... Hundreds of agencies submitted their return-to-office plans to the White House budget office to meet last Monday’s deadline, laying out how they would begin to phase out remote work for hundreds of thousands of employees after Labor Day, with a full return to federal offices planned by the end of the year. ...
But with the more contagious delta variant surging and sending tens of thousands of unvaccinated people to hospitals across the nation, trepidation over the reentry plans has risen among some Biden administration officials ...
The Social Security Administration, the focus of increasing pressure from Republicans on Capitol Hill to reopen, has not submitted its reentry plans to the White House budget office. ...
The White House is under intense pressure from disparate sides of the debate over reopening. Unions that represent the majority of the federal bureaucracy of 2.1 million workers — and are a key Democratic constituency — are reluctant to cede full control of workplace decisions to the administration, although they have not disagreed publicly.
Advocates for the disabled, meantime, have pushed for reopening some of the nation’s 1,240 Social Security field offices. Applications for disability benefits have plummeted during the pandemic, as low-income Americans without access to the Internet have been prevented from seeking benefits.
And the administration has been hammered for months by Republican lawmakers over the slow pace of returning federal employees to the workplace. Republicans have charged that closed offices and remote work, particularly at the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service, have led to diminished services for the public. ...
On a conference call Tuesday, the agency’s union leaders concurred that the administration’s push to reopen, particularly the field offices around the country that provide vital face-to-face service to low-income applicants for disability benefits, “is happening a little prematurely,” ...
Covid is now an endemic disease. It's not going away ever. The toll it takes can be dramatically reduced by vaccination but we can no more eliminate all Covid risk now or in the future than we can completely eliminate all risk from influenza. It's unlikely that we'll ever find a way to be any safer from Covid at any time in the future than we are now. The risk from Covid, including all variants, is minimal if you're fully vaccinated and we're never going to be able to remove that minimal risk.
Anyone who claims that Social Security is getting its work done now is either a fool or a liar. The agency is having massive problems. Certainly, the biggest cause is a lack of adequate staff. There would be major problems even if Covid-19 had never happened. However, it's going to be impossible to convince me or anyone else who deals with the agency that employees are just as productive working from home every day. There's just been too much deterioration in service since last March. And, of course, there's some things that can't be done from home, like meeting claimants in person. However, quaint that may seem to some, there's a huge demand for that sort of service.
Many Social Security employees find working from home every day to be quite satisfactory. Their unions are hyping the risks of the the delta variant to the hilt to try to stave off the day when those employees are forced to return to the office. However, let's be honest, how many of those employees are really cowering in their homes in terror of Covid-19? In the world where I live, it's hard to get a restaurant reservation on the weekend. People are attending concerts and ball games in large numbers. Families and friends are gathering for social occasions. My guess is that the vast majority of Social Security employees are out and about doing these things and more, just like their neighbors. If they can do that, they can come into work.
If you think that delaying reopening is a good idea, what's your end game? What do you think is going to happen to make it safer in the future than it is today? If your position is that we should never reopen the offices to the public, do you honestly think the public will tolerate Social Security field offices closing for good?
The unions will never be happy with it but the field offices will reopen to the public at some point in
the future and I can guarantee that they won't be any safer then than
they would be now. Let's get on with it. The American public needs and deserves it.