From an newly amended section of
HALLEX, Social Security's manual for hearings and appeals:
When determining disability, the Social Security Administration (SSA) will
use each of the age categories applicable to a claimant during the period
for which SSA is determining whether the claimant is disabled. SSA will
not apply the age categories mechanically in a borderline age situation.
If a claimant is within a few days to a few months of reaching an older
age category (hereinafter “higher age category”), and using
the higher age category would result in a determination or decision that
the claimant is disabled, SSA will consider whether to use the higher age
category after evaluating the overall impact of all the factors of the
case. ...
If the administrative law judge (ALJ) decision is supported by substantial
evidence, including the findings regarding the existence of a borderline
age situation and whether to apply a higher age category, and there is no
other basis for granting review present, the Appeals Council (AC) will
deny review.
When denying review is appropriate but the ALJ did not expressly state in
the decision that he or she considered a borderline age situation and
whether to apply a higher age category, the AC will add the following
language to the “What We Considered” section in the denial
notice:
We considered the borderline age situation in this case, and we found that
the factors in the record do not support application of the higher age
category.
The first paragraph is standard Social Security policy. There's nothing objectionable about it. The rest is apparently based upon the theory that the only thing that matters isn't what you actually did; it's what you said you did. How can the Appeals Council say that the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) "considered" an issue when the ALJ said nothing about the issue? How can the Appeals Council say that it "considered" an issue when it tells the world upfront that it isn't really going to "consider" the issue; it's just going to
say it "considered" the issue.
This newly amended section is about checking off boxes. You couldn't have a clearer statement of the agency's cookie cutter approach to justice.
The ironic thing is that the language quoted above will be cited to the courts as evidence that Social Security's "considered" language is a lie. More cases will be remanded, not fewer.