Sunday, December 09, 2007

While Bush and Congress fight, people needing Social Security disability die

This is a topic that hits close to home for me. More than 30 years ago my mother became disabled following a series of heart attacks, more than one stroke, and ultimately surgery for lung cancer. When she first applied for Social Security disability she was denied.

She had paid into the system for decades, and was clearly disabled, but we were told the government routinely denied people the first time they applied, and that she should try again. Her disability finally did come through, about six months before she died.

Denying people benefits is a strategy still being used today, as hundreds of thousands of people wait for an appeals judge to settle their case. Fast forward 30 years, and I am now watching my sister go though the same process.

The New York Times reports:

Steadily lengthening delays in the resolution of Social Security disability claims have left hundreds of thousands of people in a kind of purgatory, now waiting as long as three years for a decision.

Two-thirds of those who appeal an initial rejection eventually win their cases.

But in the meantime, more and more people have lost their homes, declared bankruptcy or even died while awaiting an appeals hearing, say lawyers representing claimants and officials of the Social Security Administration, which administers disability benefits for those judged unable to work or who face terminal illness.

The agency’s new plan to hire at least 150 new appeals judges to whittle down the backlog, which has soared to 755,000 from 311,000 in 2000, will require $100 million more than the president requested this year and still more in the future. The plan has been delayed by the standoff between Congress and the White House over domestic appropriations.

There are 1,025 judges currently at work, and the wait for an appeals hearing averages more than 500 days, compared with 258 in 2000. Without new hirings, federal officials predict even longer waits and more of the personal tragedies that can result from years of painful uncertainty.

I encourage you to read the personal stories in this report, and think about what might happen if you or someone you loved became disabled due to an illness or accident. Then contact your member of Congress and ask them to increase spending to the necessary level.
If they give you the song and dance about funding, and ask where you think the money is coming from, tell them to go ask Halliburton for the $12 billion they "misplaced" in Iraq. That should more than pay for it!

6 comments:

Fran said...

My heart is breaking- I did not realize how bad this was.

And if Social Security is running out of money, it sure isn't because of paying out benefits. It is because of mismanagement and too many judges and lawyers.

That Halliburton money might just come in handy right now.

My sister-in-law works for SSA but if I were to ask her about this I would get her conservative b.s. about something, so I will avoid that.

This is sick.

John J. said...

How much more does the SSA pay to fight these people than if they just paid out the benefits? These people can only pull out what they paid in, so they don't gain anything by waiting to pay out, instead they spend millions of dollars to make people's lives hell...

BAC said...

Fran, SS would be fine if people like Bush would simply do their jobs.

John, that's a great question. It's too bad the MSM isn't asking it.


BAC

Anonymous said...

I have a friend who works at SSA. She said she could never figure out why claims for disability based on the consequences of substance abuse (alcoholism, for example) seemed to sail through the system much faster than claims for disability due to physical injuries. She was very unhappy about the routine first-time denials claims, and said many other employees were, too, because they can tell people are suffering -- but shit flows downhill.

Good luck to your sister. IMHO they make the process as long and tedious as possible in the hopes claimants will either give up or die before any thing gets paid out.

Dr. Monkey Von Monkerstein said...

I was on the receiving end of the SSA's bull shit for two years. After my heart attack and by pass I was determined to be disabled by my doctor, yet because my ejection fraction (the rate blood leaves my heart) was one percent above the level considered to be disabling I was denied my benefits. I eventually got them on appeal, after having had to hire an attorney and he got a couple thousand dollars of my initial settlement. It's outrageous and the system is broken.

Anonymous said...

Stories like these scare me to death. i recently had to file for disability. I am young (34), but I have a dilated cardiomyopathy with a 20 for the ejection fraction and it was not the result of drugs or alcohol/tobacco abuse. I just filed, but I am so terrified of having to hire a lawyer and go through all that. I need a defribilator and heart transplant if I want to live longer and better. It's so screwed up, money going to lawyers, and in the meantime we struggle to get by. i know there are many people who try to scam the government but some of these things are medically measurable. I think I may die of a heart attack from all the stress before I'm approved.