Oct 18, 2007

More From NOSSCR Conference

Here are a few more items from the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR) conference in St. Louis.
  • More than 1,000 were in attendance.
  • NOSSCR bestowed it Eileen Sweeney Distinguised Service Award to Barbara Samuels and Donald Becker.
  • Michael Astrue has a daughter in college in St. Louis.
  • Nancy Shor, NOSSCR's long time executive director said that it was her understanding that the current plan is that only 125 new Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) are to be hired in fiscal year 2009, which begins on October 1, 2008. [This may not be enough to keep up with ordinary attrition and is certainly not enough to do anything about the hearing backlog.]

Lisa De Soto At NOSSCR Conference

Lisa De Soto, Social Security's Deputy Commissioner for the Office of Disability Adjudication and Review (ODAR), spoke today at the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR) conference in St. Louis. Here are some points that I picked up from her presentation, with my comments in brackets:
  • There were 18,000 cases remanded with 8,600 allowances under the "informal remand" [or re-recon] process in the fiscal year that ended September 30, 2007.
  • ODAR has 144,000 cases that have been waiting for a hearing for 900 days or more. [Good Lord, that is a huge number.]
  • ODAR has 1,045 Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) on duty now. [I believe that is down about 50 in the last six months or so -- ordinary attrition.]
  • The new register from which ALJs can be hired should be available later this month.
  • Only 92 additional staff members are to be hired to support the ALJs. [Since ODAR hiring along with all Social Security hiring is frozen as a general matter, this means that the support staff at ODAR will decline over the course of this fiscal year, since 92 will not be enough to replace ordinary attrition.]
  • De Soto does not expect the new ALJs to be able to produce many decisions until near the end of this fiscal year (September 30, 2008).
  • De Soto plans a November 1, 2007 "kickoff" for the Senior Attorney program.
  • By the end of this month, ODAR will send out "guidance" to the ALJs to require them to hear and decide 500-700 cases per year.
  • De Soto also mentioned the 11 actions brought before the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) against ALJs this year and promised to "keep it up."
  • She expects rules to be issued soon to require 75 day notice of ALJ hearings and to require that all evidence be submitted five days before ALJ hearings. These new rules will also "close the record" after an ALJ decision.
  • ALJs at the new national hearings center at ODAR headquarters will supervise the attorneys who write the decisions for them. [This makes these ALJs supervisory personnel who would be ineligible to join a union. Was there an anti-ALJ flavor to her remarks? Absolutely.]
  • If the national hearings center works, there may be an expansion to regional hearings centers.
  • Currently there are 160,000 "unpulled" cases at ODAR. [If you do not know what "unpulled" means, well, the subject may not be important to you anyway.] Social Security has signed a contract for "e-pulling" of files. E-pulling should begin nationally by June 2008.
  • The pilot for a program to allow attorneys to review online the files of their clients should begin in June 2008.
  • By October 2008, ODAR should have many new things in place.
  • De Soto favors an expansion of video hearings. De Soto refused to answer a question asking whether she expects local hearing offices to "wither away." I do not mean that she evaded the question. She said specifically that she was refusing to answer the question. [My congratulations to the person who asked this question.]
  • De Soto said that she would not eliminate the right of a Social Security claimant to refuse a video hearing.

Astrue At NOSSCR Conference

Michael Astrue spoke today at the conference of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR) in St. Louis. Here are some points which I gleaned from his remarks, with my comments in brackets:
  • Former Commissioner Barnhart's Disability Service Improvement (DSI) plan was budgeted for 35% of his agency's budget when Astrue took office. [I found that to be a stunning figure. I can understand why Astrue may have thought when he first took office that merely cancelling DSI would free up a lot of dollars to deal with his agency's backlogs. The fact that it did not is very strong proof of just how unrealistic DSI was.]
  • He described the Social Security Administration (SSA) as "struggling." He is "frustrated" with the length of time it takes to get out disability decision.
  • Two years ago SSA had 66,000 employees. By the end of this year [calendar year (CY) or fiscal year (FY)?] SSA will have fewer than 60,000 employees.
  • In this FY, Social Security will generally be unable to replace employees who leave. Disability Determination Service (DDS) offices will be allowed to replace one employee for every two who leave, because of their higher employee turnover rate.
  • Astrue expects 150 new Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) to come "online" by April 2008. It was clear that he was talking only about 150 new ALJs, not a net increase in the number of ALJs. [150 new ALJs may not be enough to even cover the normal attrition in ALJs between now and the end of the FY.]
  • He hopes that SSA will have a new interactive website by "next year" through which attorneys will be able to view their clients' files at SSA and that SSA will have an I-Appeals system which will allow for the online filing of appeals -- "next year." [Again, is the "next year", the next CY or the next FY?]
  • Astrue is looking at shutting down many temporary offsite hearing locations.
  • SSA is working on new regulations on the recognition of law firms and other similar entities as claimants' representatives. He hopes to get this to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), where it would have to be approved, by early 2008. [This would not sound like anything important to an SSA employee or even to many who represent Social Security claimants, but it is a potentially major change which dramatically eases the path towards larger entities, either law firms or non-attorney entities, to represent Social Security claimants.]
  • Astrue wants it to be possible for attorneys to be able to attend Social Security hearings electronically from their offices. He described this as "big."
  • Earlier plans to open several new hearing offices around the country have been shelved due to lack of funds.
  • Astrue has been wondering why it has been many years since SSA has asked Congress for legislation to simplify its processes or reduce its workloads.
  • Instructions on the Senior Attorney program are going out "now."
  • Astrue feels that he learns more when he takes unscheduled visits to Social Security offices and facilities. [A very wise observation.]
  • He described many of Social Security's work processes as being medieval and said that "It's a miracle and a credit to the people that the system still works."
  • Astrue said that he was becoming convinced that SSA has too much "bricks and mortar" and that he wanted to put more money in people. [Interesting, but what does it mean?]
  • SSA now has 11 cases at the Merit Systems Protection Board against ALJs. [By SSA standards this is a stunningly high number.] He intends for SSA to be much more "proactive" on ALJ discipline. He talked about being heavily involved in ALJ disciplinary matters when he worked at SSA previously and being frustrated at the lack of action on ALJ discipline at that time. He said that there was one current ALJ who was trying to simultaneously hold down a second full time federal job! [OK, who is it?]

Federal Register Alert

New proposed digestive system listings will appear in the Federal Register tomorrow. According to Michael Astrue, Social Security Commissioner, who spoke today at the conference of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR), these will include major changes in the listings concerning liver diseases. These listings will now include the MELD score, a concept previously unknown to the listings. (Much more on Astrue's talk later.)

AARP Working On Social Security Budget

The appropriations bill covering the Social Security Administration is coming up for action on the Senate floor today. From Congressional Quarterly(registration required):

AARP, the biggest U.S. lobbying group for people 50 and older, complained about how little the Labor-HHS bill would provide for Social Security’s administrative expenses. The Senate bill would allocate $9.7 billion, $125 million more than Bush requested. AARP said it was “grateful” for the additional funding, but “the agency needs more funding to avoid additional office closings and an increased disability backlog,” according to AARP official David P. Sloane in an Oct. 16 letter to Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus. AARP has 38 million members, or about 12 percent of the U.S. population. Separately, Harkin yesterday criticized Bush for submitting a budget request for Social Security that “would add almost 100,000 disability claims to the backlog.” “We put in $426 million to reduce that backlog,” Harkin said. Social Security last week said it planned to hire about 150 judges and office staff for hearings on disability claims in the spring 2008. Social Security had a backlog of almost 747,000 cases at hearing level as of the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30.

Oct 17, 2007

Social Security Budget Comes Up In Senate Tomorrow

The Labor-HHS budget bill comes up for action on the Senate floor tomorrow. This is the budget bill that includes the Social Security Administration.

Another Post On The Baby Boomer Event

From the Entitled To Know blog of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare:
We have to admit to being more than just a little confused when we read press coverage of yesterday’s baby boomer event at the National Press Club. Just in case you missed it, the nation’s first baby boomer, Kathleen Casey-Kirschling, filed online for Social Security benefits yesterday to much hoopla.

But what was truly unexpected about this event was the lack of the administration’s usual gloom and doom propaganda. In fact, Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue was incredibly reasonable and definitely not singing from the same “sky-is-falling-the-baby-boomers-will-suck-us-dry” hymnal preferred by the Bush administration.

Here is what Commission Astrue said about Social Security’s financial outlook:
“There’s no reason for any immediate panic”
“It’s not catastrophic”
“There’s no factual basis for these ‘nuclear winter’ scenarios
many have described”


Wow. You have to wonder if the White House knows he’s sticking so closely to the facts.

But here’s where we find ourselves down the rabbit hole. While the Bush administration’s Social Security head is telling the straight story on the program’s long-term fiscal picture (unlike what we generally hear elsewhere from this administration), multiple news organizations virtually ignored it in favor of the White House’s crisis propaganda. Almost all of the coverage today parrots the administration’s “we can’t afford the Baby Boomers ” line even though that is
not what the SSA Commissioner actually said at this event.

The Washington Post even went so far as to belittle the Commissioner and Casey-Kirschling for having the nerve to express their confidence in Social Security’s future. The media loves a crisis...this isn’t new. However, Social Security is too important to millions of American seniors and their families to play so fast and loose with the facts in the name of headlines.

The First Boomer

Kathleen Casey-Kirschling made an appearance with Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue a couple of days ago. She was dubbed the first baby boomer to apply for Social Security benefits. Here is a background story on Ms. Casey-Kirschling in an old USA Today article. I hate to sound cynical (it's an occupational hazard) but something tells me that Ms. Casey-Kirschling has an agent or publicist. I have a hard time believing that the Social Security Administration would have sought her out.