Apr 8, 2012
Apr 7, 2012
A Warm, Fuzzy Easter Story
From the Battle Creek Enquirer:
The pastor of a Foxborough, Mass., church has been charged with attempting to scam four elderly people out of their Social Security checks by telling them they were lottery winners.
One of the victims is Margaret Swartz, 84, of Athens.
“He called me in March and told me I had won a bunch of money,” she said today, while in the midst of coloring Easter eggs.
She told him she only deserved money she earned.
“He said the government gives out money to people with a very good work record and I fell for it.”
The pastor told Swartz he needed her Social Security number. ...
Ranulfo Luther Raposo of the Seventh-day Adventist Church pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to charges including attempted larceny and identity fraud. He was granted $5,000 bail.Police say all the alleged victims are in their 70s and 80s, live in Michigan, New Mexico and Arkansas, and are unconnected with the church.
Labels:
Crime Beat
Is He Getting The Right Explanation? Sounds To Me Like He's A Fraud Victim.
From WCAX:
There are almost 144,000 people in Vermont who receive Social Security benefits. And that system is going paperless by March 1, 2012. The administration says it will save the country's taxpayers about $44 million. But the change is coming with some headaches.
Harold Nadeau contracted polio when he was 4.
"From then on I've been paraplegic," he said.
Once Nadeau couldn't work anymore he applied for disability Social Security benefits. He's been getting that money directly deposited in his account for over 10 years now. But recently he noticed something was off.
"I went online to make my monthly payments and when I opened my account it was empty," Nadeau said.
His monthly payment never arrived. So he called the Social Security office in Montpelier.
"They were baffled," he said. "They had no idea what happened or why."
But Nadeau finally got his answer from the Vermont Social Security office. Turns out his money was sent to him in the mail on a Direct Express Card. It's part of Social Security's effort to go paperless. The card works and looks like a debit card and your monthly payment gets refilled. But Nadeau never was told he'd be receiving the card. And it wasn't clear when he did that it was from Social Security. ..."If you don't respond to this letter then you'll be enrolled automatically into this debit card system," Sarah Launderville said.
Launderville works for the Vermont Center for Independent Living or VCIL. The nonprofit got several calls recently from people who also did not receive their monthly payments, like Nadeau.
Labels:
Payment of Benefits
Apr 6, 2012
Will This Work?
The Commissioner has sent out a letter warning medical providers that Social Security is switching to electronic signatures for claims filed online. Will medical providers accept electronic signatures?
Labels:
Medical Records,
Online Services
Apr 5, 2012
OIG Report On NHCs -- And Read To The End For News On Remands And Possibility Of NHC ALJs Traveling
From a recent report by Social Security's Office of Inspector General (OIG) on the agency's National Hearing Centers (NHCs):
During FYs [Fiscal Years] 2010 and 2011, ODAR’s [Office of Disability Adjudication and Review] 5 NHCs processed more than 56,000 hearings to assist backlogged hearing offices with older cases. The Chicago Region transferred the highest number of cases during this period, about 50 percent of all cases the NHCs received. These transfers allowed the Chicago Region to address case backlogs while new hearing offices were being constructed to permanently address workload needs. We found the ALJs [Administrative Law Judges] working in the NHCs had a higher than average disposition rate that may have related to such factors as (1) a higher decision writer-to-ALJ ratio, (2) how attorneys are supervised, (3) the lack of travel to remote sites, (4) useful pre-hearing briefs, and (5) the processing of NHC remands at the hearing office level. However, the NHCs identified a number of challenges that may limit the effectiveness of the NHC model, including (1) availability of video capacity, (2) difficulties scheduling experts, and (3) claimants declining video hearings. The assisted hearing offices we contacted stated case transfers to the NHCs led to fewer pending cases and improved processing times. The hearing offices also had a few concerns, including their processing of NHC remands as well as the extra work related to declined video hearings.
The OIG report does not try to evaluate the NHCs versus their alternative, which would have been adding ALJs to traditional hearing offices where office space was available and using the excess capacity to help out backlogged offices.
Also of interest is a statement that Social Security is considering having NHC ALJs travel to hearing sites to hold hearings for claimants who decline video hearings. I suppose that Social Security may be re-evaluating this since they are no longer advising claimants of which ALJ will hold the hearing. There is also a statement that since January 3, 2012 remands from a NHC ALJ decision will be sent back to the NHC ALJ rather than being assigned to an ALJ at the ODAR office with jurisdiction over the area.
By the way, Social Security doesn't even know how many claimants are declining video hearings with NHC ALJs. From what I hear from other attorneys, I think that number has gone up dramatically since Social Security started withholding the identity of the ALJ until the day of the hearing.
Labels:
National Hearing Offices,
ODAR,
OIG Reports
Apr 4, 2012
It Happens Almost Every Month
Almost every month payments of attorney fees for representing Social Security claimants come to a near complete halt in the last week of the month and then immediately resume with a bang on the first business day of the next month. This pattern is most noticeable if you receive fees by direct deposit as I do. It's not just me who has seen this pattern. Other attorneys I know have commented on it. This has been going on for more than a year.
Does anyone know what's going on? My guess is that this pattern is not coming from Social Security but from the Department of the Treasury which actually issues the checks and direct deposits. My guess is that it has to do with cash and debt management and probably affects a wide range of payments made by the federal government but I don't know.
Apr 3, 2012
I Want Your Filthy Lucre!
I've created a Cafepress shop to sell Social Security themed merchandise. Mostly, this is Social Security Administration logo items such as caps, T--shirts and mugs but also some items with Social Security images. Eighty-six items are available for sale.
In case you're wondering, all of the images on these items are in the public domain. If you've visited D.C., you've seen vendors on the streets selling items such as these with the logos of the FBI and CIA and the Presidential seal, for instance.
Labels:
Store
Panel Discussion On Why So Many People Are Filing Claims For Social Security Disability
The National Academy of Social Insurance is holding a panel discussion today at 10:00 EST on the subject "Why Are More People Claiming Disability Insurance and What Should Be Done About It?" They ran out of space in the room they originally planned to hold it in and moved it to a larger room. They've run out of space in the larger room. The event will be broadcast live on C-SPAN2. Here is the lineup for the event:
Presenters:
Discussants:
- Stephen C. Goss, Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration
- Lisa Ekman, Senior Policy Advisor, Health and Disability Advocates
- David Stapleton, Director, Center for Studying Disability Policy, Mathematica Policy Research
Moderator:
- Marty Ford, Director, Public Policy Office, The Arc of the United States
- Tony Young, Senior Public Policy Strategist, NISH
- Mark Miller, Reuters
No offense but who is Lisa Ekman? Why are two people who make their living off the myth that large numbers of Social Security disability recipients can be returned to work -- Stapelton and Young -- on this panel? Ticket to Work doesn't work. Stapelton and Young will undoubtedly say that if more money is devoted to their employers that tons of people will fly off the Social Security disability rolls. Nonsense. It hasn't happened and it won't happen. If you require people to be half dead or nearly fully crazy before you put them on benefits, you shouldn't expect them to ever return to work. It's that simple. Most people attending or watching this event have little feel for who is actually drawing Social Security disability benefits in this country and are easily misled.
Labels:
Disability Claims,
NASI
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