The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has scheduled what they call "a conversation with some of the nation’s top disability experts and policymakers" for June 6 in Washington. Two of the speakers have focused their attention on ways to encourage disabled people to return to work. One speaker is a Democratic staffer for the House Ways and Means Committee and another is a career staffer at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Two Senators may speak.
May 29, 2019
More On SCOTUS Opinion In Smith v. Berryhill
SCOTUSblog has posted an analysis of yesterday's Supreme Court opinion in Smith v. Berryhill. As usual, it's excellent.
Labels:
Appeals Council,
Supreme Court
May 28, 2019
Supreme Court Decision In Smith v. Berryhill
From the syllabus of Smith v. Berryhill, a unanimous Supreme Court decision issued this morning:
An Appeals Council dismissal on timeliness grounds after a claimant has had an ALJ hearing on the merits qualifies as a “final decision . . . made after a hearing” for purposes of allowing judicial review under §405(g).
Labels:
ALJs,
Procedural Rules,
Supreme Court
The Changing Face Of Social Security's Backlog Problem
I recently noticed that my firm's database shows that we have more cases awaiting either an initial or reconsideration determination than we have awaiting action by the Office of Hearings Operations. I don't think I've seen this since the 1980s.
For good reason, we've had a lot of attention to Social Security's hearing backlog but that one is coming down rapidly. I haven't seen the national figures but even though the number of claims filed is down the state agency backlog seems to be growing. It's certainly not shrinking. I've personally got a couple of cases stuck at the initial level since last July but I'm now getting cases scheduled for a hearing within six months after the request for hearing. Maybe one reason the hearing backlog is going down so rapidly is the increasing backlogs at the initial and reconsideration levels.
May 27, 2019
May 26, 2019
Why Let The Facts Stand In The Way Of The Story You Want To Present?
From National Public Radio:
During and after the Great Recession, people turned to disability rolls in large numbers to make ends meet. This accelerated what had been going on for a generation, as the federal government's disability insurance program saw steady growth.
But now, for the first time in decades, the disability rolls are shrinking. More people with disabilities are returning to work and holding on to their jobs. With unemployment at a nearly 50-year low, companies are struggling to find workers. And that means people who had trouble finding a job in the past are suddenly in demand. That includes people with disabilities. ...
It's still unusual for people to leave the disability program and return to work. Less than 1% of recipients do so each year. But the numbers have been growing as the job market has improved. In 2017 more than 51,000 people traded disability checks for paychecks, up from about 32,000 four years earlier. ...
At the same time, aging baby boomers are moving from disability into retirement, and the government has made it harder to qualify for disability benefits. ...
When jobs evaporated during the Great Recession, many people turned to disability as a kind of de facto unemployment insurance. By 2013, nearly 1 out of every 4 workers in parts of Alabama was collecting a disability check. ...
Click on image to view full size |
NPR presents it as a fact that Americans are leaving Social Security disability benefits to go to work but then presents evidence that, in fact, very few people are leaving Social Security disability to go to work. There's been an increase but it has had only a trivial effect. They then present it as an established fact that during the Great Recession people turned to disability benefits as "de facto unemployment insurance" with no proof. Their own graphic demonstrates there's been almost no change in the labor force participation rate by disabled people over the years which completely undermines the story they're presenting. It's like they gathered the evidence about what happened and then decided to ignore it in favor of the simplistic story they wanted to present.
I mean, just look at their chart! How do you look at that and then say that disabled people are streaming back to work?
Labels:
Media and Social Security
May 25, 2019
At Least He Had A Good Reason
From the Sacramento Bee:
Read more here: https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article230757574.html#storylin
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Read more here: https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article230757574.html#storylink=cpy
A 97-year-old Arizona woman was last seen in December 2018 — and now local authorities have figured out where she went.
Daniel Shannon, 66, buried his mother Leonie Shannon in the backyard of a San Tan Valley home after the woman died on Dec. 21 rather than reporting his mother’s death, according to a Pinal County Sheriff’s Office news release. That meant that he could keep collecting his mother’s VA and Social Security benefits even though she had died, deputies said.
Shannon was arrested Wednesday on charges of fraud and concealment of a body, though he could face further charges in the ongoing investigation, deputies said.
“Shannon told detectives that he needed to keep getting the benefits to help pay for the patent on his invention,” authorities said.
Asked what the patent was for, Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Navideh Forghani wrote “here is the invention” in an email to McClatchy and shared a link to a 2008 news article with the title “Man invents self-closing toilet.”
That article in the Loveland, Colorado, Herald-Reporter said that Shannon “created a self-closing, self-contained toilet seat, the Smart Lid, which is powered by kinetic energy from lifting the lid, requires no electricity and can be installed like any standard toilet seat.” ...
Read more here: https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article230757574.html#storylin
Read more here: https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article230757574.html#storylink=cp
Read more here: https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article230757574.html#storylink=cpy
Labels:
Crime Beat
May 24, 2019
On This Day In History
Benjamin Cardozo, author of Helvering v. Davis |
Labels:
Social Security History,
Supreme Court
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