Jun 1, 2011

Rejected Disability Applicants Earn Less Before Applying

 From a press release issued by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln:
Male disability applicants rejected for federal benefits tend to have lower earnings and labor force participation rates over the decade prior to applying for federal disability benefits, a new study finds. 

Rejected applicants also work less despite being in better health than accepted applicants, according to the research led by economist Seth Giertz of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

On average, the study found, those rejected for benefits made 8.5 percent less than beneficiaries six years before applying – and nearly 22 percent less just prior to application. Also, applicants who were rejected left the workforce faster as their application dates approached than those who were approved for benefits.

The findings suggest that many of the rejections may have been because applicants were not entirely motivated by health reasons when seeking disability.
Another possible interpretation of this data is that rejected applicants suffer more from undiagnosed and untreated, perhaps untreatable, health problems, such as chronic psychiatric illness, including substance abuse, and mild to borderline mental retardation. These health problems are generally life-long and have made these applicants a marginal part of the labor force throughout their lives.

That is the problem with disability research. The data is real but the interpretations are often questionable and have more to do with the researchers' political and social views than anything else.

Obesity Takes Its Toll

From Obesity, Disability, and Movement Onto The Disability Rolls by Richard V. Burkhauser and John Cawley:
The magnitude of the impact of male obesity on work limitations is equivalent to the effect of aging 19.8 years or losing 8.9 years of education.

Little Support For Cutting Social Security

From the Kaiser Family Foundation:

About Time

Social Security is taking steps to move closer to online security standards used in the private sector -- allowing citizens to select a user name and password to access Social Security's online systems.

New York Field Office To Close

From the Ridgewood Times of New York:
Residents of Ridgewood and Glendale seeking Social Security or Medicaid benefits may be forced to travel farther to find them as the Social Security Administration has announced that it will close and merge the Glendale office with its Rego Park branch as soon as this summer.
Vincent Arcuri, chairperson of Community Board 5, announced the proposed merger during the advisory body’s May 11 meeting at Christ the King Regional High School. He subsequently sent a letter to Rep. Anthony Weiner, calling on him to “use your substantial influence” to keep the site open, adding that its closure “would be destructive to the local Myrtle Avenue rental property situation, currently suffering from the recent financial crisis.”

Weiner joined Arcuri at a press conference outside the Glendale Social Security office on Tuesday morning, May 17, calling for the Social Security Administration to overturn its decision, charging that thousands of seniors and others seeking public assistance such as Medicare and Medicaid would be denied a convenient location to apply for benefits and resolve related problems. ...

The consolidation is a cost-cutting move by the Social Security Administration that will reportedly save $3 million over the next decade. Shallman noted that the merger “makes sense,” adding that there are five Social Security offices located within a 25 square mile area around the Glendale site, including locations in Jamaica, Cypress Hills and Bushwick.

“We just got our 2011 budget, and it was less than 2010, and 2012 is looking very austere as well,” he said. “We’ve got a high concentration of offices in a relatively small geographic area.”

May 31, 2011

I Thought That Conversation Had Been Underway For Some Time

From a press release:
U.S. Congressman Sam Johnson (R-TX), Chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security announced today that the Subcommittee will hold an oversight hearing on the findings in the 2011 Annual Report of the Social Security Board of Trustees.  The hearing will take place on Friday, June 3, 2011 in B-318 Rayburn House Office Building, beginning at 9:00 a.m. ...
In announcing the hearing, Chairman Sam Johnson (R-TX) stated, “This year’s annual report again sounds the alarm that Social Security will be unable to keep its promises to the hard-working Americans who pay into the system.  Americans want, need and deserve a Social Security program they can count on and a fact-based conservation about how to get there.  This hearing will begin that conversation. 

New Hearing Office In North Carolina

From the Fayetteville [NC] Observer:
The average wait to appeal for disability benefits in Fayetteville has been reduced by more than half in the past four years, the head of the Social Security Administration said today.
The wait was more than 700 days when the administration four years ago embarked on an ambitious plan to beef up its staff, open several hearing centers around the U.S., modernize its operations and fast-track some disability cases.
Fayetteville was a top priority in the country for a hearing center, said Michael Astrue, the commissioner of the Social Security Administration. The wait here to appeal a denial of benefits has since been reduced to under 300 days, he said.
Astrue joined others snipping a ribbon today celebrating this month's opening of a permanent Social Security appeals hearing center in downtown.
The center, which has 48 employees and six administrative law judges, opened last year in temporary quarters until its new home could be remodeled at 150 Rowan St.

COLA Coming -- But Will Medicare Premium Increase Gobble It Up?

 From the Baltimore Sun:
After two years without seeing an increase in their Social Security checks, more than 59 million retirees and other beneficiaries can expect a bump up in benefits next year.
The Social Security trustees' annual report released this month estimates that the cost-of-living adjustment in next year's checks will be 0.7 percent. The increase, which will be announced in October, could be higher, depending on where prices head in the coming months.
Still, experts say, retirees could see all or some of that raise eaten up by higher Medicare premiums.