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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY CASES LAST LONGER AS
BACKLOG RISES -- 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.

Richard and Vicki Wild of
Hillsborough, N.C., said they were mystified when their son Mark’s
disability claim was rejected. “We had 10 years’ worth of hospital
records,” Mr. Wild said. (photo: Jeremy M. Lange for The New York
Times) |
For more about Social Security benefits, use the
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Story here...
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/10
/us/10disability.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Story below:
-------------------------
Disability Cases Last Longer as Backlog Rises
By ERIK ECKHOLM
RALEIGH, N.C. — 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.
Article continues below:
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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.
Progress against the backlog, if it happens, cannot undo the three years
that Belinda Virgil of Fayetteville, N.C., has worried about her future
since her initial application was turned down.
Tethered to an oxygen tank 24 hours a day because of emphysema and
life-threatening sleep apnea, Ms. Virgil lost her apartment and has
alternated between a sofa in her daughter’s crowded house and a friend’s
place as she waits for an answer to her appeal.
“It’s been hell,” said Ms. Virgil, 44, who finally got her hearing in
November and is awaiting the outcome. “I’ve got no money for Christmas, I
move from house to house, and I’m getting really depressed.”
The disability process is complex, and the standard for approval has, from
the inception of the program in the 1950s, been intentionally strict to
prevent malingering and drains on the treasury. But it is also inevitably
subjective in some cases, like those involving mental illness or pain that
cannot be tested.
In a standard tougher than those of most private plans, recipients must
prove that because of physical or mental disabilities they are unable to
do “any kind of substantial work” for at least 12 months — if an engineer
could not do his job but could work as a clerk, he would not qualify — or
prove that an illness is expected “to result in death.”
In a recent interview, the commissioner of Social Security, Michael J.
Astrue, said that outright fraud was rare but that many cases on appeal
were borderline. In addition, widely publicized charges in the 1970s that
money had been wasted on recipients whose conditions improved led to
tighter scrutiny.
Of the roughly 2.5 million disability applicants each year now, about
two-thirds are turned down initially by state agencies, which make
decisions with federal oversight based on paper records but no
face-to-face interview. Most of those who are refused give up at that
point or after a failed request for local reconsideration.
But of the more than 575,000 who go on to file appeals — putting them in
the vast line for a hearing before a special federal judge — two-thirds
eventually win a reversal.
Mr. Astrue and other officials attribute the high number of reversals to
several causes. Those who file appeals tend to be those with stronger
cases and lawyers who help them gather persuasive medical data. During the
extended waiting period, a person’s condition may worsen, strengthening
the case. The judges see applicants in person and have more discretion to
grant benefits in borderline cases.
Requiring face-to-face interviews at the initial stage could reduce the
number of appeals, Mr. Astrue said, “but given the huge volume of cases
coming through, it would be incredibly costly, and the Congress is not
willing to fund that.”
The growing delays in the appeal process over the last decade resulted in
part from litigation and financing shortages that prevented the hiring of
new administrative law judges. In addition, the number of applications is
rising as baby boomers reach their 50s and 60s.
“Once the system got overloaded, it fell farther and farther behind,” said
Rick Warsinsky, legislative director of the National Council of Social
Security Management Associations, which represents managers from the
agency.
If approved, those who have paid into Social Security receive income
comparable to retirement benefits, averaging more than $1,000 a month and
potentially more. The poor, and severely disabled children, receive
Supplemental Security Income checks that will be $637 a month in 2008.
Charles T. Hall’s law firm in Raleigh has the state’s largest disability
practice, with six lawyers representing some 2,500 clients, usually
working on contingency and collecting 25 percent of back payments, to a
limit of $5,300. Mr. Hall said that about one client a month died while
awaiting a hearing. Far more clients, he said, run out of money and are
evicted from rental units or lose their homes.
In the past, said Walter Patterson, a disability lawyer in Charlotte,
N.C., clients who received a foreclosure warning were pushed up the
waiting list for quicker hearings. But as the hearing offices have become
overwhelmed, he said, they now expedite cases only after seeing an actual
eviction notice — usually too late to help.
Thomas Airington, 48, who formerly ran a car-emissions testing business,
was told his appeal, filed last spring, would be expedited when he showed
officials an eviction notice. In the meantime he lost the house, which his
parents had bequeathed him. A hearing date has still not been set.
“If I’d been approved in time, I could have saved my house,” said Mr.
Airington, who is staying with a brother near Raleigh.
Mr. Airington has pins in his spine from a car accident in 1992, shattered
a knee when he fell 30 feet in 2005, has nerve damage in his feet and
chronic arthritis and depression. The rejection letter he is appealing
said, “We have determined that the condition is not severe enough to
preclude work.”
Mr. Airington said he tried a desk job but found he could not sit for
long, and tried working as a stocker in a grocery store but could not
reach for shelves. Whatever the outcome, he, like many applicants, is in
limbo while he waits.
The extended delays can also mean extra burdens for state welfare
agencies. In New York State, about half the 38,000 people now waiting on
disability appeals, for an average of 21 months, are receiving cash
assistance from the state, said Michael Hayes, spokesman for the Office of
Temporary and Disability Assistance.
Mr. Astrue, the latest of several Social Security commissioners to promise
speedier decisions, said the agency had already taken steps to ensure
quicker initial approval for those most clearly eligible and was holding
more hearings by video.
But by all accounts, a major increase in money, judges and support staff
will be needed to have a significant impact.
Mr. Astrue said that if the budget impasse continued for too long, leaving
the agency budget at its current level, “not only will we not do any
hiring, we’re looking at furloughs.”
A first step of raising the number of judges to 1,200 will require at
least $100 million extra for the agency beyond the $9.6 billion that
President Bush has proposed for the 2008 fiscal year, Mr. Astrue said.
Within a wide-ranging, $151 billion health, education and labor bill
passed in November, the Democratic-controlled Congress voted for a $275
million increase for the agency. But Mr. Bush vetoed the bill, calling it
profligate.
If the stalemate continues, the government will probably operate on the
basis of continuing resolutions, which will keep agency spending at last
year’s level and doom the plan to add judges.
Richard and Vicki Wild and their adult son Mark, of Hillsborough, N.C.,
were mystified that Mark’s case would ever require a judge.
Hospitalized with increasing frequency since his severe diabetes was
discovered at age 19, when he was found unconscious in a bus station, Mark
Wild was eager to work as a chef. But over 15 years, he tried and lost
jobs as a waiter and a cook. He had to drop out of culinary school because
he was hospitalized so often, his parents said.
“We had 10 years’ worth of hospital records and unanimous opinions from
the doctors,” said Richard Wild, 62, who until recently was a computer
analyst. But his son’s initial application was turned down in 2003.
The family had sunk into debt because of medical bills, nearly losing
their house of 30 years, but found a lawyer to file an appeal. The son, by
then in his mid-30s, had to wait two more years to get a hearing
scheduled, with no income and little life outside his parents’ home and
the hospital.
As his hearing date in October 2006 approached, Mark Wild told his parents
that he feared another rejection. “It was his last chance at any dignity,
and he said if they turned him down it would be too much to take,”
recalled Mrs. Wild, a nurse.
On Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2006, just a few days before the hearing, Mrs. Wild
woke up to find her son gone. On his desk lay his watch, his ring and a
bullet.
On that Thursday, Mrs. Wild, 55, got a call at work from their lawyer. “I
just wanted to give you the good news,” she said he told her. “Somehow the
judge has already approved the disability, it’s a done deal, Mark’s got
it.”
Two hours later, a deputy sheriff and a chaplain arrived to say that
hunters had found Mark Wild’s body in the woods, dead of a self-inflicted
gunshot wound.
“No one can say for sure, but we’re convinced that his despondency and
fear about the disability decision contributed to his death,” said Mrs.
Wild, who wears a pinch of her son’s ashes in a small tube on a necklace.
Mr. Wild has tried to go back to work, but says he is so depressed he
cannot do his job. He is applying for disability, but knows that he cannot
expect an answer anytime soon.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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