All persons acting on behalf of a party seeking a statutory right or benefit must, in their dealings with us, faithfully execute their duties as agents and fiduciaries of a party. ...
A representative must ... Conduct the representative’s dealings in a manner that furthers the efficient, fair, and orderly conduct of the administrative decision-making process, including duties to:A representative must not:
- This includes knowing the significant issue(s) in a claim and having a working knowledge of the applicable provisions of the Social Security Act, as amended, the regulations and the Rulings;
- This includes providing prompt and responsive answers to requests from the Agency for information pertinent to processing of the claim; ...
- Through the representative’s own actions or omissions, unreasonably delay or cause to be delayed, without good cause (see § 404.911(b)), the processing of a claim at any stage of the administrative decision-making process;
- Attempt to influence, directly or indirectly, the outcome of a decision, determination or other administrative action by offering or granting a loan, gift, entertainment or anything of value to a presiding official, Agency employee or witness who is or may reasonably be expected to be involved in the administrative decisionmaking process, except as reimbursement for legitimately incurred expenses or lawful compensation for the services of an expert witness retained on a noncontingency basis to provide evidence;
- Threatening or intimidating language, gestures or actions directed at a presiding official, witness or Agency employee which results in a disruption of the orderly presentation and reception of evidence;
- Violate any section of the Social Security Act for which a criminal or civil monetary penalty is prescribed;
- Refuse to comply with any of our rules or regulations;
- Suggest, assist, or direct another person to violate our rules or regulations;
- Advise any claimant or beneficiary not to comply with any of our rules and regulations;
- Assist another person whom we have suspended or disqualified; or
- Fail to comply with our decision regarding sanctions.
If we are going to start down this path of regulating non-attorney representative conduct in a way that has some similarity to the regulation of attorneys, as the use of the word fiduciary implies -- and I think we should -- there are other duties that I think ought to be incorporated into the regulations, such as:
- Communicate with the client
- Maintain confidentiality of information received from the client
- Avoid sexual relations with the client
- Keep advertisements truthful
- Maintain independence from the influence of individuals or entities who are not professional representatives
To move on, a lot of what is in the proposal is vague, almost to the point of being unconstitutionally vague. Prompt and responsive answers? Unreasonably delay? Threatening or intimidating language, gestures or actions? Fail to comply with ANY of our rules or regulations? And why does this talk of rules AND regulations unless it intends to draw a distinction between the two, but the distinction is somewhere between elusive and non-existent, unless you want to include something like POMS as rules but not regulations. I think it would be ridiculous to discipline someone for violating something hidden away in the vast recesses of POMS. I know it can be hard to define a lot of this. Much falls into the category of "I know it when I see it," but this proposal is still awfully vague. Without something more specific Social Security will never be able to make charges stick unless the representative's conduct is really, really bad.
I am glad that this forbids representatives from assisting those who have been suspended or disqualified. I think it should also forbid assisting disbarred attorneys who have not been suspended or disqualified by Social Security.
I also suggest that a provision be added to forbid professional representatives from serving as institutional representative payees. There have been a number of criminal cases arising from what this proposal would call professional representatives serving as institutional representative payees. These two roles do not seem to mix well. It would be best to forbid this combination.