Jun 7, 2007
Social Security Hiring
Another NY Newspaper On Hearing Backlogs
Social Security Subcommittee Statements Available -- Recording Not Available?
Remember that however technical and boring this hearing topic may seem, that if Social Security has to start issuing biometric Social Security cards that the agency will rapidly become a very different place with a much expanded staff. Issuing Social Security cards may become the main task of the Social Security Administration and Social Security field offices may start to resemble drivers license offices.
The only statement from a government witness about additional staffing needs at Social Security came from an official of the Department of Homeland Security who said this in his written statment:
According to SSA officials, the number of new staff required would depend on both the legislative requirements for implementing mandatory EEV and the effectiveness of efforts USCIS has under way to decrease the need for individuals to visit SSA field offices. For this reason, SSA officials told us they have not yet estimated how many additional staff they would need for a mandatory EEV.Tyler Moran of the National Immigration Law Center and Sue Meisinger of the Human Resource Initiative for a Legal Workforce, who testified at the hearing, cautioned about Social Security's implementation difficulties at a time when Social Security field offices are already overburdened. Why is someone from Department of Homeland Security and these other witnesse talking about this, but not the witesses from Social Security itself?
It is striking that the Social Security officials who testified did not mention implementation difficulties in their written statements and, indeed, that relatively low level officials were sent to testify about something that may have a profound effect upon the Social Security Administration. There seems to have been a deliberate effort to downplay implementation difficulties.
Note that the Commissioner of Social Security has his own full time White House Liaison -- for the first time in the history of the Social Security Administration, as best I can tell. The immigration bill is a high priority for the White House. A detailed assessment of Social Security's implementation difficulties for a new employment eligibility verification system may not be what the White House wanted the Subcommittee to hear.
Jun 6, 2007
Memo On Streamlined Folder Assembly
I do not understand why Social Security does not just release this sort of thing to begin with. It is not a secret. It is going to leak out quickly anyway. Just post it on the website for everyone to read.
No Streaming Video On June 7 Social Security Subcommittee Hearing
Allsup and AAPD?
By the way, Allsup's website touts a 97% success rate.
Jun 5, 2007
Witness List For Social Security Subcommittee Hearing -- And, Can I Get A Volunteer?
Frederick G. Streckewald, Assistant Deputy Commissioner for Program Policy Office of Disability and Income Security Programs, Social Security AdministrationThis may sound awfully boring, but it is important. If, as now appears very possible, everyone in the country will have to go to their local Social Security office to get a new Social Security card card which includes a photograph and will have to do so on a regular basis in the future, the Social Security Administration will be dramatically transformed. The manpower requirements for such a role will certainly be in the tens of thousands. I know there are many issues associated with "employment verification", but I hope at least one of the witnesses will focus upon the impact upon the Social Security Administration of using the Social Security card as a national ID card.
Steve Schaeffer, Assistant Inspector General for the Office of Audit, Social Security Administration Office of the Inspector General
Richard Stana, Director of Homeland Security and Justice, Government Accountability Office
Tyler Moran, Employment Policy Director, National Immigration Law Center, Boise, Idaho
Angelo I. Amador, Director of Immigration Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Sue Meisinger, The Human Resource Initiative for a Legal Workforce, Society for Human Resource Management, Alexandria, Virginia
Peter Neumann, Principal Scientist, Computer Science Laboratory, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, on behalf of U.S. Public Policy Committee of the Association for Computing Machinery
Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director, Electronic Privacy Information Center
The hearing will be available in streaming video. Unfortunately, I will be trying to earn a living while this Congressional hearing is going on. Would anyone be interested in watching and writing up a summary that I can post? I will be happy to give credit for this or to post it without a named source. If interested, please use the Feedback form on the right side of the page.
Schenectady Daily Gazette On Backlogs
Some excerpts from a Schenectady Daily Gazette article. No link is possible since there is no on-line edition of the paper. At the rate we are going every newspaper in the country will do a story along these lines.
Twenty-three-year-old Christina Doty waited three years to hear that she would be receiving a monthly check from the federal government for the rest of her life, and would never have to work again....
"It was hard to keep a job," recalled Doty, a Schenectady resident whose husband is also disabled. "With my education level, nobody wanted me. My bipolar disorder and anxiety made it hard for me to be around a lot of people. Standing for eight hours a day was painful."
Yet her application for Supplemental Security Income ... had been denied three times. She kept appealing, but the wait, which began in 2004, seemed interminable. ...
The Social Security Administration acknowledges that the wait is too long, and that they are trying to find ways to expedite the application process and reduce the ever-mounting backlog of cases waiting for a hearing decision. ...
"It's all too high," said Mark Lassiter, a spokesman for the Social Security Administration.