Oct 3, 2007

Fraud In Sacramento

From the Sacramento Bee:

A 73-year-old Sacramento woman pled guilty in federal court Monday to stealing more than $91,000 in Social Security funds.

Margaret Williams admitted to federal prosecutors that for nearly 35 years, she collected disability benefits under her true Social Security number while working under a fraudulent Social Security number, according to a news release by the office of U.S. Attorney McGregor Scott.

In 1953, Williams was assigned a legitimate Social Security number that she used to work and then to collect disability benefits with until 1988. In 1971, a second Social Security number was issued to Williams, who obtained it using a different name, false birthplace, false parent names and false birthdate. She began working under the fraudulent Social Security number in 1973, the release states.

New Security Features On Social Security Cards

A Fact Sheet from the Social Security Administration:
The Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA), P.L. 108-458, was signed into law on December 17, 2004. Section 7213(b)(1) of the law requires the Commissioner of Social Security, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, to form an interagency Task Force to establish requirements for further improving the security of Social Security cards and numbers; and, for the Commissioner to provide for implementation of those requirements.

The Task Force was formed in January 2006 and issued its recommendations in May 2006.

Status of Changes

As a result of the Interagency Task Force, SSA plans to include several new security features to the Social Security Card. Some of these new features are overt and are listed below. SSA has already implemented two overt features and will implement the other four on October 1, 2007.

Changes Implemented in April 2007:

• The card issuance date was added to the front of each card. This date reflects the date that SSA processed the application for that particular card. Information about the issuance date was also added to the perforated attachment to the card.
• Signing instructions were added to the perforated card attachment. The instructions state “ADULTS: Sign this card in ink immediately. CHILDREN: Do not sign until age 18 or your first job, whichever is earlier.”

Changes to be Implemented on October 1, 2007:
• A guilloche background pattern, which is a unique non-repeating spiral design, will replace the existing marbleized pattern. The new pattern is very similar in color to the current background and will continue to have the security feature of being erasable. This background is computer generated and very difficult to duplicate.
• A latent image has been added to the SSN card face. This feature, a text image, is visible only when the document is viewed at specific angle or angles.
• A split fountain production method was added which produces a unique ink color mixture on the press that then transfers to the paper. The colors on the background of the card flow from blue to aqua.
• Color shifting inks were added to the face of the card. These inks have a multilayer light interference ink pigment imbedded that creates a noticeable color shift when moved in front of a light source. This feature is also used in currency.

Additional Change

In addition to the above IRTPA changes, SSA implemented a change in response to requests from employer groups to distinguish the last name of the individual on the card. As a result, beginning on September 8, 2007, the individual’s last name was displayed on a separate line on the card directly below the first and middle name.

Prior Versions of the Social Security Card
• There are different versions of the Social Security card in circulation and all prior versions of the card are valid.
• Individuals do not have to request a new Social Security Card.
• Because all prior versions of the cards are valid, employers can select to use the free, Social Security Number (SSN) verification services offered by SSA to verify that their employees’ names and SSNs match our records.

Oct 2, 2007

Budget Cuts And Service

From the New York Times:
Two weeks before the Social Security Commissioner told Congress that personnel cuts proposed by the White House would have no impact on her agency's services, she said in an internal memorandum that the services would in fact ''deteriorate all over the country'' if the cuts were carried out.

Thanks to an anonymous poster for this one. This is from 1999. The Social Security Commissioner was Dorcas Hardy and the President was Ronald Reagan.

A Message From The Commissioner -- Bad News

An e-mail that went out today:

A Message To All Social Security And DDS Employees

Subject: Budget Situation

As we start the 2008 fiscal year, I am sure that it is no secret to you that we are facing unprecedented workloads. We do so with our lowest staffing level in over 30 years, and these workloads will continue to grow at an increasing rate as the aging baby boomers begin to retire and reach their most disability-prone years. At the same time, Congress has given us new and non-traditional workloads, such as taking Medicare prescription drug subsidy applications.

These factors combined with years of congressional appropriations that have fallen far short of what the President has requested for this agency - almost $1 billion short - means that we must make hard decisions about which facilities and services should be scaled back, consolidated or eliminated.

Let me be candid about our current budget situation. Under any funding scenario currently being considered by Congress, we will have limited resources to maintain our current level of services and drive down the hearings backlog. In fact, under either the House or Senate bills, we will have less discretionary money to spend in FY 2008 than in FY 2007. As you know, our FY 2007 budget appropriation narrowly enabled us to avoid employee furloughs. While we expect to avoid furloughs this fiscal year, field offices and headquarters components will generally be unable to replace employees who leave and in our hearing offices, the only significant hiring will be for up to 150 ALJs and some support staff late in the fiscal year.

To some, this constraint on our ability to hire more staff may seem counterintuitive given the increases the House and Senate have provided for us -- $100 million more than the President’s budget in the House appropriations bill and $125 million more in the Senate bill. Let me explain. Social Security has a large infrastructure, including over 1,400 field and hearing offices. Mandatory cost increases, such as rent, guards, postage, pay raises and employee benefits, means that we require a minimum administrative budget increase each year of over $300 million to fund current operations. These increases, combined with requirements in the FY 2008 budget that we spend $477 million on program integr ity work (CDRs and SSI redeterminations), mean the amount of money available to the agency to invest in additional workload processing is very limited.

Even in the face of our budget shortfall, our demographic challenges and our added responsibilities, what impresses me the most is that you continue to maintain a can-do attitude. I see that can-do attitude every time I visit a field office, a hearing office, a TSC or PSC, our DDSs, the regional offices and the components here in headquarters. I also see it in the new and innovative ideas that employees come up with for dealing with our growing workloads. This is especially evident in our multi-faceted approach to reducing the disability backlog. We can all take pride in the improvement this year in DDS processing times and the virtual elimination of our FY 2007 “aged” hearing cas es (cases pending 1,000 days or more).

Despite this progress, we must continue to look for ways to streamline our business processes. We must also convince the public to take greater advantage of other ways of doing business with us, such as our online and automated telephone services. Doing so is one of the only ways we can survive the coming demographic surge. Doing so will not jeopardize the public’s ability to do business with us face-to-face when they are required to do so or the jobs of our employees.

A May 1, 2007, editorial in the New York Times noted that we are an agency that “gets high marks for productivity and efficiency.” Clearly our situation would be worse without the productivity improvements you have achieved. As an agency, we take great pride in making efficient use of our resources. Your efforts to innovate and automate, coupled with your unwavering dedication to public service, have improved productivity on average by 2.5 percent per year since 2001. In short, we continue to produce more each year with less. The Social Security Administration is a good investment, and it is regrettable that this fact is not as w idely recognized as it should be.

For many Americans, our programs are all that stand between them and poverty. The public expects and deserves the best service we can provide. With your innovation and dedication and with the support of Congress, we will continue to provide the level of service that millions of Americans have relied on for more than 70 years. I know it is often hard, but hang in there!

Michael J. Astrue

Commissioner


So, why has Astrue been telling Congress that he did not want any more money than was in President Bush's proposed budget? Social Security is likely to get $100-$125 million more than was in Bush's budget for this fiscal year, yet Astrue is still talking about closing offices, scaling back services and a near complete hiring freeze for this fiscal year. Why was he not warning Congress and the American people about this earlier!

Congress and prospective ALJs please note what Astrue says -- his agency will not be hiring 150 new ALJs and support staff until late in the fiscal year. That will probably not be enough to even replace the ALJ attrition over the next year and the hiring will not take place until almost a year from now. This is different from what Astrue told Congress just a few months ago. Why was Astrue not frank with Congress at that time about his agency's dire budget situation? There were some sparks when Astrue appeared before the House Social Security Subcommittee at that time. There could be an explosion this time.

Pain In Bismark -- And Allsup Can Help

From the Bismark Tribune:
The weather is changing. Bismarck resident Dan Neer can feel it from his lower back to the tip of his right toe.

Cool, damp weather makes his usual, constant back pain unbearable to the point he can be bedridden. ...

The pain also was the center of a battle to get disability benefits from the Social Security Administration. ...

It took two separate claims to the Social Security Disability Insurance, including appeals that were denied on the first claim, before he was approved for Social Security Disability in February. It took more than two years from his first application to be approved. ...

Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., has asked President Bush and the inspector general's office to look into the process. ...

He wants the inspector general's office to investigate the process to find out why the approvals are happening on appeal instead of the initial consideration. He wants to know if it is deliberate or a lack of resources. ...

Neer reached a point he felt he needed the outside help. He found out about Allsup from his father-in-law. He called and talked to them about his experience.

"This woman wanted to know everything," he said. "This lady believed me. She said 'Dan, I think we have a case.' Someone believed me. Someone could help. So much pressure lifted off."

Stay On No-Match Letters Continued

From a press release from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Northern California:
After a hearing today [October 1], a federal judge extended an order that temporarily stops the government from implementing a new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) rule that would cause U.S. citizens and other authorized workers to lose their jobs, and which would illegally use error-prone social security records as a tool for immigration enforcement. The judge's order also stops the Social Security Administration (SSA) from beginning to send notices to approximately 140,000 employers across the country notifying them of the new rule, which would impact approximately eight million workers.

Psycho In Punta Gorda

From WayOdd.com:

In a scene reminiscent of Hitchcock's 'Psycho,' police entered a Florida home to find a man keeping the body of his deceased, 86-year-old roommate in the bed where he supposedly died at least thirty days prior.

Punta Gorda police believe the 86-year-old John William Jones remained in the bed he died in while his roommate, David Morse, 40, carried on as usual, except with slightly more capital. Morse allegedly has been using Jones' ATM card and collecting his social security and pension checks since his death.

Connecticut Office Closes

From the Associated Press:
The Social Security Administration will shut its Bristol office on November 2nd.


Operations will be consolidated in the New Britain office, but Social Security will have a representative work a half-day a week in Bristol to provide limited services.


The agency says it will save $113,000 this year and about $1 million over 10 years.


Bristol City Council member Frank Nicastro says he will fight the decision to shut the office.


He says closing the office will force hundreds of elderly and disabled seniors to travel to New Britain for Social Security service.