Feb 4, 2007
Former Social Security Employee Sent To Prison For Social Security Fraud
Feb 3, 2007
Treasury Secretary Soldiers On
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson conceded on Friday that chances were slim for agreeing on a way to reform Social Security financing but said he would keep trying to find bipartisan support for
"There's not a high degree of likelihood. I'm not naive, given how politically contentious this is, that we'll get this done," Paulson said in an interview on CNBC Television.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Republicans and Democrats aren't as far apart on overhauling Social Security as their public posturing might suggest, and insisted all options are on the table.
In public, some Republican lawmakers declare they won't accept any accord that would raise taxes and conservative groups threaten to unseat any legislator that considers doing so. At the same time, Democrats say they oppose President George W. Bush's proposal to set up private accounts.
``When I'm talking alone, there's no one that really pushes back hard,'' Paulson said in an interview yesterday in Washington. ``If it's going to be bipartisan, you've got to come together and everything is on the table.''
Maybe they are not pushing back hard because they do not want to waste their time on a pointless argument about something that is not going to happen.
Feb 2, 2007
Josh Marshall On Social Security
And you say that in the Social Security area, the mainstream press really doesn't care about it because they make too much money?
I think the fairly comfortable economic position of a lot of the lead reporters makes them relatively indifferent to the future of social security. Yeah, I think that's true.
Their class position influences how they cover things.
Yeah. Not in ways that they're dishonest. I think all sorts of facts about individual reporters go into the assumptions that they bring to the news. Yeah, I think that that's one of them.
In the case of Social Security, another thing that played into that is the conventional wisdom in Washington, and the conventional wisdom in Washington on Social Security leaned right. ...
Astrue Confirmed
Don't Tell Anyone! Social Security Can't Answer Its Telephones
From FY 05 to FY 06 there were 1 1/2 million more calls coming in to the agents[at Social Security teleservice centers that answer Social Security's 800 number calls]. ...
Rick [Warsinskey, president of NCSSMA] reported how FO [Field Office] managers report that many calls go unanswered in the FOs. The most recent report states FO’s got 67.8 million business related calls in FY 2005. He asked if there was any possibility of getting more FO calls routed to the 800# either by Forward on Busy (FOB) or publishing the phone number in the phone book. Do the TSCs [teleservice centers, which answer the 800 calls] have the capacity for handling these additional calls?
OTS [Office of Telephone Services?] responded that the TSCs are beyond capacity. The targets are at 330 seconds to answer a call. The target busy rate is 10%. If we sent more calls to the TSC we could seriously degrade the service we are giving now. There is no capacity for that work in the TSC nor is there any capacity to handle it in the FO. The TSC targets are way higher than the private sector. One difference is that SSA will busy you out. Private sector will not busy you out.
Companies in the private sector have goals like: answer 80% of the calls within 20 seconds. They are competition and profit driven and that adds to their drive. SSA is no where near that. Even our 10% and 330 second targets are hard to meet. Since the beginning of FY 07, we haven’t met our target more than 20 days.
Fee Payments in 2006
Fee Payments | ||
|---|---|---|
| Month/Year | Volume | Amount |
| Jan-06 | 18,752 | $64,848,326.02 |
| Feb-06 | 20,426 | $70,312.586.15 |
| Mar-06 | 26,227 | $91,045,934.83 |
| Apr-06 | 23,042 | $79,714,961.76 |
| May-06 | 23,581 | $82,015,869.29 |
| June-06 | 27,771 | $97,085,724.60 |
| July-06 | 21,432 | $74,648,883.83 |
| August-06 | 24,579 | $85,528,548.61 |
Sept-06 | 28,968 | $99,124,616.47 |
Oct-06 | 20,246 | $71,009,543.75 |
Nov-06 | 18,322 | $63,636,873.26 |
Dec-06 | 20,717 | $71,825,808.27 |
The final total for 2006 was $950,797,676.84. This is an 11% increase over the total for 2005, which was $862,369,764.09, although one should not infer from this that those representing Social Security claimants are enjoying rapidly increasing fees. These numbers are heavily influenced by the advent of withholding of fees in SSI cases and withholding of fees for certain non-attorney representatives. Without those fees being added, the increase would have been far less dramatic. Undoubtedly, there has been some increase in fees over the rate of inflation, but this has come at a cost to those representing Social Security claimants. As the length of time that Social Security takes to adjudicate cases goes up, the fees go up, since they are based upon the amount of back benefits, but so does the work that the attorney or representative must do. The longer the case stays open, the more telephone calls the attorney makes and receives concerning the case, the more medical development the attorney must do and so on.
Job Satisfaction Good At Social Security
| Agency | 2006 Ranking |
|---|---|
| Office of Management and Budget | 1 |
| Nuclear Regulatory Commission | 2 |
| National Aeronautics and Space Administration | 3 |
| National Science Foundation | 4 |
| Department of Justice | 5 |
| Department of State | 6 |
| National Credit Union Administration | 7 |
| Social Security Administration | 8 |
| US Agency for International Development | 9 |
| General Services Administration | 10 |