And to those who may still run for office planning to privatize Social Security, let me be clear: as long as I'm President, I'll fight every effort to take the retirement savings of a generation of Americans and hand it over to Wall Street. Not on my watch.
Sep 6, 2010
Not On My Watch
Sep 5, 2010
Social Security Opens New Office In Paris
SSI Report
Size and Scope of the Supplemental Security Income Program
- About 7.7 million people received federally administered payments in December 2009.
- The average monthly payment in December 2009 was $499.
- Total payments for the year were more than $46 billion, including almost $4 billion in federally administered state supplementation.
Profile of Recipients
- The majority were female (55 percent).
- Sixteen percent were under age 18, 58 percent were aged 18 to 64, and 26 percent were aged 65 or older.
- Most (85 percent) were eligible on the basis of a disability.
- Six out of 10 recipients under age 65 were diagnosed with a mental disorder.
- More than half (57 percent) had no income other than their SSI payment.
- Thirty-four percent of SSI recipients also received Social Security benefits.
- Of the people receiving SSI benefits, about 2 percent were residing in a Title XIX institution where Medicaid was paying more than half of the cost.
- Despite their disabilities, about 340,000 recipients (5.2 percent) were working in December 2009.
Sep 4, 2010
Utah Law Firm Reports Threat Made By Mississippi Client
Billy S. Dunn of Walnut faces federal accusations he threatened to assault and murder officials with the U.S. Social Security Administration.
Dunn, 32, was indicted recently after an Aug. 4 complaint from a Utah woman working as a legal assistant in a law firm, where he was a client.
During their 30-minute telephone conversation, the woman said Dunn became upset that his SSA disability claim had been denied.
She alleged that he threatened to blow up the Corinth SSA office and himself.
Dunn was arrested soon after, and is in custody of the U.S. Marshal Service until completion of a mental evaluation and report, court documents show.
If convicted on the two counts, he faces up to 15 years in prison and a $500,000 fine.
Virginia Attorneys Wants Closer Hearings
From The Roanoke Times:
Why should Covington [Virginia] residents seeking Social Security disability benefits have to drive 90 minutes -- to Beckley, W.Va. -- to plead their case?
That's the question a Covington lawyer [Bill Wilson] is asking in a campaign to get the Social Security Administration to hold hearings in Covington. Since March, residents of Covington and Alleghany and Bath counties whose disability claims reached the hearing stage have had to drive to Beckley.
Previously, they had to travel to Lewisburg, W.Va., a roughly 30-mile drive. The drive to Beckley is about 80 miles. ...
Aidan Diviny, spokesman for the administration in Philadelphia, said the hearings were moved to Beckley because the agency's lease on the Lewisburg building expired in April and because the Beckley office has two hearing rooms. ...
Watson said the Covington office handles about 130 disability claims a month from residents in Alleghany and Bath counties and the three West Virginia counties of Monroe, Pocahontas and Greenbrier. Most of the claimants, he said, are West Virginians.
Diviny said all claimants can request to have their hearings held in Roanoke instead of Beckley. However, the drive to Roanoke is about 60 miles from Covington, with a travel time of more than an hour.
But Wilson is agitated because when claimants travel all the way to Beckley, they don't plead their case live before an administrative judge -- the judge is sitting in a room in Charleston and the hearings are held via videoconference.