Sep 19, 2008
SSI Stats Released
Sep 18, 2008
Congress Passes ADA Restoration Act
Pressure Works
The head of the Social Security Administration has announced new steps to reduce the backlog of disability claims cases in the Tampa Bay area.The South Florida office will serve some areas formerly handled by Tampa but are closer to Fort Lauderdale. In-person and video hearings will continue to be offered at the agency's Fort Myers and West Palm Beach remote sites.
Social Security Commissioner Michael J. Astrue outlined the new procedures in a letter to Rep. Kathy Castor, a Tampa Democrat who introduced a bill on July 14 to address the national backlog of disability claims.
The bill would require that a hearing be held within 60 and 75 days from the date of the request, and that a final verdict be given no more than 15 days after a hearing. Rep. C.W. Bill Young is among the co-sponsors.
Indecent Exposure At Social Security Office
Federal security officers responding to reports of a man exposing himself to a woman and her daughter in a Social Security office in Denver on Wednesday arrested an ex-convict on parole for attempted murder.
Federal Protective Service officers were alerted at the Social Security office near 16th and Champa streets about 1:05 p.m., said Carl Rusnok, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. ICE oversees the protective service.
Officers took into custody Herbert L. Towery, 67, for investigation of indecent exposure, Rusnok said.
Errors In Workers Compensation Offsets
Workers injured on the job may qualify for DI [Disability Insurance] benefits in addition to benefits under Federal and State workers' compensation (WC) programs. However, combined DI and WC benefits could result in workers receiving more in disability payments than they earned before they became disabled. To prevent this, Congress enacted the WC offset provision under section 224 of the Act, which requires that SSA adjust DI benefits based on an offset formula set forth in that provision of the Act.
While SSA adjusts DI benefits based on an offset calculation, to protect DI beneficiaries with a continuous WC offset against inflation, SSA is required to re-compute the beneficiary's average current earnings (ACE) [a figure used in computing the workers compensation offset] on a triennial basis. This recalculation is known as a triennial redetermination (REDET). A REDET may result in increased benefits ...
A-04-07-17078 - Alternate Format In 2006, SSA identified 36,177 DI claims that required a REDET. As of June 30, 2007, SSA had completed 21,976 REDETs, from which we selected a random sample of 250 DI claims for review. To determine whether the REDETs were accurate, we
- reviewed all available documentation for independent proof of current WC rates,
- calculated the WC offset based on the current proven WC benefits data,
- compared the total benefits paid to the total benefits owed, and
- obtained SSA's review and comments for each payment error. ...
A-04-07-17078 - Alternate Format SSA did not always accurately process and calculate the 2006 REDETs in our sample. In total, 24 (9.6 percent) of the 250 sampled DI claims we reviewed had payment errors. Of the 24 claims, 19 had payment errors totaling $219,610 related to the WC offset calculation. Based on this error rate, for the 21,976 REDETs in our population, we estimate approximately 1,670 DI claims totaling about $19.3 million had payment errors related to the WC offset calculation. The five remaining claims, totaling $53,320, had DI processing errors unrelated to the WC offset calculation.
Also, 16 of the 24 REDET claims had payment errors that continued after August 31, 2007. Fourteen of these errors were related to the WC offset calculation, and the remaining two were unrelated to this calculation. Based on the number of continuing errors, we estimate that for the 12 months following our audit period, approximately 1,406 claims had payment errors totaling about $4.8 million.
Sep 17, 2008
Is E-Pulling E-Failing?
Much of ODAR’s promise of increased efficiency is tied to the success of the ePulling initiative. According to the IG report, the pilot is being expanded to five hearing offices and the NHC. Rollout to additional offices is dependent on the performance of the software at the pilot locations. Minneapolis is one of those five hearing offices. We are only eight weeks into the pilot, but at this point, the process has been very time consuming and has slowed the staff down by more than 50 percent. We at FMA believe that many staffing decisions are being considered assuming the success of this initiative. We would caution that its success and ability to deliver significant numbers of folders for ALJ review anytime in the near future is overly optimistic.
Aftermath Of Ike In Houston
Social Security representatives will be prepared to issue immediate payments to residents who cannot reach their mailboxes to get their benefit checks, officials say.
Approximately 20,000 paper checks are due to people receiving Social Security benefits from the affected areas on Wednesday.
Although mail delivery is returning to the majority of the impacted locations, many of the people who evacuated may not be able to return home to get their checks. Social Security representatives are prepared to issue immediate payments from any of their open offices.
However, Social Security officials announced the following offices will be closed on Wednesday, September 17:
• Angleton
• Beaumont
• Conroe
• Galveston
• Houston Downtown
• Houston Northeast
• Houston Northwest
• Houston Southeast
• Houston Southwest
• Houston Teleservice Center
• Pasadena
• Port Arthur
• Office of Disability Adjudication and Review Hearing Office, Houston Downtown
• Office of Disability Adjudication and Review Hearing Office, Bissonnet
• Office of Inspector General, Houston