Sep 26, 2008
My New TV Ads
Sep 25, 2008
Major 9th Circuit Decision On Attorney Fees
We read Gisbrecht not to prohibit a district court from making lodestar-type calculations, but only from relying exclusively on such calculations and refusing to consider the contingent-fee agreement. Here, the district court noted that Gisbrecht controls, and considered the contingent-fee agreements. The district court, however, concluded that substantial reductions in the fees under those agreements were necessary for the fees to meet the statutory standard of reasonableness. Those rulings complied with the requirements of Gisbrecht.Unlike the dissent, we do not read the Supreme Court’s Gisbrecht opinion as mandating any particular procedure or format that the district courts must follow in determining a reasonable attorney fee in social security cases. The Court did not, as the dissent apparently concludes, prescribe that in every case the district court mechanically must begin its analysis with the twenty-five percent contingent fee and then make any reduction in that amount that appears appropriate in the particular case.
As we have noted above, what Gisbrecht held was that “§ 406(b) does not displace contingent-fee agreements within the statutory ceiling; instead, § 406(b) instructs courts to review for reasonableness fees yielded by those agreements.” 535 U.S. at 808. The methodology by which a district makes such reasonableness determinations is for that court to select in the exercise of its sound discretion. In making these determinations, it would be preferable for a district court to begin with the contingency-fee agreement and decrease from there, rather than increase from a lodestar calculation. It does not seem to be an abuse of discretion, however, to use the latter approach as long as the court takes the necessary factors into consideration.
Employment Levels At Social Security
- June 2008 63,622
- March 2008 60,465
- December 2007 61,822
- September 2007 62,407
- June 2007 62,530
- March 2007 61,867
- December 2006 63,410
- September 2006 63,647
- September 2005 66,147
- September 2004 65,258
- September 2003 64,903
- September 2002 64,648
- September 2001 65,377
- September 2000 64,521
- September 1999 63,957
- September 1998 65,629
Continuing Funding Bill Passes House Of Representatives
My Thoughts About NPRM On Representation -- Part II, Mandatory Direct Deposit
The proposal would make direct deposit of fees for representing claimants mandatory. Most attorneys I know would be delighted to receive their fees by direct deposit, except for one problem. How would they know which direct deposit goes with which client? The Department of the Treasury is not sending enough information with direct deposits to allow identification of the client involved. This is already a pain when we deal with payments under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), but we receive far fewer of those checks. The current maximum fee, after deduction of the user fee is $5,221. If I receive a direct deposit for $5,221 I have no idea what client the fee is for. Social Security's response to this question to this point seems to have been "Uh, uh, uh, why don't you ask Treasury?" I find that attitude unhelpful.
Treasury is not the one proposing this regulation. I am not sure how much clout Social Security will have in getting Treasury to resolve this problem, but I am pretty sure that it is more clout than I and others who represent Social Security claimants will have with Treasury. Social Security needs to get this resolved before they make direct deposit of fees for representing claimants mandatory.
You may comment on this proposal online and I encourage you to do so. This is a major proposal. Everyone who represents Social Security claimants needs to be studying it carefully and submitting comments.
Totalization Agreement With Denmark To Go Into Effect
Update. It has not been published in the Federal Register.
Social Security And Voter Registration
UNUM Trial To Begin
Trial begins today in federal district court in Boston against insurance giant Unum Group (NYSE: UNM - News) on whether Unum is dumping tens of thousands of disability claims onto the overburdened Social Security system, costing the government millions of dollars.
The court is hearing a "qui tam" lawsuit brought by a whistleblower on behalf of the federal government involving Unum's alleged practice of requiring claimants to file first for Social Security Disability Insurance benefits even when they clearly didn't qualify. If they didn't apply to Social Security, Unum would cut their benefits.Social Security has much stricter criteria for disability benefits than private insurers. To qualify for disability payments from private insurers, people must be unable to perform their current job; to qualify for Social Security benefits, a claimant needs to be unable to work at all.
"Our lawsuit exposes a practice that creates additional burden on an already overwhelmed Social Security program and also hurts taxpayers," said Colette G. Matzzie, a Washington, D.C., attorney with Phillips & Cohen LLP, which represents the whistleblower. "We're confident that the court will find merit in our case."
Sep 24, 2008
Strategic Plan Released
The plan does indicate that Social Security plans to spend money to encourage people to save. That is another laudable goal, but such a program could also be used to scare people about the future of Social Security, which, probably, is the reason for the program.