Mar 7, 2018

Does This Mean That Nancy Berryhill Is Now The Acting Acting Commissioner Of Social Security?

     Below is most of a letter from the General Counsel of  the Government Accountability Office to the Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee (footnotes omitted). Note the last sentence which I have bolded:
Pursuant to section 3349(b) of title 5 of the United States Code, we are reporting a violation of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 19981 (herein "the Vacancies Reform Act" or "Act") at the U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA) with respect to the Commissioner position. Specifically, we are reporting that the service of Nancy A. Berryhill as Acting Commissioner at SSA after November 17, 2017, is in violation of the Act.
The Vacancies Reform Act establishes requirements for temporarily authorizing an acting official to perform the functions and duties of certain vacant positions that require Presidential appointment and Senate confirmation. The Act generally limits the period of time that such a position may be filled with an acting official to 210 days. 5 U.S.C. § 3346(a)(1). In the year of a transitional Presidential inauguration, that time period is extended to 300 days after the vacancy occurs with respect to any vacancy that exists during the 60-day period beginning on the transitional inauguration date. 5 U.S.C. § 3349a(b). Under the provisions of section 3349(b), the Comptroller General is required, upon a determination that an acting official has served longer than the allowable period of service, to report such findings to Congress, the President, and the Office of Personnel Management.
In response to our recent inquiry to all federal departments and agencies with positions subject to the Vacancies Reform Act to update the status of any vacancies, acting officials, or nominations, the General Counsel of SSA reported that the position of Commissioner remains vacant.2 Our research indicates that the position was vacant on January 20, 2017, and Nancy A. Berryhill became Acting Commissioner on January 21, 2017. To date there have been no nominations submitted for that position. According to SSA, Ms. Berryhill became Acting Commissioner pursuant to a memorandum of December 23, 2016, issued by President Obama establishing an order of succession for the performance of the functions and duties of the office of the Commissioner of Social Security (Memorandum of Succession). We note that the Memorandum of Succession specifies that its provisions are subject to the limitations of the Vacancies Reform Act.
In accordance with the Vacancies Reform Act, the 210-day period began to run 90 days after the vacancy occurred on January 20, 2017-on April 20, 2017-and ended on November 16, 2017. Thus, the position of Commissioner should have been vacant beginning November 17, 2017. SSA's website indicates that Ms. Berryhill continued serving as Acting Commissioner after November 16, 2017. We have previously determined that using the acting title of a position during the period in which the position should be vacant violates the time limitations in the Vacancies Reform Act. Therefore Ms. Berryhill was not authorized to continue serving using the title of Acting Commissioner after November 16. However, SSA can provide for performance of the delegable functions and duties of the Commissioner position in accordance with the Memorandum of Succession or other applicable authority. ...
     There will be a House Social Security Subcommittee hearing on this issue today.
     I've already been asked if there will be litigation on this. Maybe I lack imagination but I've not been able to think of anyone who would have standing to raise the issue.
     Attorneys who sue Social Security now have a problem. When we sue the agency, we are supposed to sue the Commissioner or Acting Commissioner by name. That's why Nancy Berryhill is the defendant in thousands of lawsuits. Who is now the proper defendant? I should say that this is a technicality that doesn't affect the validity of any lawsuit.
     Don't blame Nancy Berryhill for this. I doubt that she ever wanted the job even temporarily. She's a career employee. They generally try to avoid the limelight. The responsibility for this lies with President Trump.
     Don't expect Trump to nominate anyone soon. The current term for a Commissioner ends in January 2019. By the time anyone was confirmed now, their term would almost be at an end and they'd have to go through the confirmation process again.

Mar 6, 2018

A New SSA-1695 Process

We are revising EM-12004 REV 3 to update the processing steps of the form SSA-1695 (Identifying Information for Possible Direct payment of Authorized Fee) as they will take place in RASR. ... 
We are revising this EM policy to reflect that effective immediately, we will no longer send manual acknowledgement notices to representatives after processing the SSA-1695, since RASR release 1 will send this notice automatically. In addition, we will no longer redact and fax the processed SSA-1695 into the electronic folder (EF). Instead,we will properly dispose of the form, since the acknowledgement notice sent automatically by RASR will serve as our record of the processing. ...
     I don't know what RASR stands for. 
     The bottom line is that Social Security is altering its process for recording the fact that an attorney is representing a claimant. I always cringe when Social Security makes this sort of change. Any alteration in this sort of process is disruptive. We can hope the disruption will be favorable -- easier processing for Social Security with fewer mistakes -- but in the short run there's probably a greater potential for mistakes.

Mar 5, 2018

Can Social Security ALJs Be Distinguished From Other ALJs?

     The issue in the Lucia v. SEC case which the Supreme Court will almost certainly decide by the end of June is whether Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are unconstitutional under the Appointments Clause of the Constitution because they were not appointed by the President or a Department head. Social Security leaders seem confident that this won't affect their agency. At least, they're doing nothing that suggests concern. I don't understand why.
     When it charged Eric Conn with federal crimes, the government estimated that the amount of money involved was $550 million. Around 1,800 claimants were involved. This means that they valued each case at around $300,000. In doing so, I think they weren't taking into account the value of Medicare benefits but let's leave that aside. The average Social Security Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hears more than 500 cases a year. This means that based upon the value that the Department of Justice puts on these cases the average Social Security ALJ is deciding upon cases with a value of about $150 million per year.
     The standard for determining whether an officeholder is in "officer" as that term is used in the Constitution is whether that person exercises “significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States.”  OK, tell me your argument for why ALJs at the SEC are obviously inferior offices subject to the Appointments Clause while Social Security ALJs aren't.
     What does the fact that SEC cases are adversarial and Social Security cases aren't have to do with it? Most "inferior offices" in the federal government have no adjudicative role at all. The question is the decision-making authority involved. The plaintiff in the Lucia case, who promoted a scheme he called "Buckets of Money", was barred by an SEC ALJ from selling securities. (Real sympathetic test case they've got there.) My understanding is that's the sort of thing that SEC ALJs adjudicate. A Social Security ALJ has the power to decide whether a person has an income or not. Not infrequently, homelessness is on the line. If you're barred from selling securities, you move on to a new line of work, not a homeless shelter. On the whole, I'd say there's more at stake in the average Social Security ALJ case than the average SEC case (not to mention that each Social Security ALJ adjudicates far more cases than the average SEC ALJ), unless you think that any case involving wealthy people or corporations is inherently more consequential than a case involving an ordinary American.
     By the way, take a look at the 1988 Supreme Court decision in Morrison v. Olson. That case concerned whether independent counsels of that day passed muster under the Appointments Clause. The statute under consideration in that case is no longer in effect. Robert Mueller was appointed under Department of Justice regulations rather than the old statute. While Mueller was appointed by the acting head of the Department of Justice (the Attorney General had recused himself), he can only be removed for cause. It was the same situation faced by the Court in Morrison. If the Supreme Court decides that SEC ALJs are unconstitutional, it's going to have to make it clear that it doesn't mean to disturb Morrison or there's going to be litigation about the constitutionality of the Mueller appointment. Distinguish Robert Mueller. Distinguish Social Security ALJs. Distinguish Social Security Appeals Council members. Distinguish members of the Board of Veterans Appeals. Probably distinguish ALJs at some other agencies. That's a lot of distinguishing. Maybe finding SEC ALJs unconstitutional isn't worth all that distinguishing especially when no one seems to be able to come up with a bright line test to apply.

Mar 4, 2018

What Were They Thinking?

     I can't get over the fact that at a time when there are frequently lines of people waiting to be served at Social Security field offices and many people who try to call the agency end up hanging up in frustration because they have been on hold for so long that the Social Security Administration thought it appropriate to spend good money on a study to answer the burning question, "Can you tell how disabled someone is just by looking at how frequently they're treated at a hospital?"
     Honestly, someone ought to be fired over this. Perhaps everyone at Social Security central offices ought to be required to spend some time working on their agency's front line. 

Mar 3, 2018

How I Stay Sane -- Countdown To 2018 Congressional Elections

Mar 2, 2018

Warning: Beltway Bandits At Work!

     From a press release:
A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine examines to what extent and in which ways health care utilization—such as in-patient hospitalizations, emergency department use, and hospital readmission—reflects disease severity, disability, and ability to perform gainful activity. The committee that conducted the study was unable to find an association between health care utilization and disease severity as it relates to the Social Security Administration's (SSA) determination of severe impairment—an impairment or combination of impairments severe enough to prevent a person from performing any gainful activity regardless of age, education, or work experience. 
     The Social Security Administration paid these beltway bandits to tell us that there's no direct relationship between the number of hospital visits and the degree of disability! Anybody involved with disability determination could have told you that for free. I have clients with 300 page files who are obvious allowances. I have other clients with 2,000+ page files who have weak cases. Disability determination isn't about counting the number of pages of medical records any more than counting the number of hospital visits. The idea that there would be such a simplistic relationship is absurd on its face.
     There's a real beltway bandit touch to this report. Even though the Social Security Administration paid for this worthless study, the National Academies wants $50 for a copy of the report. 
     By the way, if you did pony up the $50, I will bet you that there will be one unambiguous recommendation in the report -- more research. As I've said before, when someone goes to work for a beltway bandit, they must be told on their very first day of work, whenever you write a report, no matter what else it says, it must always give a firm recommendation for more research.

Mar 1, 2018

Does It Even Matter?

     From a press release:

House Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee Chairman Sam Johnson (R-TX) announced today that the Subcommittee will hold a hearing entitled “Lacking a Leader: Challenges Facing the SSA After Over 5 Years of Acting Commissioners” on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 in 1100 Longworth House Office Building, beginning at 10:00 AM. The hearing will focus on the need for a Senate-confirmed Commissioner to lead the Social Security Administration (SSA), the challenges and limitations the SSA faces when it is led by an Acting Commissioner, and the legal framework for filling a vacancy. ...

The Social Security Administration has been without a Senate-confirmed Commissioner for more than five years since Commissioner Michael Astrue’s term expired on January 19, 2013. The current Acting Commissioner, Nancy Berryhill, has served in that role since January 20, 2017. The current six-year term for a Senate-confirmed Commissioner expires on January 19, 2019.

Are We Sure That Online Filing Is A Good Thing?

     From the Detroit Free Press:
Tim Sagert has been enduring the pain of a double-whammy of identity theft.
First, a crook used his stolen ID to claim Social Security benefits last spring. Then this tax season, Sagert was hit with an SSA-1099 tax form for reporting the income paid to the crook.  ...
The Equifax data breach, first disclosed in September — which some dub as the most destructive data breach recorded —  compromised the personal information of nearly 146 million consumers, including some Social Security data. 
Many consumers wondered  whether someone would open a credit card in their name or file a fake tax return to generate a fraudulent refund using their stolen Social Security numbers.
Few imagined that hackers would try to make bogus claims for Social Security benefits.
But consumers who are in their 60s who have not claimed benefits yet could be at risk for headaches involving fraudulent Social Security retirement claims. ...
Social Security after full retirement age is eligible for up to six months of retroactive benefits, payable in a lump sum. If you accept that lump sum, your monthly benefit is smaller.
For the cyber crooks, the payout is huge if they  use the ID of someone in that age range who isn't already collecting benefits. ...
     I'm going to take a guess that the Social Security Administration would prefer that this not be reported. They wouldn't want their vulnerability to be better known.