fishheadbob
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- Aug 5, 2014
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It seems like I am a magnet for the problems with the system. . I had to get my Congressman in the act on that one. The letter he wrote to them was not pretty, and he sent a copy to the Head of SS. All was peaches and cream, a lot of yes sirs, they called me for the first time, and fast action (for them).
I know it is a long story, but hopefully it will help some other soul avoid or have insight to the process. With all government programs during a dispute you have to have good irrefutable records, persistence, and the patience of Job. I have won against IRS through the same process.
I certainly do not wish to imply Fish Head Bob is one of the type SS agents I encountered. He would have handled my case at the local office level with his vast knowledge of the system and his strong work ethic; to bring the SS bureaucracy down to a face to face level.
Bob if I have stated something wrong here or in previous posts please bring it to my attention as I don't want to unknowing or through ignorance mislead someone. Sometimes memories of us old farts get us in trouble we do not intend.
Ron[/QUOTE]
You did a good job of sticking with it. Your description of the Congressional Inquiries Unit and the way we handle Congressional inquiries is pretty much on. Some of them are folks squawking because their disability claim was denied; nobody applies for any benefit expecting to get turned down, but it sure happens. Your congressman can't help you much with that, the lawyers who advertise on TV are the answer for that. Know that they screen their claimants pretty good; if a case isn't money in the bank a lot of them won't touch it.
You and a prior poster touched on something I observed over and over. Most SS claims are very quiet. People come on the roles in their mid 60s, move once or twice, and die 20 or 30 years later. Even the conversion of the spouse to widow or widowers benefit is pretty automated, in fact it's called an auto conversion. Kind of like being an undertaker, we do it on a daily basis even though it's a cataclysmic event for those involved.
The more important thing you touched on was the same people have problems over and over and over. Social Security's computer systems aren't Steve Jobs and Bill Gates at their best. It's more a case of the lowest bidder at his worst. Most every time a record needs substantial redoing it has to be taken apart and manually reconstructed in whats always a most bizarre and illogical way. The odds on getting all the little subtleties right so every thing works smoothly for the next 30 years are long odds.
Most of us are old enough to remember Fess Parker as Davey Crockett saying "Be sure you're right, then go ahead". If you're pretty sure you're right then pursue any wrong as you did. Problems arise for everyone when some knucklehead firmly believes that the Social Security moon is in fact made of green cheese and pursues that position for a long time tying up a lot of diminished resources for way too long. When I started with SSA there were 80,000 of us paying 35 million people. Now there are slightly over 40,000 of us paying 55 or 60 million folks. Glad I'm out. Someone else's turn to be polite to_____ (your turn to fill in the blank).
Let them believe whatever they want to believe; they're never going to change their minds.
I know it is a long story, but hopefully it will help some other soul avoid or have insight to the process. With all government programs during a dispute you have to have good irrefutable records, persistence, and the patience of Job. I have won against IRS through the same process.
I certainly do not wish to imply Fish Head Bob is one of the type SS agents I encountered. He would have handled my case at the local office level with his vast knowledge of the system and his strong work ethic; to bring the SS bureaucracy down to a face to face level.
Bob if I have stated something wrong here or in previous posts please bring it to my attention as I don't want to unknowing or through ignorance mislead someone. Sometimes memories of us old farts get us in trouble we do not intend.
Ron[/QUOTE]
You did a good job of sticking with it. Your description of the Congressional Inquiries Unit and the way we handle Congressional inquiries is pretty much on. Some of them are folks squawking because their disability claim was denied; nobody applies for any benefit expecting to get turned down, but it sure happens. Your congressman can't help you much with that, the lawyers who advertise on TV are the answer for that. Know that they screen their claimants pretty good; if a case isn't money in the bank a lot of them won't touch it.
You and a prior poster touched on something I observed over and over. Most SS claims are very quiet. People come on the roles in their mid 60s, move once or twice, and die 20 or 30 years later. Even the conversion of the spouse to widow or widowers benefit is pretty automated, in fact it's called an auto conversion. Kind of like being an undertaker, we do it on a daily basis even though it's a cataclysmic event for those involved.
The more important thing you touched on was the same people have problems over and over and over. Social Security's computer systems aren't Steve Jobs and Bill Gates at their best. It's more a case of the lowest bidder at his worst. Most every time a record needs substantial redoing it has to be taken apart and manually reconstructed in whats always a most bizarre and illogical way. The odds on getting all the little subtleties right so every thing works smoothly for the next 30 years are long odds.
Most of us are old enough to remember Fess Parker as Davey Crockett saying "Be sure you're right, then go ahead". If you're pretty sure you're right then pursue any wrong as you did. Problems arise for everyone when some knucklehead firmly believes that the Social Security moon is in fact made of green cheese and pursues that position for a long time tying up a lot of diminished resources for way too long. When I started with SSA there were 80,000 of us paying 35 million people. Now there are slightly over 40,000 of us paying 55 or 60 million folks. Glad I'm out. Someone else's turn to be polite to_____ (your turn to fill in the blank).
Let them believe whatever they want to believe; they're never going to change their minds.