May 25, 2008
Outcomes Chart
Courtesy of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR). Click on the image to see it full size.
May 24, 2008
SSI County Data Released
May 23, 2008
Congressional News
The last provision is aimed at military contractors who have been making contract employees in Iraq employees of offshore subsidiaries.House Passes H.R. 6081, the “Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax (HEART) Act of 2008”On May 20, 2008, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 6081, the “Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax (HEART) Act of 2008,” by a vote of 403 - 0. H.R. 6081 is similar to H.R. 3997, different versions of which passed the House and the Senate last year. (See Legislative Bulletins 110-15 and 110-16.)
The new version of the HEART Act contains the following provisions of interest to SSA:
Taxable Wage Exclusions for Volunteer Firefighters and Medical Responders
• Would amend the Internal Revenue Code and the Social Security Act to exclude from FICA taxable wages any property tax rebate or other qualified benefit provided to volunteer firefighters and emergency medical responders in return for labor services. The IRS has previously ruled that such payments constitute compensation for services performed. Would be effective as if included in Section 5 of the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 (i.e., January 1, 2008).
Military and National Service Related Changes to the SSI Program
• Would treat most cash military compensation as earned income for SSI purposes, thus allowing the service member to benefit from the SSI program's more favorable consideration of earned income.
• Would codify SSA's policy regarding consideration of privatized military housing allowances. In situations where the allowance is withdrawn directly from a service member's pay by military payroll and paid to the landlord, the allowance would be considered in-kind income and the SSI benefit reduction attributable to the housing allowance would be capped at one-third of the Federal Benefit Rate. In other cases, housing allowances would be considered earned income.
• Would exclude State-provided pensions for aged, blind or disabled veterans (or their spouses) from income consideration for SSI purposes. Such payments would also be excluded as a resource for SSI purposes.
• Would exclude any cash or in-kind benefits provided under an AmeriCorps program from income consideration for SSI purposes. Under current law, AmeriCorp VISTA payments are already excluded from such consideration, but AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps and Americorps State/National program payments are countable.
• All SSI-related provisions would be effective for benefits payable for months beginning 60 days after enactment.
Consideration of Offshore Companies for FICA Tax Purposes
- Would end the practice of U.S. government contractors setting up shell companies in foreign jurisdictions to avoid payroll taxes. The legislation amends the Internal Revenue Code and the Social Security Act to treat foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies performing services under contract with the United States government as American employers for the purpose of Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes. This change would affect U.S. citizens and U.S. residents working for these subsidiaries. Would be effective upon enactment.
Andrew Biggs Has A Blog
May 22, 2008
New Acting Deputy Commissioner
I could guess that it would be impossible for Fichtner to be in the same job that Biggs had been in without sharing many of Biggs' belief, but I do not know. At this point in the Bush Administration, I am not sure that it matters.
San Francisco TV Station On Backlogs
No Comment Department
Todd Davis has dared criminals for two years to try stealing his identity: Ads for his fraud-prevention company, LifeLock, even offer his Social Security number next to his smiling mug.Now, Lifelock customers in Maryland, New Jersey and West Virginia are suing Davis, claiming his service didn't work as promised and he knew it wouldn't, because the service had failed even him.
Attorney David Paris said he found records of other people applying for or receiving driver's licenses at least 20 times using Davis' Social Security number, though some of the applications may have been rejected because data in them didn't match what the Social Security Administration had on file.
It's Not Just Social Security
From a piece by Paul C. Light at Politico:
The problem is that the federal government is perilously close to the breaking point. Unless the next president takes the lead in fixing government, he or she will preside over a string of meltdowns that will make the federal response to Hurricane Katrina look like a minor mistake.
Just imagine for a moment the worst possible circumstances for running a high-performing government.
First, the federal government would be given missions that stretch well beyond its resources. Asked to do more with less, federal employees would eventually be forced to do everything with almost nothing. Old missions would never fade away, even as new missions would suck up scarce resources. ...
The place to start building a government well executed is to talk about it. Instead of frittering away their time on gasoline tax holidays or complaining about congressional earmarks, the three candidates should put their government reform ideas on the table.
The media should also start asking about the recent meltdowns and why none of the candidates has said word one about the shortages of food and airplane inspectors, tax collectors, passenger screeners, and Social Security claims representatives. ...
Finally, Americans should stop pretending that the federal government can succeed without an immediate infusion of the resources to do its job. Either that, or start a betting pool on the next government meltdown. It is coming soon to front pages everywhere.