The Social Security Administration published final rules for the program that allows some attorney advisors employed by the agency to issue fully favorable decisions after claimants request a hearing. Previously, the program had been operating under interim rules.
Mar 3, 2008
Mar 2, 2008
Putting It In Perspective
Nobel Economics Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz, quoted in Mother Jones: "For somewhere between a half and quarter of the cost of the war in Iraq you could have fixed all the problems associated with Social Security for the next 75 years and still have had a lot left over."
Labels:
Social Security "Reform"
Another View On The Backlogs
From an article in Government Executive on the February 28 House Appropriations Committee hearing:
Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Fla., questioned whether SSA was creating an incentive for most claimants to appeal state-level denials for disability benefits, increasing the caseloads for judges. Weldon pointed to the fact that they award disability benefits in 62 percent of the appeals they hear. "We've created an industry to appeal these claims," Weldon said. "Are we feeding a monster?"
Labels:
Backlogs,
Congressional Hearings
What Were They Thinking?
From the March 2008 issue of Unity, the newsletter of Council 220 of the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents about 25,000 employees of the Social Security Administration:
A plan to charge $15.00 for each Social Security benefit verification came to an immediate halt recently when Union officials learned about the idea. A sign had been placed on the front door of the Foothill branch office in Oakland, Calif. It stated the fee would take effect in January, but Health and Safety Representa-tive Howard Egerman saw the no-tice and reported it to other Union members. Unfortunately by that time the practice had become widespread and signs had been posted in offices around the entire San Francisco Bay Area.
Dana Duggins, the third Vice President of AFGE Council 220, soon learned about the scheme and immediately wrote to SSA Com-missioner Michael Astrue.
“Before you knew it, the signs had come down,” Duggins said, “but I’d still like to know who put them up in the first place and whether anyone was ever charged. If they were, it was an illegal practice that has to be dealt with and those claimants surely have to be reimbursed.”
The agency’s own regulations state benefit verifications will be provided free to the public, and Duggins says that raises two other questions.
Labels:
Customer Service
Mar 1, 2008
Radio Interview With Linda Fullerton
Linda Fullerton, the founder of the Social Security Disability Coalition, an organization of Social Security disability claimants, was interviewed for the Disability News and Views radio show. You can listen to the interview online.
Social Security Lifts 1.3 Million Children Out Of Poverty
From a press release issued by the National Academy of Social Insurance:
While Social Security is best known as a retirement program, it is also irreplaceable life and disability insurance for young families, according to a new report released today by the non-partisan National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI).
About 6.5 million children under 18 – or nearly 9 percent of all U.S. children – received part of their family income from Social Security in 2005. They include 3.1 million children who themselves receive benefits as dependents of a deceased, disabled, or retired parent, and an estimated 3.4 million other children who do not themselves receive Social Security, but live with relatives who do.
Labels:
Press Releases
Social Security Bulletin Released
The Social Security Administration has released the latest issue of the Social Security Bulletin, a periodical mostly devoted to statistical matters.
Labels:
Statistics,
Wonk Zone
Social Security Union Endorses Obama
Council 220 of the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents 25,000 Social Security employees, has endorsed Barack Obama for President.
Labels:
Campaign 2008,
Unions
Feb 29, 2008
Written Statements At House Appropriations Hearing
The House Appropriations Committee has not posted the written statements made at yesterday's hearing. I have obtained those statements and have posted them as best I reasonably can on the separate Social Security Perspectives Blog. However, the statements of Ron Bernoski on behalf of the Association of Administrative Law Judges and Patrick O'Carroll, Social Security's Inspector General were only available to me in a PDF format that would not allow easy text extraction, so I have not posted them.
Here are the statements that I was able to post:
Here are the statements that I was able to post:
Labels:
Budget,
Congressional Hearings
A Remembrance Of The Extraordinary Bob Ball
From Gene Sperling:
The whole article is worth reading.During the battle over President George W. Bush's plan to partly privatize Social Security, many of us engaged in the debate received long, lucid memos from a former Social Security commissioner. I used to receive similar notes from this particular person years before, when I was in the Clinton White House.What was extraordinary was that the individual pounding out and faxing these memos was at the time 91 years old. It just didn't seem like a big deal to most of the Washington policy community, because everyone had just come to expect that from Bob Ball, who died four weeks ago at age 93. ...
Nostalgia for Ball's accomplishments -- or even for his energy level -- doesn't do justice to his future-oriented spirit. Even in his 80s and early 90s, Ball was putting forward plans that were designed to both ensure Social Security's long-term solvency and its guaranteed benefit.
Labels:
Obituaries,
Social Security Alumni
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