A North Carolina man faced a Massachusetts judge today on sexual assault charges dating back to 1975. Police tell us they finally caught up with Richard Victor Clark when he tried to apply for Social Security benefits.
Feb 7, 2007
Social Security Claim Leads To Arrest
Feb 6, 2007
Social Security Workforce Dwindling
September 2005 66,147
December 2005 65,777
March 2006 64,297
June 2006 64,814
September 2006 63,647
By the way, if you are wondering why the workforce bumped up in June 2006, I think I can explain it. That was crunch time for the initial implementation of Medicare Part D. Social Security got some extra funding for that, although not much, since the bump in employment was so minor and the impact upon the agency so large.
The employment level proposed for Social Security in the President's 2008 fiscal year budget is 59,800, which is a 6% decrease from the level as of September 2006.
Basically, it appears that Social Security is being budgeted into a 3-4% staffing decrease per year, but, of course, there has been a change in control of Congress, so the result for the 2008 fiscal year budget may be different, although the difference for the 2007 fiscal year budget, which will be passed by a Congress controlled by Democrats, looks to be even worse, a hiring freeze.
Unless there is a turnaround in Social Security's operating budget, it is hard for me to see anything ahead over the next five to ten years other than a complete breakdown in Social Security's ability to get its work done, with it taking dozens of calls to get through on Social Security's 800 number, people lined up before dawn outside Social Security offices, months long backlogs at almost every stage of every process at Social Security and Social Security's hearings and appeals process breaking down to the point that it becomes almost worthless. If that sounds impossibly bleak, ask yourself how Social Security can cope with a 30-40% decrease in its staffing over the next ten years. Without a major turnaround, that is what is ahead.
Feb 5, 2007
President's Budget For SSA
I do see clearly a proposal in the President's budget to lower to 16 the age at which full-time school attendance would be required as a condition for receiving children's benefits under Social Security. That might actually pass.
Social Security's Operating Budget -- Is It Lockheed Martin Versus Having Enough Employees To Get The Work Done?
A possible explanation for a budget increase but a staff decrease might be the five year $124 million contract awarded to Lockheed Martin for scanning documents and the $525 million contract awarded to Lockheed Martin for information technology (IT) modernization, as well as contracts awarded to other corporations. If there is another explanation, I would be interested in hearing it.
The actual budget that Social Security is getting in FY 2007 is a good deal less than what the President had proposed, but that does not mean that the contractors get less. Apparently, it just means a greater reduction in staff for Social Security. That is why Social Security is in the midst of a year long hiring freeze and was under the threat of a staff furlough until recently.
I do not mean to suggest that Social Security did not computer system modernization. They did and still do, but if your trains are not running on time, in addition to looking at how your trains are scheduled, you have to look at the basic question of whether you have enough trains. Spending gobs of money on fancy software will not make your trains run on time if there are not enough trains to begin with.
In considering the FY 2008 budget, Congress will have to consider not merely the gross amount of Social Security's operating budget, but how that money is to be spent. This should include some serious hearings about the value added by outside contractors and how much staffing Social Security needs to get its work done.
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. ...