes individually and seal them by hand. The process takes hours. After outgoing is done all day - we handle incoming. Hundreds of documents from the public daily in some cases. Items go missing regularly. We open every piece and scan them into a program so employees can work. This process is even longer than outgoing mail. When it concludes - the day is likely over. As this work from home progresses we were slowly told things would return to normal but from home. Problem is we don’t the technology - everything at home takes longer. Managers were drowning in mail and still are- the calls exploded - an office like mine went from 600 calls to roughly 2000. We could not keep up - Area directors insisted on 90% answer rates. Workload immediately fell off. Instead of adjusting they increased our PSI goals in one area in particular- ssi redetermination. We had some of the highest targets ever yet we were receiving no help. Through all this management was told they could not work OT because it would look bad. We were told that management doing production was also frowned upon.

Months have passed and the agency did little to aid mgmt. in fact they made it worse. They made exceptions to allow individuals in office and mgmt was asked to pull away from mail to risk ourselves with claimants. It’s ok - they bought flimsy sneeze guard to protect us. When we asked for hazard pay or ability to carryover we were told no.

We have been wildly mistreated by the DCo front office. This year is worse still

For your audience our initials claims have gone from 125 as a goal for an initial decison to 170 days and recons from 118 to 152 days . In short it’s now average 11 months before you make it to a hearing In many cases - replacement cards take a month before processing . Record request from attys - I haven’t been able to get to them in months. You want certified record - that’s 6 months minimum. We are a disaster and holding it all together on the back of managers that are breaking. We are told we can’t let calls go but due to a nearly 500 million budget shortfall we won’t have any OT , are still expected to clear 20% more redeterminations and answer 90% of goals. Oh and all mail most be processed in 60 days.

I could go on forever - I only share to say how truly dire SSA situation is. I also share to show this who represent people that we are in a giant spiral with zero plan.

How out of touch you say - well dco touted a great Mobil check in program that they didn’t realize can’t handle foreign ss5 because a lack of having a number. They actually developed , designed, shared , gloated and didn’t realize its flaws until a manager pointed out the obvious.

Sorry for the rant and misspelling -perhaps you can take some blurbs to share with readers that we aren’t bad - we work hard - we just are given no chance for success and it’s getting worse. Thanks Charles

4 comments:

  1. I am thankful for all SSA can do right now. So, to Mr/Mrs. Anonymous, know we (or I, at least) appreciate you and your staff and all that you do, right now, and always. I know it doesn't help much with the situation, but the appreciation is certainly there. It won't be like this forever. History has shown that. Hang in there! We do certainly need you!!!

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  2. Sounds about how my office has been. And we have lost 3/4 of our top T2 CRs to retirement, transfers, etc. On paper we look almost as good as we did 2 years ago but most of the CRs are trainees that aren't worth much. It doesn't look promising.

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  3. Does anything really change? Historical Momentum. It just keeps rolling along. Doesnt matter who is in charge, doesnt matter if it is wfh or in office, Republican or Democrat controlled White House and Congress. SSA has its own momentum and just rolls along day in and day out like a river. Wait times go up, wait times go down. People come and people go. You watch SSA like a river, it floods and destroys, it dries up and destroys, it runs normal in between. It will just keep moving, thats kinda what it does now and what it will do.

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  4. Thanks for the post.

    I am getting like lightning quick decisions after hearings in December. My hunch is ALJs will start twiddling their thumbs with not much to do waiting for the backlog at the DDS level. It is the SSA's fault putting the reconsideration nonsense to bottleneck these cases.

    The disability system would probably work perfectly if EVERY disability case was adjudicated within 1 year. Why 1 year? Because of the antiquated requirement that a severe impairment causes a person to miss 12 consecutive months of work.

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