Jan 23, 2018

Why Make Him Wait?

     From KCRG in Cedar Rapids, Iowa:
Just two months after finding out he had stage four lung cancer, Dean Lange applied for disability. The treatments forced him to quit his job in the trucking industry.
Lange says, "You get what they call chemotherapy brain. It's what the doctors actually call it. You get cloudy, you can't think, it's a vicious thing you know."
He got approved for Social Security Disability Insurance back in November, but he won't see a check until June. He says, "A lot can happen in that 5 months to people in my situation. A lot of people aren't gonna make that 5 months.”
The waiting period is by design ... Laura Seelau with RSH Legal says she does get complaints about the 5 month process, but it's not her client's biggest concern. ...
Lange is calling on members of Congress to change the law so people with a terminal illness can get the benefits right away. He says the extra money would go a long way paying for medical bills. Lange says if cancer kills him, a bill passing to help others in his situation would be his dying wish. ...
     And while we're at it, why does he fact a two and a half year waiting period for Medicare?

Jan 22, 2018

Shutdown Ends

     The Senate has voted for a new continuing resolution that will reopen the government. I think the bill might have to go back to the House of Representatives for further action and to the President for a signature but those would be formalities. This shutdown is all but over.

Shutdown

     I posted Social Security's shutdown plan on Saturday, the day of the shutdown. Let me post it again. Click on each thumbnail to view full size.
     By the way, my office called one of Social Security's local field offices today about an attorney fee issue today. It was a situation where the award certificate said the fee was to be one amount but we were paid about $1,000 less. We were trying to find out whether there was some good reason why this happened. We were told "Sorry, but during the shutdown we're not allowed to discuss attorney fees issues." I don't think that should be accurate. Attorney fees are just part of the process that pays the claimant and those payments are being made. If Social Security failed to pay the attorney properly, there's a good chance they've also failed to pay the claimant properly. Has anyone seen or heard instructions on this or other shutdown issues?






An Obscure Question

     Sometimes I upload PDF versions of photos of a part of a client's using Social Security's Electronic Records Express (ERE) system. I do this to demonstrate the client's physical impairment. It might be photos of swollen ankles or severe angulation following a poorly healed bone fracture. In one memorable case, it was astonishingly extreme gout.
     Photos to demonstrate physical impairments work only if they can be viewed in color. I've seen color PDFs uploaded to ERE stay in color in years past but then that seemed to stop. However, I've recently seen an ERE file that included medical records that had color documents in it that stayed in color.
     What's the deal? Will color PDFs uploaded to ERE stay in color or not? Is there some special technique to use?
     Update: A friend provided a link to a section of Social Security's POMS manual which recognizes that some ERE documents need to be in color. It mentions scanning them in color. However, I know I've seen color documents converted to black and white by Social Security's system. In fact, up until last week I don't think I had seen anything in color in ERE for years.

Jan 21, 2018

Interesting

    Unlike Social Security, the Department of Veterans Affairs will stop processing new claims for benefits during the federal shutdown.
     I've said it before. Keeping the most visible parts of federal agencies open during federal shutdowns reduces the political costs of shutdowns, making them more likely to happen and longer when they do come. If everything other than prisons, law enforcement and the Military were shut down, we wouldn't have shutdowns. Stop the Treasury from paying contractors and see what happens. Just shut down air traffic control and see what happens.

What It's Like

     From a blog post by Kale Sastre:
I am a young, seemingly vibrant 27 year old woman. I have a Master’s degree, am fluent in both English and Spanish, and have experience working a variety of jobs, ranging from retail to teaching at a university. I have many interests and abilities, including writing, reading, researching, working with kids and serving people in my community. And I am currently in a situation where I am destitute and desperate. ...
Well, there’s something else about myself that I haven’t mentioned yet. I am severely and debilitatingly disabled, with a myriad of confusing and frustrating issues I still desperately hope are solvable. It took a long time for me to swallow my pride and apply for disability benefits, which I did over a year ago, six months after I left the job I could no longer reliably show up for. That leaves me with a year and a half so far with absolutely no income, waiting to hear back from the disability office. ...
I know many people believe the lies I believed before I found myself in this situation. We believe disability benefits are there to provide for those who can’t provide for themselves, and that people who are legitimately disabled can receive them. The only time anyone should be worried is if they’re not actually disabled. ... The longer I wait for this process to be completed, the more I realize this isn’t true. Disability is extremely tedious and difficult to get on, regardless of how disabled or desperate you are. ...
I’ve been told that people who legitimately need help can get it, and everyone else is just lazy, fraudulent, or freeloaders. This is a lie. ...
     Ms. Sastre is smarter than many of my clients who, even they have endured the delay, worry and frustrations involved in applying for Social Security disability benefits, still believe that there are lots of freeloaders drawing disability benefits. How often do I hear something like "Why can't I get disability. I've got a neighbor down the street and there's nothing wrong with him and he's getting disability?"

Jan 20, 2018

Social Security's Shutdown Plan

     We're now in a federal government shutdown. Here's Social Security's shutdown plan. Click on each thumbnail to view full size.
     The two things I notice is that this time almost all of the Office of Hearings Operations (OHO) will stay open but that almost all of the Office of General Counsel (OGC) will shut down. Last time both mostly shut down but were eventually called back in.
     I'm mostly glad to see OHO stay open. However, there's a part of me that says that ameliorating the effects of a shutdown like this makes the shutdown longer. If virtually the entire federal establishment were actually shut down, the shutdowns would be rare and brief. 
     The OGC shutdown is more of a problem than you might think. Social Security is subject to deadlines in federal court litigation. OGC has enough of a problem meeting these deadlines in the best of times. Federal judges are not as sympathetic to the agency's shutdown problem as you might think. The judges, their staffs and the clerks offices always keep working during these shutdowns. They can't see why OGC would shut down. 






Jan 19, 2018

Acting Commissioner's Message On Possible Government Shutdown



From: ^Commissioner Broadcast
Sent: Friday, January 19, 2018 10:37 AM
Subject: Planning for Potential Lapse in Funding

A Message to All SSA Employees

Subject: Planning for Potential Lapse in Funding

As many of you are aware, annual funding for the government expires on January 19.  The Executive Branch does not believe it is necessary for a lapse in funding to occur, and looks forward to working with the Congress to finalize appropriations for this year.

However, prudent management requires that we be prepared for all contingencies, including the possibility that a lapse could occur.  A lapse would mean that a number of government activities would cease due to a lack of appropriated funding, and that a number of employees would be temporarily furloughed.  To prepare for this possibility, we are working to update our contingency plans for executing an orderly shutdown of activities that would be affected by a lapse in appropriations. 

Thank you for your hard work, dedication, and patience through this process, and for all that you do for the Social Security Administration and the American people.

Nancy A. Berryhill
Acting Commissioner