As part of a virulently hostile piece about attorneys who represent the disabled, the Manhattan Institute, a right wing "think tank", posted this graph, which undermines their argument a bit:
Nov 24, 2014
Updated Disability Trust Fund Numbers
The numbers are now available on the operations of Social Security's Disability Insurance Trust Fund through the third quarter of this year. To make it a little easier to understand, I'll give the net decrease in the Trust Fund balance for each quarter this year, in billions, and the comparison to 2013.
- 1st Quarter 2014 -$6.4 billion, $1.5 billion better than in 1st Quarter 2013
- 2nd Quarter 2014 -$4.1 billion, $0.2 billion worse than in 2nd Quarter 2013
- 3rd Quarter 2014 -$10.1 billion, $0.3 billion better than in 3rd Quarter 2013
The net is a reduction in the Disability Trust Fund of $20.6 billion through the first nine months of 2014, which is $1.6 billion better than during the same time period of 2013. The intermediate projection of Social Security's Chief Actuary was that the decline in the Disability Trust Fund would be exactly the same in 2014 as in 2013, $32.2 billion, so, thus far this year, the rate of decline is about 5% better than projected. Does that continue in the 4th quarter? More important, does the improvement continue next year and in coming years?
Labels:
Actuary,
Disability Trust Fund
Nov 23, 2014
"Truly Disabled"
Senator Tom Coburn, who will be leaving the Senate in January, has some strong opinions he wants to share about Social Security disability.
Nov 22, 2014
Hearing Backlog Growing Rapidly
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From a recent report by Social Security's Office of Inspector General |
Labels:
Backlogs,
Social Security Hearings
Nov 21, 2014
Americans Demand Local Field Office Service
Poll results reported by the Strengthen Social Security Coalition:
A majority of Americans want to be able to call or visit a local Social Security field office for various services. The vast majority of Americans — regardless of party affiliation, race/ethnicity, gender and age — believe that we need to have more or the same number of local field offices in the future.
57 percent of people want to be able to call or visit a local office to request a new Social Security card.
59 percent of people want to be able to call or visit a local office to get information when they are one or two years away from retirement .
- 35 percent of those surveyed would prefer to call a local phone number to speak with a live agent.
- 22 percent said that they would like to visit a local Social Security office in person.
- 24 percent would prefer to call a national 800 number to speak with a live agent.
- 11 percent prefer using the internet or email.
- 7 percent of participants prefer using an automated phone service. 1 percent would like to correspond through the mail and 1 percent are unsure of their preferred method.
61 percent of people want to be able to call or visit a local office when it was time to actually apply for retirement benefits.
- 33 percent of those surveyed would prefer to call a local phone number to speak with a live agent.
- 26 percent said that they would like to visit a local Social Security office in person.
- 21 percent would prefer to call a national 800 number to speak with a live agent.
- 12 percent prefer using the internet or email.
- 5 percent of participants prefer using an automated phone service. 1 percent would like to correspond through the mail and 1 percent are unsure of their preferred method.
86 percent of Americans want more or the same number of local field offices in the future.
- 32 percent of those surveyed would prefer t o call a local phone number to speak with a live agent.
- 29 percent said that they would like to visit a local Social Security office in person.
- 19 percent would prefer to call a national 800 number to speak with a live agent.
- 13 percent prefer using the internet or email.
- 5 percent of participants prefer using an automated phone service. 1 percent would like to correspond through the mail and 1 percent are unsure of their preferred method.
These results are from a poll conducted by Public Policy Polling who surveyed 1,207 registered voters on November 14 - 16, 2014.
- 44 percent believe there should be more local field offices in the future
- 42 percent believe there should be the same number of local field offices in the future
- 8 percent believe there should be fewer local field offices in the future
Labels:
Customer Service,
Field Offices,
Polls
Nov 20, 2014
Does This Line Keep Going Up And Up?
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From a recent report by Social Security's Office of Inspector General |
Labels:
Backlogs,
OIG Reports
Nov 19, 2014
Budget Cuts Opposed
From Joe Davidson's column in the Washington Post:
In advance of feared Republican budget cuts, Social Security advocates gathered on Capitol Hill to ward off more hits to a basic federal program that serves nearly all American families. ...
[S]ervice reductions have been a reality for years, with Congress providing less money than President Obama requested. ...
From fiscal year 2011 through 2013, the Social Security Administration received $2.7 billion less than Obama requested, followed by a small increase in 2014, according to a Senate Special Committee on Aging report.
“The three previous years of low funding, combined with a wave of retirements and a hiring freeze that has been in place since 2010, led to a reduction in staffing throughout SSA’s operations,” the report said.
Staffing reductions mean service reductions. The notion of doing more with less only goes so far and that is not far enough to maintain service without cuts.
Citing data from the National Council of Social Security Management Associations, the committee said field-office staffing dropped 14 percent from 2011 to 2014. ...
Good luck to Social Security clients requesting a hearing after being denied benefits. They’ll need a great deal of patience. There are about 1 million cases in the hearing backlog. SSA estimates it will take an average, not a maximum, of 435 calendar days for those clients to get a decision.
“Shameful” is the word acting SSA commissioner, Carolyn Colvin, had for the backlog.
Colvin, whom Obama has nominated to be the full time commissioner, said, “I’ve had to make some very, very difficult decisions.”
Reduced funding prevented the agency from hiring administrative law judges who conduct the hearings. That led, Colvin said, to “a situation I find not acceptable.”
The agency lost 12,000 employees it could not replace. How do you manage a field office now staffed with two or three employees instead of the eight to 12 who once worked there, she asked. Her answer: “It’s almost impossible.”
She assured the advocates that “there is no grand plan to close down field offices” and she has “absolutely no intention” of using technology to replace workers — particular concerns of Mikulski and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), whose members staff them. ...
Labels:
Backlogs,
Budget,
Customer Service,
Social Security Hearings
I Don't Like This Press Release
From a press release issued by the Republican majority on the House Ways and Means Committee:
Last week, Social Security Administration (SSA) Inspector General (IG) Patrick P. O’Carroll, Jr., released a further response to the June 2014 letter sent by Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security Chairman Sam Johnson (R-TX), requesting a full and immediate investigation into the SSA’s mismanagement and failed implementation of the $300 million Disability Case Processing System (DCPS) ... Chairman Johnson issued the following statement:
“The news is not good for taxpayers based on reports received so far regarding Social Security’s failed implementation of a new disability case processing system. After spending close to $300 million, with efforts led by a team of multiple leaders using 46 vendors, Social Security spent almost $800,000 of hard-earned taxpayer dollars to pay an independent contractor to tell them they should have had one person in charge of the project. Worse, no one was fired and taxpayers will not get any of their misspent money back. It also raised questions about Social Security’s lack of transparency and more troubling efforts to possibly conceal information from the IG. Going forward, I will continue to hold the Commissioner fully accountable as she takes steps to right this wrong for taxpayers.”
Results of a criminal investigation regarding the implementation of DCPS are still pending.Criminal investigation? Give me a break. Read the actual IG report rather than just the press release. Nothing like that is suggested. Everybody knew that development and implementation of DCPS was going to be extraordinarily difficult since what it is replacing is a highly fragmented mess that developed over decades. Realistically, could DCPS have been managed better? Can it be better managed now? Maybe. I don't know. It's always easy to look back with 20/20 hindsight and say that mistakes were made along the way. That doesn't mean that the people who made those mistakes are fools or knaves. They just did the best they could under the circumstances. The idea that there is anything criminal seems absurd on its face. The IG report suggests nothing like that.
Would DCPS have happened differently had John McCain or Mitt Romney been elected President? Probably not. Would this press release have been issued if there was a Republican president? Of course, not. The public isn't paying attention to DCPS. There's nothing here or likely to come out that would create any political advantage to either party.
Can't we just get on with governing? Can't Republicans in Congress just do ordinary oversight (and ordinary second guessing) without this sort of press release? This sort of thing can't be good for day to day working relationships between Committee members, their staffs and Social Security officials.
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