After suffering severe injuries in a fall and being in intensive care for a time, Eric Schnaufer is back at work, updating his schnaufer.com website with the new Social Security appellate decisions from the last month or so, including the typically elegant writing of Judge Posner in Gentle v. Barnhart from the 7th Circuit.
Jan 4, 2006
Interesting Comment on Age NPRM
Alan Polonsky, an attorney in private practice, made an interesting comment on Social Security's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that would increase the age categories in the grid regulations by two years. Polonsky writes:
The stated premise of the proposed rule is that advances in health care have increased life expectancy. You state that the change from 1978, when the guidelines were published, to today is just under 4 years increase from 73.5 to 77. You then make the assumption that this means that at all ages, individuals are 3.5 years healthier than they were in 1978. The two do not follow.
With particular regards to the less educated, the research shows quite the opposite. On November 6, 2005, the New York Times published a synopsis of research from a paper presented by Peter Muennig at the Fall 2005 Symposium of the Campaign for Social Equity of Teacher’s College, Columbia University. The paper is available for review at http://devweb.tc.columbia.edu/manager/symposium/Files/81_Muennig_paper.ed.pdf
Among the specific findings were that the life expectancy of a high school dropout is nine years less than that of a high school graduate and that the health of a typical high school graduate is similar to that of more educated persons twenty years older.
Jan 3, 2006
Media Attention to Grid Regs Proposal
The Philadelphia Inquirer is the first traditional media outlet to have any reporting on Social Security's proposal to increase the age categories in the grid regulations by two years, a proposal that will cut disability benefits by almost $6 billion over ten years. The piece by Mark Alan Hughes criticizes the proposal on the grounds that it will have a disproportionate effect upon African Americans. Perhaps a more accurate criticism is that the proposal affects blue collar America almost exclusively and African Americans are a disproportionate part of blue collar America.
One Day Left to Comment on Age Proposal
There is only one day left to comment on Social Security's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) on the age classifications in the grid regulations. The proposal would add two years onto each of the age categories, making age 57 the new 55 and 52 the new 50. The change is predicted to cut Social Security disability benefits by almost $6 billion over ten years. Anyone wanting to comment on the NPRM may do so online at an SSA website. The deadline is January 3.
Jan 2, 2006
Friedman Warns That Social Security Isn't Secure
Saul Friedman warns in Newsday that the attacks on Social Security have not ended. In 2006 he expects the President and his allies will continue their efforts to privatize Social Security.
Jan 1, 2006
Bush's Social Security Gamble
The Washington Post reviews a new book by Nancy J. Altman, entitled The Battle for Social Security: From FDR's Vision to Bush's Gamble. According to Altman, Republican attacks on Social security have a long and completely unsuccessful history. Eisenhower was one who was having nothing to do with such attacks:
He wrote to his brother Edgar in November 1954, ridiculing oil tycoon H.L. Hunt of Texas and like-minded millionaires who refused to accept Social Security. "Their number is negligible," Ike wrote his brother, "and they are stupid."
Dec 31, 2005
Where Everyone Knows Your Name and Mod
Those of us who live outside the Baltimore area may have negative attitudes towards the staff at SSA headquarters in Woodlawn, MD, but for those who work there, it is a job like any other job. As this Baltimore Sun article shows, these SSA employees have Monaghan's Pub, a nearby place where everyone knows their name.
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