Disability Backlogs Violate Due Process Rights (5/8/2008)
Employment verification would only worsen an unreasonable
process
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202) 675-2312, media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON, DC – The American Civil Liberties Union was encouraged by today’s
Senate Finance Committee hearing on service delivery problems with the Social
Security Administration (SSA) field offices. The SSA has struggled in processing
disability claims in reasonable timeframes and the ACLU has concerns that a
mandatory employment verification system would capsize the already overburdened
agency.
"Disabled Americans are waiting upwards of two years to receive Social
Security benefits. Now is not the time for Congress to impose a radical new duty
on SSA – the verification of every worker in the U.S.," said Caroline
Fredrickson, director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "Over half of
all calls made to SSA field offices across the country go unanswered. Congress
should focus on giving SSA the resources necessary to execute its critical
functions of processing disability, retirement, and survivor benefits, and
reject mandatory electronic employment verification."
Both chambers of Congress are currently considering legislation that would
implement mandatory electronic employment verification systems. These systems
would place the verification responsibility on the SSA, requiring that job
applicants’ documentation is accurate and in good standing before any new job
could be accepted. In addition to disability backlogs, the SSA databases are
fraught with errors in individual Social Security records that would prevent
innocent Americans from working until their records are corrected.
"The Secure America through Verification Enforcement ("SAVE" Act) [S. 2368,
H.R. 4088] would crush the SSA field offices," added Joanne Lin, ACLU
Legislative Counsel. "Approximately 3.6 million workers would need to visit an
SSA field office each year in order to correct their Social Security records, or
lose their jobs. The SAVE Act would also require every worker with earnings
reported by two or more employers to visit a field office annually to prove
their identity and earnings. This translates into an additional 45 million field
office visits per year."
The ACLU written statement submitted to the committee can be
found at: http://www.aclu.org/disability/gen/35204leg20080508.html
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