A bat invasion has closed the only Social Security office in our nation's oldest city [St. Augustine, FL].The office, located off U.S. 1 South, has been closed for the past two weeks. A spokesperson says the plan right now is to set up temporary offices. ...
Tom Moore with Rascal Rangers, the company hired to remove the bats, estimates that there were more than 1,000 brown bats in the ceiling area.
Moore says the biggest health concern with bats is the excrement they leave behind.
Jun 28, 2008
I Wonder How Long It Took Them To Notice There Were More Than 1,000 Bats In The Ceiling
Jun 27, 2008
Meeting About Buffalo Backlogs
Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-27) today met with senior Social Security Administration officials with direct oversight over Social Security hearing office operations to discuss the SSA’s plans to address the egregious backlog of Social Security cases in the Buffalo Hearing Office region. ...
“The Social Security Administration has taken the first step, but has only scratched the surface of the egregious backlog problem in Western New York,” Said Higgins. “It is crucial that we now continue to build on this start and in order to eliminate the backlogs that exist now and ensure that Western New Yorkers never have to deal with backlogs like this in the future,” Higgins said. ...
“The SSA knows that it can and must do better for Western New Yorkers whose lives have been put on hold while they await a decision on their Social Security cases,” Higgins said. “This is not a matter we will let go unchecked simply because the SSA has made a step towards solving the problem.”
Appropriations Bill Clears Senate Committee
The fate of Social Security's FY 2009 appropriation is very much up in the air. The appropriations process has stalled in the House of Representatives. The President would surely veto anything that the Democratic controlled Congress would pass. With a new President coming next January, the Democrats in Congress have little incentive to negotiate with President Bush over the FY 2009 appropriations. It has generally been assumed that the appropriations process going on now was mostly to determine the bill that would be presented by the new Congress to the new President come next year, but there would be new actors on the stage then and there may be significant changes from what is being voted out of Committee now.
Beginning October 1, 2008 Social Security will be operating under a continuing funding resolution which will be problematic for the agency, since it will probably only allow spending at the FY 2008 level. This problem is likely to continue until at least next February and probably next March.
SSI Monthly Stats
Jun 26, 2008
Appropriations Process Stalls In House Of Representatives -- No Patience For BS
The House Appropriations Committee on Thursday abruptly adjourned a markup of the Labor/HHS spending bill [which includes Social Security's administrative budget] after Republicans attempted to force votes on energy-related issues.Following opening remarks by Chairman David Obey (D-Wis.), ranking Republican Rep. Jerry Lewis (Calif.) requested that Obey guarantee that the Interior appropriations bill would be scheduled for a markup on July 9. It had already been tentatively scheduled for that date, but Republicans said they had reason to believe it would be postponed.
At that point, according to Rep. John Peterson (R-Pa.), Obey replied, “If you want to run this place, get 30 more members.”Lewis then attempted to force a vote by introducing an amendment that would have stricken the language from the Labor/HHS appropriations bill and replaced it with that of the measure funding the Interior Department.
When Peterson introduced an amendment regarding offshore drilling, instead of allowing him to present the contents, Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Wash.) called for a motion to adjourn, which passed on party lines. ...
Obey spokeswoman Kirstin Brost indicated the Wisconsin Democrat was not amused with the stunt, saying that the Interior bill was already scheduled for July 9.
“It should come as no surprise to anybody that Dave Obey has no patience for BS,” Brost said.
Why Do I Remain Afraid?
(e) Benefits Under State Worker's Compensation Laws- Nothing in this Act alters the standards for determining eligibility for benefits under State worker's compensation laws or under State and Federal disability benefit programs.I hope that the ADA Restoration Act will not affect the validity of the Dan Skolar letter that remains the basis for Social Security's interpretation that the Americans with Disabilities Act does not affect disability determination under the Social Security Act. As specific as the language quoted above seems to be, I remain fearful. There are lots of well-meaning people out there who have an almost religious belief that EVERY disabled person can work and that full implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act will allow EVERY disabled person (who is not just lazy) to return to work. If you think I am exaggerating about the disability advocates who believe the EVERY disabled person can work, try digging around in the website of the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Advisory Panel.
If you are wondering how the ADA Restoration Act with such specific language could possibly affect disability determination at Social Security, remember that the Dictionary of Occupational Titles is kaput. Social Security has to replace it somehow. Whatever is done will fundamentally alter disability determination at Social Security. Social Security's leaders must make fundamental decisions about a future course of action and, no, I do not think that starting the process to contract with some entity to update the Dictionary of Occupational Titles commits Social Security to much of anything. That is merely a starting point, since I am pretty sure that any update to the DOT that is even halfway honest will show that unskilled sedentary jobs have almost disappeared from the economy and that there are far fewer unskilled light jobs than there used to be. It is what you do about that fact that is going to matter a whole lot. In making decisions about what to do about these changes in the economy, Social Security's leaders may be affected by the ADA Restoration Act without saying so or, indeed, without believing that they are affected. This is all very close to the bone.
Watch Out! Amendments To ADA Pass House
The U.S. House moved Wednesday to broaden the definition of a disability under federal laws, passing a bill that would effectively reverse recent Supreme Court decisions on the workplace rights of disabled employees.The bill, which passed 402-17, would revise the term "disability" to encompass a broader range of physical and mental impairments. Disability rights advocates say 1999 and 2002 U.S. Supreme Court decisions have so curtailed the scope of disabilities protected under the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA, as to exclude conditions such as cancer and cerebral palsy.
The bill would state that a disability couldn't be determined by whether " mitigating measures," including medication, prosthetics and assistive technologies, are available. The bill excludes people whose condition is expected to last six months or less.
According to the House Education and Labor Committee, plaintiffs in 2004 lost 97% of ADA employment discrimination claims, "often due to the interpretation of definition of disability."
The argument that the ADA should change everything about the Social Security disability programs looks absurd at ground level. By statute, employer attitudes are excluded as a factor in determining disability at Social Security. The vast majority of disability claimants suffer from conditions that could not possibly be accommodated by employers. But the idea that simply passing amendments to the ADA could take lots of people off disability benefits and put them into jobs has such a powerful appeal to the naive that this is likely to have some effect upon the Social Security disability programs.
The irony is that those who promote an idea which would cause dramatic damage to the disabled population of this country are often those whom society thinks of as prototypically disabled, people in wheelchairs. Most people who are in wheelchairs do not suffer from progressive illness or severe pain or severe mental illness and have little sympathy for those who do. They believe that if they can conquer their disability that there is no reason why others cannot. If they could get over the depression that accompanied the own adjustment to wheelchair life, there is no reason why some person suffering from bipolar disorder or schizophrenia cannot get over their mental illness. My impression is that people in wheelchairs often dramatically overgeneralize from their own situations. Instead of helping others with disabilities, they are often the enemy of others who are disabled.
Jun 25, 2008
One Last Nomination
The President intends to nominate Jason J. Fichtner, of Virginia, to be Deputy Commissioner of Social Security for the remainder of a six-year term expiring 01/19/13. Dr. Fichtner currently serves as Acting Deputy Commissioner of Social Security and as Associate Commissioner for Retirement Policy at the Social Security Administration. Prior to this, he served as Senior Economist on the Joint Economic Committee of the United States Congress. Earlier in his career, he served as Senior Consultant in the Office of Federal Tax Services of Arthur Andersen.
Dr. Fichtner received his bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan, his master's degree from Georgetown University, and his PhD from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
This late in President Bush's term there is essentially no chance of Fichtner being confirmed to a position whose term would run well beyond the end of the Bush Administration.