Our review identified various factors that impacted hearing office productivity. Specifically, we found ALJs had control over certain factors that affected hearing office productivity—motivation and work ethic, case review time, and hearings management. Further, we identified factors related to support staff that can also affect hearing office productivity—staff quantity, quality, and composition.
Jan 22, 2010
OIG Report On Hearing Office Productivity
Jan 21, 2010
Fast Scheduling
Is this a local phenomenon or is something happening regionally or nationally that could explain this?
My opinion is that the only fair thing is to schedule hearings in the order in which claimants asked for them insofar as practical. What I am seeing seems inappropriate to me.
Budget Commission Coming
Faced with growing alarm over the nation's soaring debt, the White House and congressional Democrats tentatively agreed Tuesday to create an independent budget commission and to put its recommendations for fiscal solvency to a vote in Congress by the end of this year.
Under the agreement, President Obama would issue an executive order to create an 18-member panel that would be granted broad authority to propose changes in the tax code and in the massive federal entitlement programs -- including Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security -- that threaten to drive the nation's debt to levels not seen since World War II.
South Carolina Field Office Receives Award
The Anderson office of the Social Security Administration pays more than $93 million in benefits to local residents every month.The speed in which it takes applications for those benefits and turns the applications around has now garnered the office’s staff an award for being the best district office for the Social Security Administration’s Atlanta region, said Jan Hammett, one of the office’s officials. ...
The staff will receive the recognition on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. Rodney Taylor, the deputy regional commissioner for the Atlanta region, will present the award.
Jan 20, 2010
Libertarians And Social Security
To shrink government, you need to love government. Most liberals believe deeply in government. As a result, they sit on school boards, city councils, and regional planning boards. They become expert at navigating through the bureaucracy and know which bureaucratic levers to pull to make their policy vision reality.Many conservatives and libertarians come from the world of business. They don’t particularly like government. They view it as merely a necessary evil. As a consequence, they rarely immerse themselves in the intricacies of governing, preferring to make their case from a safe distance.
Once in power, they tend to have far more difficulty navigating the complex terrain of the public sector. The result? From Ronald Reagan’s Grace Commission to the 1995 government shutdown by a GOP Congress, most high-profile attempts to shrink government fail.
Until small-government types better master the nuts and bolts of the public sector—how to design policies that work in the real world and how to execute on large public undertakings—their initiatives to downsize government will continue to disappoint.
Florida Office Honored
When Tom Milligan learned the Leesburg Social Security office was to be honored for excellence, he was surprised — and gratified.
“I’ve always thought we were very deserving, every year,” said Milligan, the office’s district manager. “It’s a great honor, and we’ve worked really hard.”
A brief award presentation took place Thursday afternoon at the office.
“It means a lot to us — the people in this office,” Milligan said, “and hopefully it means a lot to this area — that they get the kind of service here that they would like to have.”
The award was presented by Paul Barnes, regional commissioner for the Southeast Region of the Social Security Administration.
Jan 19, 2010
Getting Media Attention Helps
An 18-year-old Orofino teen with a rare disease that has left him partially blind and deaf has won his year-long fight to get Social Security benefits.
Jacob Walk has type-2 neurofibromatosis, a disease that causes tumors to grow on nerves throughout his body. He says he's accepted his prognosis, and knows the disease will likely leave him completely blind and deaf in the coming years. He's had eight brain surgeries and has at least 14 tumors on his spine.
The Lewiston Tribune reports Walk first applied for Social Security benefits more than a year ago, but was denied -- twice. He took his fight to the media and to lawmakers, and last week U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo told him a Social Security administrative law judge had decided in Walk's favor.
Hearing Office Processing Time Report



