Dec 9, 2022
Dec 8, 2022
Dec 7, 2022
The Need Is Real
From Lisa Rein writing for the Washington Post:
Dec 6, 2022
Redesigned SSA Web Site
The Social Security Administration has issue a press release saying that they've redesigned their website. The press release says that the agency's website is getting about 180 million hits a year.
Dec 5, 2022
At The Breaking Point
From Lisa Rein at the Washington Post:
Then one week in September came the unthinkable: 75,000 new claims suddenly were routed to an electronic queue already buckling under 2½ years of strain during the coronavirus pandemic. ...
The data obtained by The Washington Post paints a grim picture of the holdups claimants are confronting across the country. In Texas, it took 214 days on average in fiscal 2022 to process an initial application. Wisconsin took 227 days, up from 90 days in fiscal 2019. Florida’s average time has almost tripled to 225 days. Georgia is taking 246 days. And Delaware now holds the record for the longest wait: 261 days. The pileup of cases has driven a normally three-month wait for an initial review to at least seven, the data shows. But in states struggling most to catch up, it’s taking well over a year. ...
Dec 3, 2022
Annual Statistical Supplement Issued
Social Security has issued its Annual Statistical Supplement for 2022. This is the largest compendium of statistical information on agency programs.
Dec 2, 2022
DDS Refusing To Schedule CEs For ALJs -- How Widespread?
I and others in North Carolina are seeing cases where Administrative Law Judges try to order consultative medical examinations (CEs) but the state Disability Determination Services (DDS, which handles CEs in addition to making determinations on disability claims at the initial and reconsideration levels), refuses to schedule the exams, saying they don't think them necessary.
Is this happening in other states?
I don't particularly like them but sometimes a CE is necessary and ALJs don't order many of them so this seems surprising.
I don't think DDS should be second guessing ALJs on this, especially since it's often hard to understand why DDS schedules CEs themselves when they have jurisdiction over cases. It often seems to be a stalling device for disability examiners -- as in "I'm too busy to finish work on this case now so I'll delay by ordering a CE." I don't see ALJs doing that. Clean up your own house, DDS!