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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittees on Income Security and Family Support and 
Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:30 a.m. EST:
Tuesday, March 24, 2009: 

Social Security Administration: 

Further Actions Needed to Address Disability Claims and Service 
Delivery Challenges: 

Statement of Daniel Bertoni, Director: 
Education, Workforce, and Income Security: 

GAO-09-511T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-511T, a testimony to the Subcommittees on Social 
Security and on Income Security and Family Support, Committee on Ways 
and Means, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

For years, the Social Security Administration (SSA) has experienced 
challenges managing a large disability workload and making timely 
decisions. In fiscal year 2006, SSA made about 3.7 million disability 
claims decisions, while over a million were awaiting a decision. 
Further, SSA has faced staffing challenges and difficulties managing 
its workloads at its network of approximately 1,300 field offices, 
where millions of people go to apply for disability and retirement 
benefits, to obtain Social Security cards, and for a host of other 
services. 

The Subcommittees on Income Security and Family Support, and on Social 
Security, House Committee on Ways and Means, asked GAO to address (1) 
key service delivery challenges facing SSA, particularly with respect 
to the backlog of disability claims, and (2) steps SSA is taking to 
address these challenges. This testimony is based primarily on reports 
assessing trends in disability claims processing and backlogs, steps 
SSA is taking to reduce the backlog, and other challenges SSA faces in 
meeting future service delivery needs. Certain information was updated 
to reflect recent legislative changes. 

What GAO Found: 

In recent years, SSA has experienced a growing backlog of disability 
claims and deteriorating customer service at field offices. SSA’s total 
backlog of disability claims doubled from 1997, reaching 576,000 in 
2006, which has resulted in claimants waiting longer for final 
decisions. The backlog was particularly acute at the hearings level 
(see figure). SSA also experienced declines in field office service 
delivery, with average customer wait times in field offices increasing 
by 40 percent from 2002 to 2006, and over 3 million customers waiting 
more than 1 hour to be served in 2008. Two key factors likely 
contributed to the backlog and service delivery challenges: (1) 
staffing reductions or turnover of field office staff and key personnel 
involved in the disability claims process, and (2) increased workloads. 
In particular, initial applications for disability benefits grew by 
more than 20 percent over the past 10 years. SSA projects further 
increases in workloads as the baby boom generation reaches its 
disability-prone years and retires. 

Figure: Total Backlogged Claims, by Level of Adjudication, Fiscal Years 
1997 to 2006: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 1997; 
Backlogged initial claims: 0; 
Backlogged hearings: 183,712; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 74,655. 

Fiscal year: 1998; 
Backlogged initial claims: 16,378; 
Backlogged hearings: 84,313; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 83,045. 

Fiscal year: 1999; 
Backlogged initial claims: 54,367; 
Backlogged hearings: 11,958; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 107,792. 

Fiscal year: 2000; 
Backlogged initial claims: 135,407; 
Backlogged hearings: 46,756; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 90,323. 

Fiscal year: 2001; 
Backlogged initial claims: 165,673; 
Backlogged hearings: 135,904; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 57,827. 

Fiscal year: 2002; 
Backlogged initial claims: 192,692; 
Backlogged hearings: 200,757; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 21,968. 

Fiscal year: 2003; 
Backlogged initial claims: 181,929; 
Backlogged hearings: 291,562; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 13,641. 

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Backlogged initial claims: 224,658; 
Backlogged hearings: 364,276; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 8,546. 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Backlogged initial claims: 160,529; 
Backlogged hearings: 411,284; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 3,614. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Backlogged initial claims: 155,071; 
Backlogged hearings: 415,568; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 5,559. 

Source: GAO analysis of SSA data. 

[End of figure] 

SSA has taken steps to improve its disability claims process, reduce 
the claims backlog, and manage its field office workloads, but some 
efforts were hampered by poor planning and execution while others are 
too recent to evaluate. In 2006, SSA introduced a comprehensive set of 
reforms to improve the efficiency, accuracy and timeliness of the 
disability claims process. However, this initiative produced mixed 
results and many aspects were suspended to focus on the hearings 
backlog and other priorities. While final decisions regarding many 
aspects of this reform are pending, SSA outlined a new plan in 2007 
that concentrates on clearing out backlogged cases at the hearings 
level. GAO is currently reviewing this plan as part of its ongoing 
work. To address overall workloads and maintain customer service, SSA 
has shifted workloads to less busy offices and deferred workloads it 
deemed lower priority. However, deferring certain workloads, such as 
continuing eligibility reviews, can result in beneficiaries receiving 
payments who no longer qualify. In response to a recent GAO 
recommendation, SSA agreed to develop a single service delivery plan to 
help it better manage future service delivery challenges. However, it 
remains unclear how SSA will address current and future challenges 
given its current service delivery infrastructure and resource 
constraints. 

To view the full product, click on [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-511T]. For more information, contact 
Daniel Bertoni at (202) 512-7215 or bertonid@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairmen and Members of the Subcommittees: 

I am pleased to have the opportunity to discuss challenges facing the 
Social Security Administration (SSA) with respect to its disability 
claims processing and field office service delivery. SSA provides a 
number of services that touch many lives. In particular, each year 
millions of Americans who believe that they can no longer work because 
of severe physical or mental impairments, apply for cash benefits 
through the Social Security Administration's (SSA) two disability 
programs--Disability Insurance (DI) and Supplemental Security Income 
(SSI). In addition, SSA annually processes millions of applications for 
retirement benefits through its Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) 
program, issues millions of Social Security cards, and provides many 
other services through its large and decentralized workforce. In fiscal 
year 2008, SSA had an administrative budget of over $11 billion, and 
employed about 63,000 employees, 44 percent of whom are located in 
approximately 1,300 field offices across the country. 

For more than 20 years, SSA has faced challenges managing a large 
disability claims workload and making timely decisions. During fiscal 
year 2006, SSA made about 3.7 million disability claims decisions, and 
some 1.5 million disability claims were awaiting a determination. SSA's 
data show that disability applicants can wait years for their claims to 
be resolved at the final administrative appeals level.[Footnote 1] 
Disability claims--as well as retirement claims--are expected to 
increase further as the baby boom generation continues to enter its 
disability-prone years and begins to retire. The current economic 
downturn may prompt even more people to apply for SSA benefits as a 
source of income security. Constrained budgets and staffing reductions, 
coupled with increases in retirement and disability filings, have also 
challenged field offices' ability to meet the demand for services. 

For today's hearing, you asked us to address (1) key service delivery 
challenges facing SSA, particularly with respect to the backlog of 
disability claims, and (2) steps SSA is taking to address these 
challenges. My statement draws on a number of prior GAO reports that 
were conducted in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. (See related GAO products.) We updated information 
as appropriate to reflect recent legislative changes. 

Summary: 

In summary, SSA has experienced a growing backlog in disability claims, 
as well as deteriorating customer service. From fiscal years 1997 to 
2006, SSA's total backlog of disability claims--the number of claims 
exceeding the amount that should optimally be pending at year end-- 
doubled, reaching about 576,000 in 2006. The backlog was particularly 
acute at the hearings level. Backlogs, in turn, resulted in claimants 
waiting longer for a final decision from SSA. In addition, at field 
offices, SSA customers experienced longer wait times and unanswered 
phones. For example, between 2002 and 2006, average customer wait times 
in field offices increased by 40 percent, and in fiscal year 2008, more 
than 3 million customers waited over 1 hour to be served. Two key 
factors likely contributed to these disability claims backlogs and 
service delivery challenges. First, SSA experienced reductions or 
turnover in field office staff and key personnel involved in the 
disability claims process, such as disability examiners and 
administrative law judges (ALJ). Second, SSA experienced an increase in 
workloads. In particular, from 1997 to 2006, initial applications for 
DI and SSI disability benefits increased more than 20 percent, spurred 
by, among other factors, the aging of the baby boom generation, 
downturns in the economy, increased referrals from other programs, and 
changes in disability eligibility requirements in prior years. SSA 
projects that its workloads will continue to increase over the coming 
years as the baby boom generation retires. 

SSA has taken steps to improve its disability claims process and reduce 
the backlogs as well as to manage its overall workloads, but some 
efforts have been hampered by poor planning and execution while others 
are too recent to evaluate. One of SSA's more recent efforts to improve 
its disability claims process--a comprehensive set of reforms called 
the Disability Service Improvement (DSI) initiative that was piloted in 
the Boston region in 2006--produced mixed results. Many aspects of DSI 
were ultimately suspended to focus on the hearings backlog and SSA's 
electronic processing system. In May 2007, SSA outlined a new plan for 
eliminating the hearings level backlog. We are currently evaluating the 
extent to which the hearings backlog reduction plan includes components 
of sound planning and the potential effects it may have on the hearings 
backlog and other SSA operations. In addition, to address overall 
workloads and maintain customer service in field offices, SSA shifted 
workloads to less busy offices and deferred work that the agency deemed 
as lower priority. However, deferring key workloads, such as reviews of 
continuing eligibility for benefits, means that beneficiaries who no 
longer qualify may still receive payments erroneously. More recently, 
in response to our recommendation that SSA develop a detailed service 
delivery plan, SSA is consolidating its various planning efforts into a 
single planning document. SSA stated this document will reflect its 
efforts to address service and staffing challenges related to the 
disability and retirement wave of the baby boom generation. However, it 
remains unclear how SSA will manage growing workloads with its current 
infrastructure of approximately 1,300 field offices and resource 
constraints, while minimizing the deferral of key workloads and 
declines in customer service. 

Background: 

SSA administers three major benefit programs: Old-Age and Survivors 
Insurance (OASI), which provides benefits to retired workers and their 
families and to families of deceased workers; (2) Disability Insurance 
(DI), which provides benefits to eligible workers with disabilities and 
their family members; and (3) Supplemental Security Income (SSI), which 
provides income for aged, blind, or disabled individuals with limited 
income and resources. In addition to paying benefits through these 
three programs, SSA also issues Social Security cards, maintains 
earnings records, and performs various other functions through a 
network of field, state and headquarter offices.[Footnote 2] 

SSA's field offices are the agency's primary points for providing face- 
to-face service to the public. In addition to processing new disability 
and retirement claims, field offices manage other workloads related to 
program integrity, such as determining whether certain individuals with 
disabilities remain eligible to receive disability payments based on 
program criteria. Besides field offices, SSA operates Social Security 
Card Centers, which issue Social Security numbers; Teleservice Centers, 
which offer services nationally via a toll-free telephone number; and 
Program Service Centers, which maintain earnings records, in addition 
to other functions. In 2008, SSA's administrative budget for managing 
its operations was $11.1 billion. 

Disability Process: 

The process for deciding who is eligible for SSA disability benefits is 
complex, consuming a large portion of SSA's administrative budget. 
Several state and federal offices, and several adjudication levels are 
involved in determining whether a claimant is eligible for benefits. 
The process begins when an individual files an application for 
disability benefits at an SSA field office, online or over SSA's toll- 
free number. In each case, an SSA representative determines whether a 
claimant meets the non-medical eligibility criteria of each program, 
such as ensuring that an SSI applicant meets income requirements, or 
determining if a DI applicant has a sufficient number of work credits. 
If applicants meet the non-medical eligibility criteria, field office 
personnel will help claimants complete their applications and obtain 
claimants' detailed medical, education, and work histories. The 
completeness of the information gathered at this time can affect the 
accuracy and speed of the decision. 

After the field office determines that an applicant has met SSA's non- 
medical eligibility requirements for disability benefits, up to four 
adjudicative levels may review the applicant's claim for eligibility 
generally based on medical criteria. The first adjudicative level is 
the state Disability Determination Services (DDS),[Footnote 3] where a 
disability examiner, working with medical staff, must make every 
reasonable effort to help the claimant get medical reports from 
physicians, hospitals, clinics, or other institutions where the 
claimant has received past medical treatments.[Footnote 4] After 
assembling all medical and vocational information for the claim, the 
DDS examiner in consultation with appropriate medical staff determines 
whether the claimant meets the requirements of the law for having a 
disability. In doing so, the DDS examiner uses a five-step, sequential 
evaluation process that includes a review of the claimant's current 
work activity, severity of impairment, and vocational factors. See 
figure 1. 

Figure 1: SSA's Five-Step Sequential Evaluation Process for Determining 
Disability: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Step 1: Work test: Is the claimant working and earning more than 
substantial gainful activity?[A] 
Yes: Benefits denied; 
No: Go to next step. 

Step 2: Severity test: Does the claimant have a severe impairment that 
significantly limits his or her ability to do basic work activities and 
that also meets the duration requirements? 
Yes: Go to next step; 
No: Benefits denied. 

Step 3: Medical listings test: Does the condition meet SSA’s medical 
listings, or is the condition equal in severity to one found on the 
medical listings? 
Yes: Benefits awarded; 
No: Go to next step. 

Step 4: Previous work test: Can a person with the claimant’s residual 
functional capacity perform any of the claimant’s past work? 
Yes: Benefits denied; 
No: Go to next step. 

Step 5: Any work test: Can the claimant perform other types of work 
that exist in the national economy? 
Yes: Benefits denied; 
No: Benefits awarded. 

Sources: GAO analysis of SSA data. 

[A] In 2007 the substantial gainful activity (SGA) threshold was $1,500 
per month for blind recipients and $900 per month for individuals with 
other disabilities. 

[End of figure] 

Claimants who are dissatisfied with the initial DDS determination have 
up to three additional levels of adjudicative appeal. The claimant may 
request a "reconsideration" of the claim, which is conducted by DDS 
personnel who were not involved in the original decision. If the 
reconsideration team concurs with the initial denial of benefits, the 
claimant then has 60 days from the time of this decision to appeal and 
request a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ).[Footnote 5] 
ALJs, who are based in 140 hearing offices located throughout the 
nation, can consider new evidence and request additional information 
including medical evidence or medical and vocational expert testimony. 
A claimant who is dissatisfied with the hearings decision may request, 
within 60 days of the ALJ's decision, that the Appeals Council review 
the claim. The Appeals Council is SSA's fourth and final adjudicative 
appeals level and is comprised of administrative appeals judges. The 
Appeals Council may uphold, modify, or reverse the ALJ's action, or it 
may return the claim back to the ALJ for another hearing and issuance 
of a new decision. The decision of the Appeals Council is the 
Commissioner's final decision. To appeal this decision, the claimant 
must file an action in Federal Court. 

Measuring Performance: 

SSA measures its performance in managing its workloads in various ways. 
For its disability claims process, at each level of the claims process 
SSA tracks the number of claims pending a decision each year and the 
time it takes to issue a decision. The agency also uses a relative 
measure to determine the backlog by considering how many cases should 
optimally be pending at year-end. This relative measure is referred to 
as "target pending" and is set for each level of the disability process 
with the exception of the reconsideration level. From 1999 to 2006, 
SSA's target pending was 400,000 for claims at the initial stage and 
300,000 and 40,000 for the hearings and Appeals Council stages, 
respectively.[Footnote 6] The number of pending claims that exceed 
these numbers represents the backlog. With respect to service delivery, 
SSA uses various measures of performance, including work productivity 
(average work units performed per year, per employee), customer wait 
times at field offices, and overall customer satisfaction with service 
delivery. 

SSA Has Faced Challenges with Disability Claims Backlogs and Field 
Office Service Delivery: 

SSA has experienced increased backlogs and processing times associated 
with disability claims in recent years, as well as declines in measures 
of field office service. These trends are likely due to rising 
workloads and staffing shortfalls. 

Disability Claims Process Challenges: 

The total number of backlogged disability claims in SSA more than 
doubled over the last decade, with the greatest accumulation of claims 
occurring at the hearing level. By the close of fiscal year 2006, the 
total number of backlogged disability claims, by SSA's measure, reached 
576,000, which represented an overall growth rate of more than 120 
percent from fiscal year 1997. As shown in figure 2, backlogs of 
varying degree have occurred at all stages of the claims process where 
backlogs are calculated. However, since fiscal year 2001, these claims 
were concentrated most heavily at the hearings level and, to a lesser 
extent, at the initial processing level within the DDS 
offices.[Footnote 7] The hearings level accounted for the largest share 
of backlogged claims for 7 of the 10 years we reviewed. In fiscal years 
2000 and 2001, the DDS level accounted for the largest share of the 
backlog. The Appeals Council had the largest backlog in fiscal year 
1999, but dramatically reduced these numbers by 2006. 

Figure 2: Total Backlogged Claims, by Level of Adjudication, Fiscal 
Years 1997 to 2006: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 1997; 
Backlogged initial claims: 0; 
Backlogged hearings: 183,712; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 74,655. 

Fiscal year: 1998; 
Backlogged initial claims: 16,378; 
Backlogged hearings: 84,313; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 83,045. 

Fiscal year: 1999; 
Backlogged initial claims: 54,367; 
Backlogged hearings: 11,958; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 107,792. 

Fiscal year: 2000; 
Backlogged initial claims: 135,407; 
Backlogged hearings: 46,756; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 90,323. 

Fiscal year: 2001; 
Backlogged initial claims: 165,673; 
Backlogged hearings: 135,904; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 57,827. 

Fiscal year: 2002; 
Backlogged initial claims: 192,692; 
Backlogged hearings: 200,757; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 21,968. 

Fiscal year: 2003; 
Backlogged initial claims: 181,929; 
Backlogged hearings: 291,562; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 13,641. 

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Backlogged initial claims: 224,658; 
Backlogged hearings: 364,276; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 8,546. 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Backlogged initial claims: 160,529; 
Backlogged hearings: 411,284; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 3,614. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Backlogged initial claims: 155,071; 
Backlogged hearings: 415,568; 
Backlogged Appeals Council: 5,559. 

Source: GAO analysis of SSA data. 

[End of figure] 

In concert with changes in the total claims backlog, average processing 
times for disability claims at most adjudicative levels increased. As 
shown in figure 3, although processing times decreased dramatically at 
the Appeals Council level, they increased markedly at the hearings 
level, and somewhat at the initial and reconsideration levels.[Footnote 
8] For example, from 1997 to 2006, processing times increased about 20 
days at the DDS level and 95 days at the hearings level. Further, in 
fiscal year 2006, 39 percent of all hearing decisions took between 365 
to 599 days to process; 28 percent took 600 to 999 days to process; and 
2 percent took over 1,000 days. For two regions (region 5 in Chicago 
and region 10 in Seattle), nearly half of all hearing decisions made in 
fiscal year 2006 took longer than 600 days to complete. 

Figure 3: Average Claims Processing Time for DDS Initial Claims, DDS 
Reconsiderations, Hearings, and Appeals Council Decisions, in Days, 
Fiscal Years 1997 to 2006: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

Fiscal year: 1997; 
Initial claims: 70.4 days; 
Reconsiderations: 51.4 days; 
Hearings: 386 days; 
Appeals Council: 340 days. 

Fiscal year: 1998; 
Initial claims: 72.6 days; 
Reconsiderations: 55.3 days; 
Hearings: 371 days; 
Appeals Council: 417 days. 

Fiscal year: 1999; 
Initial claims: 77.5 days; 
Reconsiderations: 61.6 days; 
Hearings: 314 days; 
Appeals Council: 441 days. 

Fiscal year: 2000; 
Initial claims: 81.5 days; 
Reconsiderations: 62.8 days; 
Hearings: 274 days; 
Appeals Council: 495. 

Fiscal year: 2001; 
Initial claims: 90.3 days; 
Reconsiderations: 68.8 days; 
Hearings: 307 days; 
Appeals Council: 439 days. 

Fiscal year: 2002; 
Initial claims: 89 days; 
Reconsiderations: 69.9 days; 
Hearings: 333 days; 
Appeals Council: 404 days. 

Fiscal year: 2003; 
Initial claims: 84.8 days; 
Reconsiderations: 68.3 days; 
Hearings: 343 days; 
Appeals Council: 288 days. 

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Initial claims: 85.7 days; 
Reconsiderations: 65.8 days; 
Hearings: 391 days; 
Appeals Council: 247 days. 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Initial claims: 87.2 days; 
Reconsiderations: 68 days; 
Hearings: 415 days; 
Appeals Council: 238 days. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Initial claims: 88.9 days; 
Reconsiderations: 72 days; 
Hearings: 481 days; 
Appeals Council: 201 days. 

Source: GAO analysis of SSA data. 

[End of figure] 

One contributor to increased disability claims backlogs has been spikes 
in new applications. For example, the number of initial applications 
for DI and SSI benefits increased by 21 percent overall from fiscal 
years 1997 to 2006, contributing to the claims backlog and adding 
additional pressures to field office personnel who initially review 
these claims. These increases can be attributed to a number of 
influences: periodic downturns in the economy, the aging of the baby 
boom population, increased referrals from other programs, previous 
changes in program eligibility requirements and regulations, and 
increased program outreach. Officials in one region recounted one 
initiative that targeted outreach to the homeless, which increased 
applications and also added to processing times. They also attributed 
some processing delays to the time required to track homeless 
candidates and help them document their disabilities. With respect to 
the economy, SSA officials, DDS senior managers, and our prior work all 
attest to the fact that economic downturns from a failing industry or 
natural disaster can precipitate new disability applications. 

The growth in the disability claims backlogs has also coincided with 
losses in key personnel associated with the disability claims process. 
For example, although DDS staff increased about 4 percent from 1997 to 
2006, DDSs have experienced high rates of staff turnover and attrition. 
Attrition rates for DDS disability examiners, who are state employees, 
were almost double that of SSA federal staff. Many DDS senior managers 
we spoke with said that turnover of experienced disability examiners 
has affected productivity. For example, from September 1998 to January 
2006, over 20 percent of disability examiners hired during that period 
left or were terminated within their first year. DDS officials said the 
loss of experienced staff affects DDS' ability to process disability 
claims workloads because it generally takes newly hired examiners about 
2 years to become proficient in their role. 

Further, at the hearings level, SSA generally experienced shortfalls in 
ALJs and support staff--decision writers, staff that prepare case files 
for review, attorneys, and claims technicians. The number of ALJs 
available to conduct hearings ranged from a high of 1,087 in 1998 to a 
low of 919 in 2001, ending at 1,018 in 2006. Although SSA has had fewer 
than 1,100 ALJs over the last 10 years, in May 2006, SSA's Commissioner 
noted that the agency requires no less than 1,250 ALJs to properly 
manage its current pending workload. With respect to support staff, 
numbers ranged from a high of 5,500 in 1999 to a low of 4,700 in 2006. 
Although SSA managers and judges would like to see a ratio of 5.25 
support staff per ALJ, the actual ratio has more often been lower, 
ranging from a ratio of 4.59 in 1997 to 4.12 in 2006. Only in 2001, 
when the number of ALJs was at its lowest point, was the target ratio 
achieved. 

Finally, a number of initiatives undertaken by SSA to improve the 
disability process and potentially remedy backlogs have faltered for a 
variety of reasons, including poor planning and execution. In fact, 
some initiatives had the effect of slowing processing times by reducing 
staff capacity, increasing the number of appeals, or complicating the 
decision process. Several other initiatives improved the process, but 
were too costly and subsequently abandoned. This was the case for 
several facets of a major 1997 initiative, known as the "Disability 
Process Redesign," which sought to streamline and expedite disability 
decisions for both initial claims and appeals. In the past, we reported 
that various initiatives within this effort became problematic and were 
largely discontinued due to their ineffectiveness and high cost. 
Further, implementation of an electronic system enhanced some aspects 
of the disability claims process, but also caused delays due to 
systemic instability and shutdowns at the DDS and hearings offices. 
[Footnote 9] Further, the "Hearings Process Improvement" initiative, 
implemented in 2000, involved reorganizing hearing office staff and 
responsibilities with the goal of reducing the number of appeals. 
However, many of the senior SSA officials we spoke with expressed the 
opinion that this initiative left key workloads unattended and was 
therefore responsible for dramatic increases in delays and processing 
times at the hearings level. 

Field Office Service Delivery Challenges: 

In addition to disability claims backlogs and increased processing 
times, other aspects of SSA's service delivery at field offices have 
declined in recent years. From fiscal year 2002 to 2006, the average 
time customers waited in a field office to speak with an SSA 
representative increased by 40 percent from 15 to 21 minutes. In fiscal 
year 2008, more than 3 million customers waited for over 1 hour to be 
served. Further, SSA's 2007 Field Office Caller Survey found that 51 
percent of customers calling selected field offices had at least one 
earlier call that had gone unanswered. Because SSA based its results 
only on customers who were ultimately able to get through, the actual 
percentage of customers that had unanswered calls was likely even 
higher. Overall these factors may have contributed to a 3 percent drop 
in SSA's overall customer satisfaction, from 84 percent in fiscal year 
2005 to 81 percent in fiscal year 2008. 

Declines in field office service delivery measures coincided with a 
period of staff turnover and losses agency wide. From fiscal year 2005 
to 2008, SSA experienced a 2.9 percent reduction in total employees and 
a 4.4 percent reduction in field office employees. At the same time, 
employees and managers reported high levels of stress. We asked 153 
employees at 21 offices to rate the stress they experienced in 
attempting to complete their work in a timely manner and 65 percent 
reported feeling stress to a great or very great extent on a daily 
basis, while 74 percent of office managers described high levels of 
stress. 

Declines in service delivery measures also coincided with increased 
workloads. For example, the number of annual field office visitors 
increased by about 2.5 million customers, from 41.9 million in fiscal 
year 2006 to 44.4 million in fiscal year 2008. In addition, SSA's field 
offices experienced growth in other types of workloads. Between 2005 
and 2008, SSA performed more work related to managing beneficiary rolls 
[Footnote 10] and assigning Social Security numbers. Finally, the work 
SSA performs on behalf of other federal agencies has grown. For 
example, new elements of the Medicare prescription drug program and new 
state laws requiring federal government verification of work 
authorization are resulting in additional work and field office visits. 

Future Workload and Staffing Challenges: 

SSA projects an increase in disability claims and other workloads over 
the coming years while at the same time anticipates the retirement of 
many experienced workers. Specifically, SSA projects: 

* An overall 13 percent increase in retirement and disability claims 
from fiscal years 2007 to 2017. 

* A growth of 22 percent in the number of retirement and disability 
beneficiaries from 2007 to 2015. 

* That nearly 40 percent of its current workforce will be eligible to 
retire in 5 years and 44 percent will retire by 2016. 

SSA Continues to Take Steps to Address Disability Claims Backlogs and 
Service Delivery Challenges: 

SSA continues to take steps to address disability claims backlogs and 
service delivery challenges, including efforts to improve its 
disability claims process, redistribute workloads across field offices, 
and develop a plan for addressing future growth in disability and 
retirement claims. Some of these efforts have been hampered by poor 
planning while others are too recent to evaluate. 

Improving the Disability Evaluation Process: 

SSA has pursued a number of initiatives to improve the overall 
efficiency and effectiveness of its disability claims process. For 
example, the DSI initiative, piloted in 2006, was designed to produce 
correct decisions on disability claims as early in the application 
process as possible, with the expectation that DSI would reduce both 
appeals of denied claims and future backlogs. The plan involved several 
envisioned changes to improve the disability determination process. 
However, results of the initiative by early 2007 were mixed. (See table 
1 for examples of these initiatives and their results.) In general, we 
found that implementation of these and other DSI initiatives were 
hampered by rushed implementation, poor communication, and inadequate 
financial planning. Overall, the DSI initiatives cost more than the 
agency had originally estimated. 

Table 1: Examples of DSI Initiatives and Their Results: 

Name of initiative: Quick Disability Determination Process; 
Description: Used an automated screening function to identify cases 
that have a high probability of being approved for expedited 
processing; 
Results: Generally produced timely and accurate decisions and is 
targeted for national roll-out. 

Name of initiative: Federal Reviewing Official; 
Description: Replaced the reconsideration level with attorneys that 
review appealed initial decisions; 
Results: Achieved positive decision accuracy and documentation; 
experienced staffing challenges; contributed to increased pending 
claims and processing times; cost more than originally estimated. 

Name of initiative: Medical and Vocational Expertise Initiative; 
Description: Provided medical expertise to the Federal Reviewing 
Official; 
Results: Experienced staffing challenges; experienced difficulty 
entering into contracts with medical professionals; contributed to 
increased pending claims; cost more than originally estimated. 

Source: Based on information presented in GAO-08-40. 

[End of table] 

The future of DSI currently remains uncertain. While the Quick 
Disability Determination will likely be implemented nationwide, SSA 
suspended national roll-out of most portions of the DSI initiative, and 
issued a proposed rule to suspend the Federal Reviewing Official and 
Medical and Vocational Expertise initiatives in the Boston region. SSA 
has said that it will continue to conduct an evaluation of DSI 
initiatives to determine whether they should be reinstated. Because 
SSA's assessment of DSI components to date has been limited, in 2007 we 
recommended that SSA conduct a thorough evaluation of DSI before 
deciding which elements should be implemented or discontinued. SSA 
noted that it would continue to collect data and monitor outcomes to 
evaluate DSI, but that, due to constrained resources, it may not be 
able to collect sufficient data to ensure the reliability of the 
results. 

SSA suspended DSI, in part, to refocus on reducing its hearings 
backlog, which had reached critical levels. In May 2007, SSA outlined a 
new hearings backlog reduction plan that focuses on reducing the 
existing backlog and preventing its recurrence through a series of 
steps that employ some prior innovations and also new initiatives. 
However, officials we spoke with at SSA emphasized that the hearings 
backlog reduction plan is not meant to replace the DSI initiative but 
to complement it until a final decision is made regarding the future of 
DSI. Steps in the plan include updating SSA's medical eligibility 
criteria, expediting cases for which eligibility is more clear-cut, 
improving hearings office capacity and performance, and other actions. 
Also in the plan, the Commissioner proposed dedicating $25 million to 
improve SSA's electronic processing system. SSA's efforts to reduce the 
hearings backlog may be supported by additional funds through recent 
legislation. Specifically, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act 
of 2009 (ARRA) allocated $500 million to SSA to assist with processing 
workloads and related technology acquisitions.[Footnote 11] SSA has not 
yet determined how it will use this money for its various workloads. 

In December 2007, we recommended that SSA take the necessary steps to 
increase the likelihood that new initiatives will succeed, such as 
performing comprehensive planning to anticipate challenges of 
implementation, including the appropriate staff in the design and 
implementation stages, establishing feedback mechanisms to track 
progress and problems, and performing periodic evaluations.[Footnote 
12] SSA agreed with the intent of this recommendation, noting that it 
would take necessary steps to improve the likelihood of success of 
future initiatives. Accordingly, we are currently evaluating the extent 
to which the hearings backlog reduction plan includes components of 
sound planning and the potential effects of the plan on the hearings 
backlog and other SSA operations. As part of this review, we will (1) 
examine the plan's potential to eliminate the hearings-level backlog, 
(2) determine the extent to which the plan includes components of sound 
planning, and (3) identify potential unintended effects of the plan on 
hearings level operations and other aspects of the disability process. 
We expect to complete our work later this year. 

Shifting Workloads and Maintaining Staffing Levels: 

To address overall workloads and maintain customer service, SSA is 
shifting workloads to less busy offices. For example, if a field office 
has work demands that it cannot immediately cover, that office can 
request that some work be transferred to another office. Offices that 
have a particular expertise in that particular type of work will make 
themselves available, as they can process this work more quickly. These 
efforts likely contributed to increased productivity levels.[Footnote 
13] Specifically, the average amount of work produced by field office 
employees increased by 2.9 percent between fiscal years 2005 and 2008. 

Managers also are addressing workloads by using claims processing 
personnel to perform the duties typically conducted by lower-graded 
employees, and in some cases, office managers take on duties of their 
employees. Such duties include answering the telephone, providing 
initial services to arriving customers, processing requests for new or 
replacement Social Security cards, and conducting some administrative 
duties. Although visiting customers need attention, this practice may 
reduce time spent on other workloads, such as claims processing or 
managing the office. Moreover, as we noted earlier, the stress of 
expanding workloads and staffing constraints can negatively impact 
morale. 

With fewer staff available, SSA has deferred some workloads, although 
this practice may have significant drawbacks. Specifically, SSA has 
focused on field office work it considers essential to its "core 
workloads," such as processing new claims for Social Security benefits 
and issuing Social Security cards, while deferring other types of work 
including changes of address, changes to direct deposit information, 
and reviews to determine beneficiaries' continuing eligibility for DI 
and SSI benefits. Reviews of continuing eligibility, however, are key 
activities in ensuring payment accuracy. Such reviews yield a lifetime 
savings for both DI and SSI of $10 for every dollar invested, according 
to SSA. In recent years, SSA has reduced the number of reviews 
conducted, citing budget limitations and an increase in core work. When 
reviews of benefits are delayed, some beneficiaries continue receiving 
benefits when they no longer qualify. 

SSA has used a variety of strategies to maintain adequate staffing 
levels overall, although it faces challenges with hiring, training and 
retaining staff. For example, SSA: offers recruitment, relocation, and 
retention bonuses to individuals with needed skills; offers workplace 
flexibilities; uses dual compensation waivers from the Office of 
Personnel Management for certain hard-to-fill positions; and developed 
recruiting efforts to reach out to a broader pool of candidates, 
including retired military and veterans with disabilities. SSA may also 
use ARRA money to hire additional staff to help manage some of its 
workloads.[Footnote 14] However, in the past, SSA has encountered 
obstacles that delay hiring. For example, SSA's ability to hire 
sufficient ALJ's has been hindered by the length of the Office of 
Personnel Management's review process. In addition, field office 
managers and staff at many locations we visited stated that it 
typically takes 2 to 3 years for new employees to become proficient 
after being hired. For disability examiners, this process can take 
about 2 years, according to SSA staff, while at the same time turnover 
is high. 

Developing a Consolidated Plan to Address Future Growth: 

More recently, in response to our recommendation that SSA develop a 
detailed service delivery plan,[Footnote 15] SSA stated that it intends 
to consolidate its various planning efforts into a single planning 
document. SSA commented that its consolidated document will, at 
minimum, include comprehensive plans for expanding electronic services 
for customers; increasing the centralization of receiving phone calls 
and working claims from customers while maintaining the network of 
local field offices; enhancing phone and video services in field 
offices (where applicable) and piloting self-service personal computers 
in the reception areas of those offices; and continuing to assess the 
efficiency of field offices. While a consolidated planning document 
will better reflect the variety of planning efforts SSA has to improve 
its operations, it remains unclear how SSA will manage growing 
workloads with its current infrastructure of approximately 1,300 field 
offices, while minimizing the deferral of its workloads and declines in 
customer service. 

Concluding Observations: 

By all accounts, the operational challenges that SSA faces are 
projected to become more acute in the coming years as our society ages. 
SSA's aging workforce and our faltering economy may exacerbate these 
challenges. Over the years and across many fronts, SSA has taken 
numerous and varied steps to address its backlog of disability claims 
and its service delivery challenges, but often with mixed results or at 
the expense of some other key services. Funds that SSA receives through 
the ARRA may relieve staffing shortages and potentially improve 
electronic case processing, but more concerted efforts will likely be 
needed to get in front of the challenges ahead. We have recommended 
that, to increase the probability of success for any new initiatives 
aimed at reducing the backlog of claims, SSA focus on comprehensive 
planning that anticipates implementation challenges by involving key 
staff in design and implementation, establishing feedback loops, and 
performing periodic evaluations to ensure that reforms are executed 
effectively. We have also recommended that SSA develop a service 
delivery plan that addresses in detail how it will successfully deliver 
quality customer service in the future while managing growing work 
demands with constrained resources. SSA agreed that it should take 
necessary steps to improve the likelihood of success of future 
initiatives and to develop a comprehensive service delivery plan, and 
noted that they are taking steps toward these ends. We look forward to 
SSA's progress as it moves forward with these efforts. 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, this concludes my 
remarks. I would be happy to answer any questions that you or other 
Members of the Subcommittee may have. 

GAO Contact and Acknowledgments: 

For further information, please contact Daniel Bertoni at (202) 512- 
7215 or Bertonid@gao.gov. Also contributing to this statement were 
Michele Grgich, Erin Godtland, and Jessica Orr. Advisors included Blake 
Ainsworth, Barbara Bovbjerg, Julianne Cutts, Shelia Drake, Cindy 
Fagnoni, Sal Sorbello, and Paul Wright. Roger Thomas provided legal 
advice. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

High-Risk Series: An Update [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271], January, 2009. 

Social Security Administration: Service Delivery Plan Needed to Address 
Baby Boom Retirement Challenges [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-24], January 9, 2009. 

Social Security Disability: Better Planning, Management, and Evaluation 
Could Help Address Backlogs [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-40], December 7, 2007. 

Social Security Disability: Management Controls Needed to Strengthen 
Demonstration Projects [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1053], September 26, 2008. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] In light of these and other disability program challenges at SSA 
and other agencies, we designated federal disability programs a high- 
risk area in 2003. GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271] (Washington, D.C.: January 
2009). 

[2] In addition to these services, SSA performs work related to 
verifying employment eligibility and Medicare program assistance. 

[3] Although SSA is responsible for the program, the law calls for 
initial determinations of disability to be made by state DDS agencies. 
The work performed at DDS offices is federally financed and carried out 
under SSA disability program regulations, policies, and guidelines. See 
42.U.S.C. §421(a)(1). 

[4] The examiner may also ask the claimant to take a special 
examination called a "consultative examination," where physicians or 
other medical professionals hired by SSA gather more information on the 
claimant's condition. 

[5] As part of one of SSA's process improvement initiatives, SSA 
eliminated the reconsideration step in 10 states. In these states, 
claimants who are dissatisfied with their initial decision would have 
their appeal reviewed by an administrative law judge. 

[6] SSA stated that it had never communicated the target pending amount 
of 400,000 to DDSs. Further, they stated that they had set a new target 
pending of 577,000 for 2006 and 2007. SSA indicated that they had 
funded the DDSs at a level consistent with 577,000 claims pending in 
recent years. 

[7] We do not report backlogs for the reconsideration stage because SSA 
could not provide data that would allow us to do so. 

[8] Processing times reported in this report do not reflect time spent 
working on a claim prior to it reaching a DDS office (such as time 
spent at an SSA field office). 

[9] In 2000, SSA revived a prior plan to transform its paper-based 
processing system to a national, fully integrated electronic processing 
system. The initiative had several goals including (1) reducing delays 
caused by losing paper folders during transfers to other offices, (2) 
providing more complete disability information on claimants, and (3) 
reducing keying errors as well as storage and mailing costs. 

[10] The number of people receiving monthly benefits from SSA rose from 
nearly 53 million in 2005 to 60 million in 2008. Such an increase 
affects SSA's postentitlement workload (the workload associated with 
actions occurring after customers become eligible for benefits) 
including changes of address, benefit recomputations, overpayments, and 
reviews of Disability and SSI beneficiaries' status to determine their 
continuing eligibility for benefits. 

[11] In addition, ARRA allocated $500 million for the replacement of 
the National Computer Center. See the American Recovery and 
Reinvestment Act of 2009, H.R. 1, Division A, Title VIII, at 71 
(enrolled bill). 

[12] Social Security Disability: Better Planning, Management, and 
Evaluation Could Help Address Backlogs [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-40], December 7, 2007. 

[13] SSA cites additional reasons for productivity increases, including 
automation efforts and simplification of programs and policies. 

[14] As noted previously, ARRA allocated $500 million to SSA to assist 
with processing workloads and related technology acquisitions; but SSA 
has not determined how it will use these funds. See the American 
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, H.R. 1, Division A, Title VIII, 
at 71 (enrolled bill). 

[15] Social Security Administration: Service Delivery Plan Needed to 
Address Baby Boom Retirement Challenges (GAO-09-24, January 9, 2009). 

[End of section] 

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