Mar 28, 2007

Decline In Social Security Workforce Continues

The Office of Personnel Management has released figures on federal employment as of December 2006. This shows that Social Security's workforce declined by .4% over those three months. The decline was 3.6% from December 2005 to December 2006, even though Social Security's workload went up in 2006 due to the Medicare prescription drug benefit and the aging of the baby boomer population.

Digital Imaging Contract Attracts Attention

Social Security's effort to find a vendor which can provide software to magically reorganize scanned disability claim files so that duplicates records are eliminated and the proper records are neatly organized is attracting attention from a leading industry news source, FCW.com.

There will be good money to be made from such a contract, even though the task is quite hopeless. Vendors for projects such as this get paid whether the software they try to develop works or not. As I have said before, this is like something out of Dilbert.

Mar 27, 2007

No Politicking At SSA

From the Baltimore Sun:

... The Merit Systems Protection Board, for instance, overturned a lower court ruling favorable to two former Social Security Administration employees, who forwarded e-mails revealing their allegiances while at work in the agency's Kansas City, Mo., field office.

The first e-mail, from Leslye Sims was titled "FW: Fwd: Fw: Why I am Supporting John Kerry for President" Sims began her e-mail with "Some things to ponder ..." and then copied and pasted a pro-Kerry letter from John Eisenhower, son of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. ...

Sims e-mailed the letter to 22 people, including colleague Michael Davis, who responded to 27 people with an e-mail tagged, "FW: Your Vote." The message contained a graphic of a button with a flag background and President George W. Bush's face in the center. Above his head were the words "I vote" and below "the Bible." The message questioned Kerry's morals and leadership skills.

...The addressees on both e-mails were not identical and included people not working for the federal government, but Smith said they clearly were improper.

Ana Galindo-Marrone, chief of the Hatch Act unit at the Office of Special Counsel, explained the rules this way.

"E-mails on duty or while in a federal building directed at the success or failure of a candidate, party or political organization are prohibited," she said. "Employees opining on the Iraq war or abortion, even though they may be issues in a hot race, are permitted -- unless they're specifically tied back to a candidate or party."

Mar 26, 2007

ALJ Joe R. Hooper Dies

Greenville Online reports that Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Joe R. Hooper of Greenville, SC has died. His funeral is set for Tuesday, March 26.

SSA Responds To Media Attention?

The Charlotte Observer has reported on the severe backlogs affecting Social Security claimants who ask for an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing. They are now reporting in a new article that one of the claimants whose name appeared in the article has just been approved by an ALJ.

One thing not mentioned in the article, but which has been a topic of conversation among local Social Security attorneys, is that both the Charlotte and Greensboro, NC hearing offices have recently shipped out a large number of cases to be heard by ALJs from other offices. Those claimants will receive video hearings. Perhaps not coincidentally, a television station that serves an area covered by both the Charlotte and Greensboro hearing offices is preparing a story on Social Security backlogs. The only other hearing office in North Carolina, Raleigh, has nearly as big a backlog as Charlotte and Greensboro and the Raleigh backlog is growing much more rapidly than the backlogs in Charlotte and Greensboro, but no cases have yet been transferred out of the Raleigh hearing office.

Poll

Proposed New Regulation

From today's Federal Register:
We propose to revise our regulations to codify two provisions of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 that affect the payment of benefits under title XVI of the Social Security Act (the Act). One of the provisions extended temporary institutionalization benefits to children receiving SSI benefits who enter private medical treatment facilities and who otherwise would be ineligible for temporary institutionalization benefits because of private insurance coverage. The other provision replaced obsolete terminology in the Act that referred to particular kinds of medical facilities and substituted a broader, more descriptive term.

Results Of Last Week's Unscientific Poll

How do you rate the chances of former Commissioner Barnhart's Disability Service Improvement plan being implemented nationally?
Almost certain (2) 2%
More likely than not (4) 4%
Some chance (21) 19%
Little chance (39) 36%
No chance (42) 39%

Total Votes: 108