Jan 4, 2008

Iowa Field Office To Close?

From the Storm Lake, IA Pilot Tribune:
There is a "possibility" that the Storm Lake Social Security office could be closing in the not-too-distant future.

No decisions have been announced, but several of the employees in the office will reach potential retirement status in 2008, and the Storm Lake office is currently considered one of the four smallest offices in the state. ...

According to a regional official of the Social Security Administration out of Kansas City, no formal proposal has been made to close the office at this time. The process, if the office were to close, would include notification of employees and Congressional representatives as well as the community. "We would not try to hide anything," he said.

Jan 3, 2008

More From Eric Schnaufer

I had given a link to comments that attorney Eric Schnaufer had posted on Social Security's proposed procedural regulations. I had noticed that there were several other comments posted by Mr. Schnaufer, but I did not read them. I thought he was just having technical problems and had posted the same thing repeatedly. I was wrong. He had divided his comments into several sections and had posted each separately. Here is the list of links to his truly exhaustive comments:

A Tidbit That Tells You About Social Security Field Office Problems

My firm sent a reconsideration request to the Rocky Mount, NC District Office on July 31, 2007 in a case I will call "Victoria E." Ms. E's reconsideration request was not logged in at the District Office until November 28, 2007, almost four months after it reached the office. The case file has still not reached North Carolina Disability Determination Services. Ms. E's appeal is not being considered because it cannot reach the people who must work on it.

Is Ms. E's case typical? No. Most cases are not delayed this badly, but there are too many that are. Is this the fault of lazy, incompetent bureaucrats? No. They are just overwhelmed with work.

As far as I know, no one is even keeping track of this sort of backlog. This sort of backlog must be nearly invisible to Social Security employees who do not work in Field Offices. Is Michael Astrue aware, even vaguely, of this reality? I cannot say. We will get some idea of whether Astrue understands the severity of his agency's staffing problems when we see his budget request for the Social Security Administration for fiscal year 2009. I believe that will be available in late January.

"They Evidently Don't Want To Find A Solution To This"

From the Omaha World-Herald:
Nebraska and Iowa residents are waiting longer and longer for a review of their denied Social Security disability claims. ...

The wait takes a toll on people like Dwayne Webb, 46, who lives near Pacific Junction, Iowa.

Webb hopes to receive a hearing in February or March on his claim for Social Security disability benefits. That would be about two years after he asked for a judge to review his denial of benefits.

It has been almost a year since Webb and his wife gave up the house they were renting in Glenwood, Iowa, because they could no longer afford the utility bills. The couple now live in a camper at a campground off Interstate 29. ...

Rep. Lee Terry, R-Neb., said he was assured by Social Security officials a year ago that they had plans for combating the backlog in the Omaha office. Instead, the situation has only gotten worse.

"It's embarrassing for Social Security," Terry said. "They evidently don't want to find a solution to this."

Newspaper Finds Backlog Decreases By 0.39% In Columbus, OH In Last Year -- And SSA Responds

From the Columbus Dispatch:
The Social Security Administration says it is making progress toward easing a crushing backlog of disability claims.

But disability attorneys in Columbus, with one of the worst backlogs in the country, say long waits still are the rule. Major improvements have been slow in coming since complaints were aired [in the Columbus Dispatch].

"If there's any improvement at all, it is very, very minimal," said Eileen Goodin, a Social Security disability attorney in Columbus who says her clients are waiting an average of 25 to 28 months for a hearing.

As of Oct. 30, 10,532 cases were pending in the Columbus office, said a spokeswoman for the agency in Washington, D.C. That's 41 fewer than exactly one year earlier.

And Social Security's response to this? Apparently, the agency put out a press release in Ohio touting "Quick Disability Determinations." It is a shame that Quick Disability Determinations is nothing more than a new name for something that has been around for decades, but that word "quick" sure impresses the uninitiated.

Jan 2, 2008

Off Topic: You Know Things Are Bad, When ...

Refugees from Pakistan are fleeing to Afghanistan.

More Comments On Proposed Procedural Regulations

Here are some more links to public comments made upon the proposed procedural regulations. I have tried to select comments that appear to me to be of more general interest, but my selections may be idiosyncratic. I am not sure if Social Security has posted all of the comments made. Probably, some made by mail are yet to appear on the website.

I am not going to give any names, but I did not find comments from some people whom I would have expected to comment. Maybe, those comments will show up later or maybe I missed them.

Results Of Last Week's Unscientific Poll

How was Christmas for you?

Pure fun and enjoyment (18) 19%
Fun, but tiring (24) 25%
Fun, but I didn't get what I wanted (4) 4%
Fun, but there was some tension (12) 12%
Good moments, but problems (9) 9%
A bit much (5) 5%
Many problems; I'm glad it's over. (3) 3%
Christmas was very sad for me (2) 2%
Terrible; a real disaster (1) 1%
I don't celebrate Christmas (18) 19%
Other view suggestions (18) 19%