Jan 25, 2010
And We Thought Backlogs Were Bad At Social Security
Jan 24, 2010
Understaffing Social Security Makes Sense If You Start With This Premise
The Social Security Administration (SSA) spent $30 million in stimulus money in 2009 to hire 585 new bureaucrats who will be responsible for certifying whether people are eligible for disability so they can be paid by the taxpayers not to work.' ...
Sandra Fabry, director for the Center for Fiscal Accountability at Americans for Tax Reform, called SSA’s use of stimulus funds for ODAR a “bad deal for taxpayers on both ends.”
“You’re paying money on the front end to make these hires and are obligating taxpayers at the same time to pay millions and millions more on the recipients’ side,” she said.
Bottom line, Fabry said, the move by SSA grows the scope of government in both spending and “dependency.” ...
Fabry acknowledged the claims back-log, but questioned whether or not this is a good use of taxpayer dollars ...
Jan 23, 2010
Glad It Worked Out For Him
From the Independent Mail of Anderson, SC (emphasis added):
When Freddie Jordan could no longer feel his hands or his feet, which prevented him from working as a pipe fitter, he was nervous.
For 15 years, he worked with Stover Mechanical as a pipe fitter, and he’d only missed three days of work. Surely, he said, that would count for something when he discovered he could no longer work because of the neuropathy in his hands and his feet. At 57 — just five years short of retirement — he knew he was going to need to apply for disability benefits.
“I was scared,” said Jordan, a Honea Path resident. “The insurance company told me that I was going to need an attorney. And I had heard that some folks had to wait two or three years for their benefits. I didn’t want to lose my land and my truck.”
His fears were eased, he said, when he called the Social Security Administration office in Anderson.
First, they told him he didn’t need a lawyer. Save that money, they said.
“They told me to just tell the truth, and I’d be OK,” Jordan said.
His wait was three months, not three years. Now, for two months, Jordan has been receiving his benefits.
Jan 22, 2010
Social Security Releases Much Data
A press release from Social Security:
Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security, today announced that the agency is making new data about beneficiaries and the agency’s disability and hearing processes available to the public. The new data supports the President’s Transparency and Open Government initiative and is available at www.data.gov.
“I applaud President Obama’s commitment to creating an unprecedented level of openness in government and the new datasets we are posting far exceed what was asked of us,” Commissioner Astrue said. “Social Security has always valued transparency and sought to give the public user-friendly information about our programs. Each year we send millions of Americans personal information about their Social Security contributions and potential benefits. Our website www.socialsecurity.gov has a wealth of information about our programs and the Social Security trust funds. I hope the new data we are making available will lead to a better understanding of our operations and the important role we play in people’s lives. I look forward to engaging Americans in the business of their government.”
Here are a few examples of the value of the Social Security datasets available today:
- Researchers can find out about the work-related experiences of our beneficiaries receiving Social Security disability benefits and give us policy guidance for our disability programs.
- The public can see information about hearings workloads and a breakdown of the types of decisions made by Administrative Law Judges.
- Researchers can study the effects of current and proposed legislative and program provisions.
- People who have requested a hearing on their disability claim can estimate the amount of time they may have to wait for the hearing to be held and for a decision.
- The public can see general information requested under the Freedom of Information Act.
“These new datasets are just the beginning of our efforts. In February we will launch our Open Government webpage that will include improved access to our data in a variety of formats. In April we will publish our Open Government plan,” said Commissioner Astrue. “Let me also reassure all Americans that while our goal is to become more open and transparent, we will continue to vigilantly protect the personal information the public entrusts to us. We will ensure that transparency does not put that information at risk.”
- Hearing Office Dispositions Per ALJ Per Day Rate Ranking Report
- Hearings Held In-Person or Via Video Conferencing Per Hearing Office
- Hearing Office Average Processing Time Ranking Report (technical problems)
- Hearing Office Workload Data (technical problems)
- State Agency Workload Data (technical problems)
OIG Report On Hearing Office Productivity
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 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.