Aug 30, 2008

Social Security Checks Delivered Early

From a Social Security press release:
The Social Security Administration announced that benefit checks are being delivered to Gulf Coast residents today and tomorrow, before the arrival of Gustav and ahead of the regular payment date. Nearly 400,000 people in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida will receive their Social Security checks August 29th and 30th, rather than on September 3rd, the regularly scheduled payment day.

Aug 29, 2008

SSI Monthly Stats

The Social Security Administration has issued its monthly package of statistics on the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program.

Aug 28, 2008

OMB Clears Proposed Regs On Representation

On August 27, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) cleared "with change" proposed regulations it had received from Social Security to "recognize entities as representatives, mandate the use of Form 1696 to appoint or revoke the appointment of a representative, define the roles of a principal representative and a professional representative, require professional representatives to file Form 1696 electronically, and require a representative to keep paper copies of certain documents ..."

Normally, proposed regulations appear in the Federal Register within a few days after OMB clears them, although the proposed new mental impairment listings were cleared by OMB on July 9 and have still not yet appeared in the Federal Register.

In Kind Support And Maintenance: Loans To Minors

I am not even going to try to explain why this matters. Those who know, know, and those who don't, probably aren't interested. From an opinion by Social Security's Acting Regional Chief Counsel for Region VII:

State law generally provides that a minor may enter into a bona fide loan agreement with an adult, but the minor maintains the right to disaffirm the agreement upon reaching the age of majority, absent factors such as the minor's own misrepresentations concerning his or her age and good cause reliance by the adult, or emancipation by marriage.

State law provides parents have a legal obligation to support their children. Therefore, a parent may not loan an apportioned share of household expenses to a child he or she is already legally obligated to support. Guardianship and foster care cases must be reviewed on a case-by-case basis to determine if an in kind loan is proper.

Aug 27, 2008

Good News For One More

From the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:

Here's a good news update on one of our stories from last week.

A man who's been waiting more than three-and-a-half years for a hearing to determine if he'll get disability payments is finally scheduled to see a judge next month. Since David Hintz first applied for disability three-and-a-half years ago, Social Security has lost his file, transferred it around the state or just let it sit idle, according to Hintz and his attorney. ...

Here's what happened to Hintz: at the end of July, the Social Security Administration called Hintz's attorney to schedule a hearing. A judge would finally determine if the 39-year-old man was eligible for disability payments.

I am glad these people are finally getting relief, but is it all accidental that things happen for them just after their names are in the paper?

New Regulation Proposed -- And Others Still Hanging

The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which is part of the White House, must approve all proposed regulations before they are published in the Federal Register. The Social Security Administration just filed the following proposal with OMB:
We proposed to improve the operational efficiency of field offices by reducing the number of individuals who must be interviewed, face-to-face, in the office. Specifically, we will eliminate the requirement to re-interview individuals who became a representative payee (rep payee) for more than one beneficiary. Current policy requires a face-to-face interview for all proposed rep payees. This regulation will eliminate the requirement for that interview where an individual is already serving as a rep payee for another beneficiary.
Let me add a couple of "by the ways" which are probably more important. First, OMB cleared -- with changes -- new proposed mental impairment listings on July 9, 2008. Normally, once OMB clears a Notice of Proposed Rule-Making (NPRM), it appears in the Federal Register within a few days, but not this one. I wish I knew why. Second, another NPRM to "recognize entities as representatives, mandate the use of Form 1696 to appoint or revoke the appointment of a representative, define the roles of a principal representative and a professional representative, require professional representatives to file Form 1696 electronically, and require a representative to keep paper copies of certain documents that we may require" has been pending at OMB since May 30, 2008. The OMB's own rules require that they take action on this within 90 days. The 90 days are up tomorrow.

Woman Thrown Out Of Social Security Office Because Of T-Shirt

From the Los Angeles Daily News:

A routine trip to the Social Security office Monday turned into 30 minutes of shock, disbelief and irritation for Lapriss Gilbert, who was forced to leave the federal building by a guard who objected to her "lesbian.com" T-shirt.

As she headed for a line to pick up a Social Security card for her son, Gilbert was stopped by a guard who said her T-shirt, naming an educational and resource Web site for gay women, was offensive.

She said the guard, who works for a private company hired by the Department of Homeland Security, demanded that she leave the building or face arrest. ...

Lori Haley, a federal spokeswoman for the office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement - which is under the Homeland Security umbrella - said the guard was out of line.

"We believe that the actions of the contract security guard were inappropriate and unacceptable - we have notified his company, Paragon, of our position in the matter," Haley said.

Good News For Three More


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that three disability claimants who were the subject of an article that the paper ran on backlogs at Social Security have been approved.