Damien Paletta has an article in the Wall Street Journal on yesterday's Congressional hearing. Here are some excerpts:
Social Security Administration Commissioner Michael Astrue said judges in his agency who award disability benefits more than 85% of the time cost taxpayers roughly $1 billion a year. ...
"I find it interesting that there is so much wringing of the hands about a judge who pays almost 100% of his cases, as if the agency didn't know about it, as if the agency wasn't complicit in it, as if the agency didn't encourage it," said Marilyn Zahm, a Social Security judge in Buffalo who is an executive vice president of the judge's union, speaking in an interview after the hearing....
The hearing included several tense exchanges between Mr. Astrue and lawmakers, with Democrats frustrated the agency hasn't done more to reduce a backlog of applicants and Republicans questioning abuse in the system.
Mr. Astrue, at one point, lashed out at lawmakers for threatening to cut his agency's funding, which he said will make it harder for judges to move more cases and erase a large backlog of pending cases.
"We're on the verge of getting there. And if we miss it, it's not because I have failed," Mr. Astrue said. "It's because Congress chose to fail, and it's up to all of you."
In watching this over the internet none of the exchanges between Astrue and the Congressmen seemed tense. I do not remember Astrue saying anything about ALJs costing Social Security a billion dollars a year. Even if he did, Astrue's expressed attitude towards ALJs was nothing like what is implied in the first sentence of this article. We all tend to hear what we want to hear or expect to hear. There may be some element of that in Paletta's article.
I am glad that Paletta quoted Astrue on the possibility of failing to bring down the backlog. There is no distortion in that quote. There clearly was passion in Astrue's voice when he spoke. To me that was the only striking moment in a rather mundane Congressional hearing.