REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Hell for the disabled

POSTED BY: FREMDFIRMA
UPDATED: Thursday, April 2, 2009 08:16
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Thursday, April 2, 2009 5:50 AM

FREMDFIRMA


URL - http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090401/ap_on_re_us/disability_backlog;_yl
t=Atqo0P9KXnOVVfKAOVC7HkGs0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTFpM2ZpcmNlBHBvcwMyNgRzZWMDYWNjb3JkaW9uX21vc3RfcG9wdWxhcgRzbGsDc29jaWFsc2VjdXJp


Social Security clogged with disability claims

By MATT SEDENSKY, Associated Press Writer Matt Sedensky, Associated Press Writer – Wed Apr 1, 3:01 pm ET

TAMPA, Fla. – For all the talk of an impending crisis in Social Security, one already exists: The system is clogged with hundreds of thousands of disputed disability claims, a backlog so big that some people wait years for a hearing.

Social Security officials blame underfunding, understaffing, a dramatic rise in cases and an increasing number of claims involving hard-to-prove ailments, such as back pain, depression and anxiety.

Even with a $500 million infusion from the federal stimulus program, it could take years to clear the backlog. In the meantime, many of those who have applied for benefits struggle to make ends meet.

"I keep thinking every month I'll hear something," said 56-year-old Tampa resident Karen Slater Chambers, who quit her job driving a delivery truck after a series of accidents and injuries. She applied for disability four years ago, was turned down and is now awaiting an appeal hearing.

Social Security benefits are available to people who can no longer work because of a disability, regardless of whether it was suffered on the job or off. The monthly checks average $1,063.

Someone seeking benefits must first send an application and wait an average of 106 days for a decision, according to the Social Security Administration. The agency denies nearly two-thirds of the applicants, who then can request a hearing to appeal.

Then the real wait begins. Those who received a hearing last fiscal year had waited nearly a year and half on average
— twice the wait time in 2000, according to the SSA. More than 765,000 people — about double the number in 1998 — are now waiting for a hearing.

Sixty-one percent of applicants who go through an appeal hearing are ultimately approved for disability benefits.

Since 1990, the number of Americans receiving Social Security disability has more than doubled, to 7.4 million, while the number of staffers to process the claims — and sort out the fakers from the truly disabled — has dropped by around 5 percent.

"Workloads have gone up, resources did not go up proportionately, and the agency was too slow to embrace new technologies," said Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue, explaining the backlog. "It's a combination of all those things."

Also, Astrue noted that at the start of the disability program in 1957, the vast majority of applicants were blue-collar workers, generally with a single disability from a traumatic accident. That is no longer the case.

Recipients receive benefits if they are deemed mentally or physically unable to work and the condition is expected to last at least a year or will lead to the person's death.

People injured on the job can often collect workers' compensation, though it generally runs out after a certain amount of time, while Social Security benefits continue as long as the disability persists. In Slater Chambers' case, she opted against workers' compensation by settling with her employer. But the settlement money is long gone.

Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Fla., introduced a bill that would require a hearing be held no more than 75 days from the time it is requested, and a final verdict no more than 15 days after that.

Castor represents Tampa, one area where the backlog has been particularly bad. "It's crushing, especially during the economic crisis," she said.

Astrue said Castor's proposal does not take into account the time applicants need to prepare their cases. He has set a goal of a nine-month maximum wait for a hearing.

"The long waits aren't acceptable," Astrue said. "But it's not something you can fix overnight."

Applicants increasingly have found they are unable to navigate the system on their own — 85 percent of them, by Astrue's estimation, hire a lawyer or obtain other representation to help prepare their paperwork, gather medical records and ready them for a hearing.

Dorothy Garcia filed for benefits in 2005 after a brain aneurysm and a series of mini-strokes, but two years later was still waiting. She agreed to give up a portion of her initial payout to someone who could expedite the process. The 53-year-old from Gibsonton, Fla., said the help was worth the price: Within 11 months of hiring claims services company Allsup, she was approved.

"If the disability system worked the way it should, we wouldn't be in business," said Dan Allsup, an executive with the Belleville, Ill., business.

The Social Security Administration is approaching the problem from multiple angles — experimenting with electronic records to speed up medical reviews, hiring more judges and other staff, and adding offices — but the efforts only go as far as the funding.

The recently passed budget gave the Social Security Administration $126.5 million more than President Barack Obama requested, and many see the increase, combined with the stimulus relief, as the best chance the agency has had to relieve the backlog.

Slater Chambers said she has constant pain in her neck and back and her hands go numb, making it hard to grasp things. She said she cannot even win an arm-wrestling match with her 6-year-old granddaughter.

She is struggling to pay her bills. Her boyfriend and children give her money for a $547 monthly mortgage payment and other expenses, and she gets help from her mother and grandmother, who are on Social Security themselves and are in their 70s and 90s.

"Why would I put myself through four years of not knowing if I could keep a house or food?" Slater Chambers asked. "It's like they don't realize that I just can't. If I could work, why wouldn't I?"

====================================

Mind you, the timetable above is for "slam-dunk" cases where it's blatantly, visibly obvious the person is badly crippled - and even then this is no assurance, even with near fatal injuries left untreated for over a year and a half, it still took three lawyers, a congressman, large security company, mayor kurt schmoke, a federal judge and a white house staffer howling at them to even get a hearing, after denial, reconsideration denial, hearing request denial, and denial of the first appeal - all the while what with bills racking up, and not one ounce of mercy from the creditors, some of whom started laying into me the very moment they got wind that I was hospitalised despite not even being late on a payment yet.

Keep that in mind folks - OBVIOUSLY TERMINAL patients, TWO YEAR waits, during which they often cannot obtain even the minimum of medical coverage to save them, or even keep them alive.

Any way you slice it, that's revolting to think about, especially when these folk have slaved away, year after year, pouring a damn substantial chunk of their money into Social Security/SSI/Disability, only to find out the hard way that the Gov has no intention of keeping that agreement if they can get out of it.

And they'll fight you tooth and claw every step of the way, cheating at every turn and corner, like demanding original documents and then "accidently" losing or misfiling them, or sending you running all over town to collect "mandatory" paperwork, then claiming if you can do that, well then you're not disabled...

Crawling on the floorboard of a city bus in midwinter with that goddamn birdcage pincushion on my leg cause one of my crutches broke was one of the lowest points of my entire life - google the words "external fixator" if you have a really strong stomach and imagine dragging THAT (plus staples, stitches and three split skin grafts) through the slush and snow in midwinter baltimore cause they "lost" the forms they demanded and wouldn't let you submit anything but originals, which meant you had to find a way to get all the way across town and back and find the original doc, hope he was on duty, and convince him to fill out another.

Seriously, when I first saw pinhead from hellraiser, my first thought was "Gee, he got it easy!".

-Frem

It cannot be said enough, those who do not learn from history, are doomed to endlessly repeat it

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Thursday, April 2, 2009 6:37 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


And remember - after being massively underfunded and developing a years-long backlog, people will point to it and say - SEE ! government programs don't work !

Eff that.

***************************************************************

Silence is consent.

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Thursday, April 2, 2009 8:16 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Mayhaps, but backlog or underfunding didn't have nothing to do with it in my case - policy did, both written and unwritten, and heads *did* roll for those policies at the time.

And soon as they stopped rolling, it went right back to the way it was.

That's something proper funding ain't gonna cure, all the money in the world is meaningless without oversight - it's how you spend the dosh, not how much there is.

-F

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