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740 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005-1022
(202) 662-1582
Fax: (202) 662-1529
May
9, 2002
Honorable
E. Clay Shaw, Jr.
Chairman
Subcommittee on Social Security
Committee on Ways and Means
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515
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Re:
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Subcommittee Hearing
on "Challenges Facing the New Commissioner of Social Security"
Scheduled for May 2, 2002
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Dear
Mr. Chairman:
On
behalf of the American Bar Association ("ABA") and its more than
400,000 members nationwide, I write to express our initial concerns
regarding several informal proposals that would reform the process of
determining disability under the Social Security Act. We understand that
various proposals are being discussed, and the ABA likely will submit final
comments on these proposals if and when specific legislation or regulations
are prepared. In the meantime, we are particularly concerned about a
proposal to transfer hearings before administrative law judges of the
Social Security Administration ("SSA") to state agencies. It is
our understanding that this and other related issues were discussed at your
subcommittee's May 2, 2002, hearing on "Challenges Facing the New
Commissioner of Social Security Jo Anne B. Barnhart." I ask that this
letter be included in the record of the May 2, 2002, hearing.
We
are concerned that transferring the SSA hearing process to the state
agencies would effectively eliminate the right of claimants to present a
full case before a qualified administrative law judge who has been selected
by the Office of Personnel Management under the Administrative Procedure
Act ("APA"). The ABA has long opposed any attempt to deny Social
Security claimants the right to a full due process hearing under the APA
before an administrative law judge. The APA was adopted by Congress in 1946
to ensure that the American people were provided with hearings that are not
prejudiced by undue agency influence. Any transfer of the SSA hearing
process to the state agencies would deny a claimant his or her rights to a
due process hearing, on the record, before an ALJ appointed under the APA.
Further, federal ALJ's apply the law and published regulations on a uniform
and national basis, and such a transfer would seriously undermine both the
fairness and predictability of the claims process.
It
has also come to our attention that the Social Security Administration may
be considering changing the position of administrative law judge to the
position of "hearing officer," and that the agency may have taken
steps to budget for such a hearing officer position. The suggestion that
the use of administrative law judges at SSA is a matter of beneficial
convenience to the agency and not an established right held by each
claimant is of grave concern to the American Bar Association.
One
of the purposes of the APA is to establish the position of an independent
administrative law judge selected on a merit basis and insulated from
agency bias and pressure in performing their adjudicative functions. See Butz
v. Economu, 458 U.S. 478, 513 (1978). Replacing administrative law
judges in the Social Security Administration with hearing officers who do
not have these same attributes will effectively deny claimants their rights
to a due process hearing, and the ABA opposes any such change.
Thank
you for considering our views on these important matters, and we look
forward to providing additional comments on these and other issues if
specific legislation is introduced. In the meantime, if you would like more
information regarding the ABA's positions on these issues, please contact
our senior legislative counsel for Social Security issues, Lillian Gaskin,
at (202) 662-1768.
Sincerely,
Robert
D. Evans
cc: Members of the Subcommittee on Social Security
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