Congressman Dennis Moore (Kansas Third District) and Congresswoman Nancy Boyda (Kansas Second District) praised the decision this week by the Social Security Administration (SSA) to suspend its plans to institute a pilot program that would limit public office hours in Kansas City’s SSA field offices.Michael Astrue is likely to get some questions on the subject of field office service when he testifies before the House Appropriations Committee. Closing field offices or reducing field office hours is generating great opposition in Congress.
In October 2007, the SSA announced their proposed pilot program to close public office hours of selected field offices, including those in Kansas. According to SSA, this effort was created to help address their current backlog of benefits and disability cases by improving the processing of claims and inquiries. ...
In response to the proposed pilot project, Rep. Moore and Rep. Boyda authored an October 2007 letter to SSA Commissioner Michael Astrue, expressing their deep reservations about the pilot program and asking that the SSA not only delay the start of the pilot program, but that the SSA field offices in Kansas be removed from the pilot program completely. Rep. Moore and Rep. Boyda reiterated their strong reservations in a November 7, 2007, meeting they organized with Commissioner Astrue and the Kansas congressional delegation. ...
The pilot project was originally scheduled to begin on November 1, 2007, but was temporarily postponed until March 2008. Rep. Moore and Rep. Boyda received a letter from Commissioner Astrue dated February 5, 2008, announcing the indefinite postponement.
Feb 26, 2008
Congressional Opposition Blocks Reducation In Field Office Hours In Kansas
Ticket To Work Panel Backs Off
The minutes say that she referred to a letter from some Congressmen stating that the Panel had gone beyond its charge. Apparently, the letter said that the Panel had been listening too much to a "self-selected group of beneficiaries who have an interest in work, who have the capacity to participate in [the Panel's] discussions, and [that] the folks [the Panel was] hearing from aren’t really representative of the typical Social Security beneficiary."
The Chairperson also told the Panel that she had met with Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue and that he had told her that the Panel's draft final report went beyond the Panel’s charge.
Marty Ford, Chairperson for the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities (CCD) spoke at the same meeting and warned that the Panel's recommendations should "not threaten necessary income supports for individuals with disabilities." She told the Panel that the CCD did not "support radical changes in the existing Social Security and SSI disability programs. " She urged the Panel to "first and foremost do no harm.'" She asked the Panel not to recommend changes in Social Security's definition of disability or that participation in work activities be made mandatory or that disability benefits be subject to time limits.
Thus far, I have been unable to find a copy of what the Panel was considering. However, in the end, it looks like the Panel listened to its critics. The final report urged only that:
Congress and the Administration should take action to evaluate the impact of modernizing the Social Security definition of disability by defining disability in a manner that acknowledges the interaction between the person’s impairment and the environment and does not require the individual to prove their inability to engage in substantial gainful activity.There was no recommendation of time limited benefits or mandatory work activity or anything else radical.
Feb 25, 2008
Appropriations Hearing On February 28
This should be available by webcast.HearingThe Disability Backlog at the Social Security Administration
February 28, 2007 10:00 AM, 2358-C Rayburn
Michael Astrue, Commissioner, Social Security Administration
Patrick O'Carroll, Inspector General, Social Security Administration, Office of the Inspector General
Richard E. Warsinskey, Immediate Past President, National Council of Social Security Management Associations
Marty Ford, Co-Chair, Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities Social Security Task Force
Ronald G. Bernoski, President, Association of Administrative Law Judges
Federal Register Items Coming
Agency: SSA | RIN: 0960-AG67 |
TITLE: Revised Medical Criteria for Evaluating HIV Infection (3466A) | |
STAGE: Prerule | ECONOMICALLY SIGNIFICANT: No |
RECEIVED DATE: 01/17/2008 | LEGAL DEADLINE: None |
COMPLETED: 01/31/2008 | COMPLETED ACTION: Consistent without Change |
AGENCY: SSA | RIN: 0960-AG49 |
TITLE: Amendment to the Attorney Advisor Program (3398I) | |
STAGE: Final Rule No Material Change | ECONOMICALLY SIGNIFICANT: No |
RECEIVED DATE: 01/28/2008 | LEGAL DEADLINE: None |
** COMPLETED: 02/22/2008 | COMPLETED ACTION: Consistent without Change |
AGENCY: SSA | RIN: 0960-AG54 |
TITLE: Compassionate Allowances (3427P) | |
STAGE: Prerule | ECONOMICALLY SIGNIFICANT: No |
RECEIVED DATE: 02/11/2008 | LEGAL DEADLINE: None |
COMPLETED: 02/21/2008 | COMPLETED ACTION: Consistent with Change |
About Time For A Hearing
I think we are overdue for another hearing.
Astrue: "Our Field Office Structure Is Under Siege"
Years of tight budgets have also hurt agencies. Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue described his agency as a victim of its own “reputation for competence”: Congress appropriated less than the president’s budget request for 12 of the last 14 years.That has forced the agency to reduce its staff of administrative law judges, who adjudicate claims for disability benefits. The agency is down from 1,200 such judges to almost 1,000, almost as low as during the mid-’90s.“It wasn’t a Republican thing or a Democrat thing. … It was easy to bleed us dry when they were fixing a problem someplace else,” Astrue said. “And our field office structure is under siege. We’ve maintained the same number of field offices, but the population [needing our services] has gone up, and Congress adds a significant new workload every year.”Among the recent new additions to the agency’s workload: processing claims under Medicare’s Part B insurance program and Part D drug plan, and verifying immigrants’ status through Social Security numbers.
Feb 24, 2008
Quick Disability Determination
It's Bad In Kansas And Getting Worse
Thursday’s sleet and snow didn’t stop Glenda Endriss from having her day in court.
She had waited too long — more than two years — to stay at home.
Endriss is among the thousands of Kansans whose Social Security disability case has taken years — not months — to decide. Unable to work and without an income, the wait for the Social Security Administration to rule on a disability case can leave applicants struggling. ...
In August, Kansas was named the worst state in the country for its backlog of disability cases. Since then, the time it takes to get a hearing by a Social Security administrative law judge has increased.
As of January, the average wait for a hearing in Kansas City was 686 days — about two months shy of two years. It is a month and half longer than what the wait was in August.
For Wichita, it takes 529 days — almost a year and half — and more than a month longer than what the wait was in August.