Feb 12, 2015
Feb 11, 2015
Acting Commissioner Expects Re-Nomination
At today's hearing before the Senate Budget Committee, Acting Social Security Commissioner Carolyn Colvin was asked about her nomination for a term as Commissioner of Social Security. She said that she had not been re-nominated since the new Congress began but that she expected to be re-nominated.
Labels:
Commissioner,
Congressional Hearings,
Nominations
Just Ignore The Claimant's Wishes?
I'm seeing and hearing of instances where Social Security is trying to schedule video hearings or assigning cases to remote hearing offices which could only hear a case by video despite the claimant's previously expressed desire not to have a video hearing. Is this just happening around here or is it happening in other parts of the country as well? Is this just a series of mistakes or the result of deliberate decisions made at higher levels? I wonder if trying to ignore the claimant's wishes is the agency's way of dealing with the fact that its effort to discourage resistance to video hearings is actually encouraging resistance.
Labels:
Video Hearings
Feb 10, 2015
OMB Clears Proposed Rule On Submission Of Evidence
Just in time for tomorrow's hearing before the Senate Budget Committee, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has cleared Social Security's proposed rule requiring the submission of all evidence in Social Security disability claims. We can only hope that the agency made dramatic changes after this was originally published because the original proposal was completely unworkable.
After OMB clears a regulatory proposal, the Commissioner has to sign off on it before it is published in the Federal Register. Typically, the Acting Commissioner has been taking a few weeks to review these before signing off on them. However, she can sign off immediately if she chooses. So far, the Office of Federal Register doesn't show the receipt of the final regulations. After publication, new regulations typically go into effect in 30 days.
I cannot emphasize too much how unworkable the original proposal was. Requiring the submission of "everything" sounds great but imposing this requirement without defining what "everything" means could bring about the collapse of representation of claimants. That would not just be bad for attorneys or their clients. The Social Security Administration is not prepared to cope with hundreds of thousands of unrepresented claimants, nor, for that matter, is Congress since that's where claimants turned before attorney representation of Social Security claimants became widely available. I speak from experience. I was around when there were few other attorneys doing this kind of work.
Labels:
Budget,
Congressional Hearings,
OMB,
Regulations
Feb 9, 2015
Senate Budget Committee Hearing
The Senate Budget Committee has scheduled a hearing for Wednesday on "The Coming Crisis: Social Security Disability Trust Fund Insolvency.” Here's the witness list:
- Carolyn W. Colvin, Acting Commissioner of Social Security, Social Security Administration
- Dr. Mark Duggan, Wayne and Jodi Cooperman Professor of Economics, Stanford University
- Dr. Philip de Jong, Professor of Economics, University of Amsterdam - Amsterdam School of Economics
- Kate Lang, Staff Attorney, National Senior Citizens Law Center
Prospects For Disability Trust Fund Looking Up
The Baltimore Sun is running an article claiming that "The number of people receiving disability insurance payments from the Social Security Administration declined last year for the first time since 1983 ..." I'm not sure how they figured that since the website of the Office of Chief Actuary at Social Security shows an increase of about 12,000 rather than a decrease. However the article is correct in showing that the number of claims filed and applications approved is down sharply over the last four years. The number drawing benefits has actually declined over the last four months and there's a good chance that this decline is a trend that will continue for several years as baby boomers who went on disability benefits a few years ago age into retirement benefits. Interestingly, Stephen Goss, Social Security's Chief Actuary, is quoted in the article as saying that "The disability applications we have coming in now are even lower than we were assuming", suggesting the possibility of some change in the next projection for the Disability Trust Fund, due out sometime later this year.
Feb 8, 2015
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