The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Social Security chief to tackle overpaymen­ts

Agency will stop withholdin­g 100% of a beneficiar­y’s check.

- By David Hilzenrath KFF Health News and Jodie Fleischer Cox Media Group

The new chief of the Social Security Administra­tion outlined for senators Wednesday a plan to tackle overpaymen­ts and clawbacks, which affect millions of beneficiar­ies and, he said, have caused “grave injustices” and left people “in dire financial straits.”

As a joint investigat­ion by KFF Health News and Cox Media Group television stations reported in September, the agency has harmed people it is supposed to help by reducing or halting benefit checks to recoup billions of dollars in payments it sent them but later said they should never have received.

Testifying at two Senate hearings March 20, Social Security Commission­er Martin O’Malley said he is taking several steps to address the problem.

Starting next week, O’Malley said, the agency will stop “that clawback cruelty” of intercepti­ng 100% of a beneficiar­y’s monthly Social Security check if they fail to respond to a demand for repayment.

Instead, the agency will default to withholdin­g 10% of the recipient’s monthly benefits to recoup the debt, he said.

That would have helped Denise Woods, a Savannah woman who ended up living in her car after the SSA clawed back her entire monthly benefit to recoup a $58,000 overpaymen­t. The agency restored some of her benefits after KFF Health News-CMG reported her story in December.

“People like Denise and others shouldn’t be penalized for situations they did not create,” Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., said during one of the hearings. “I think it’s always important that we center the people as we discuss policy, remember the human face of the issues we talk about.”

On the question of who caused an overpaymen­t — the beneficiar­y or someone at the agency — the burden of proof will shift from the beneficiar­y to the agency, O’Malley said.

The agency will make it much easier for people who believe they weren’t at fault or can’t repay the debt to seek a waiver, O’Malley said, which he later clarified means simplifyin­g the form people must submit.

O’Malley’s plan also includes making notices to beneficiar­ies easier to understand. Now, they’re “like Mad Libs designed by mad lawyers,” he testified.

In addition, the agency recently changed a policy to allow most beneficiar­ies to arrange repayment plans of as long as five years, up from three years, he said.

Millions of people a year have been hit with clawbacks, including retirees, people receiving Social Security disability benefits and the poorest of the poor. The alleged debts can stretch back years or decades and reach tens of thousands of dollars or more.

At the end of the last fiscal year, uncollecte­d overpaymen­ts totaled $23 billion.

In December, KFF Health News and Cox Media Group television stations obtained an internal agency document showing more than 2 million Americans each year are subjected to overpaymen­t demands, out of about 70 million beneficiar­ies.

O’Malley, a former Maryland governor who was sworn in as commission­er in December, had previewed his planned changes in a recent interview with KFF Health News.

On Wednesday, he appeared before the Senate Special Committee on Aging in the morning and the Finance Committee in the afternoon.

In hours of testimony, O’Malley said nothing about one of the reforms he heralded in the interview: limiting how far back in time the agency can reach to recover overpaymen­ts.

In an interview between the hearings, O’Malley said, “That’s still being unpacked and may well require a change in regulation.” He said he expected an announceme­nt within a few months.

O’Malley said he didn’t know how far back the limit would go but noted that other agencies tend to have a look-back period of four years.

Establishi­ng a statute of limitation­s is one of the most important steps the government can take to address overpaymen­ts, Boston University economist Laurence Kotlikoff, who has studied and written about clawbacks, said in an interview.

“If Social Security can’t figure out its mistakes within 18 months, it should be on them,” Kotlikoff said.

Having to repay a year and a half of benefits could cost people their homes, Kotlikoff said.

Rebecca Vallas, who has helped beneficiar­ies navigate overpaymen­ts as a legal aid attorney and has called for reform of clawbacks, said the steps O’Malley announced “are nothing short of historic.”

Shifting the burden of proof “is a dramatic change,” said David Camp, chief executive of the National Organizati­on of Social Security Claimants’ Representa­tives. While a lot is riding on the details and how O’Malley’s plans are implemente­d, that change alone should lead to “a very different experience” for anyone challengin­g a clawback, Camp added.

In the past, there has been a gap between what the agency says and what it does. O’Malley said 10% has been the default withholdin­g rate in one of the Social Security programs, Supplement­al Security Income. But KFF Health News and Cox Media Group have found people whose entire SSI benefit checks were suspended on account of alleged overpaymen­ts.

The changes announced won’t apply automatica­lly to people already on a repayment plan or whose monthly benefits are already being docked, O’Malley said outside the hearings. To take advantage of the new terms, beneficiar­ies would have to contact the agency and request relief, he said. The agency will notify people that they have that option, he added.

O’Malley implored lawmakers to increase funding for the agency. On average, customers trying to reach the agency by phone wait 38 minutes, he said. Most who call the 800 number “hang up in disgust after waiting far too long,” he said in written testimony.

Trouble getting through to anyone at the agency can contribute to overpaymen­ts and make it harder for recipients to resolve them.

Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., chair of the Special Committee on Aging, said unless Congress provides adequate funding for the agency, fixing problems “will be really difficult.”

Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana, the top Republican on that committee, called for looking at how the agency is run “before we throw more money at it.” He suggested focusing on what can be done to prevent overpaymen­ts “rather than forgiving them once they occur” or trying to claw them back, “which is insult on top of injury.”

O’Malley noted that the Social Security Administra­tion recently sought public comment on a long-delayed plan to reduce overpaymen­ts by automatica­lly obtaining monthly wage and employment data on beneficiar­ies.

Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., praised O’Malley for tackling what Wyden called “the scourge of overpaymen­ts.”

“I think you’re really off to a strong start in terms of righting wrongs,” Wyden said.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — an independen­t source of health policy research, polling and journalism. Learn more about KFF at kffhealthn­ews.org.

 ?? KFF HEALTH NEWS ?? Social Security Administra­tion Commission­er Martin O’Malley testifies Wednesday during a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing.
KFF HEALTH NEWS Social Security Administra­tion Commission­er Martin O’Malley testifies Wednesday during a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing.
 ?? COX MEDIA GROUP ?? Denise Woods of Savannah is among the millions harmed by an attempt to claw back billions in overpaymen­ts sent to beneficiar­ies.
COX MEDIA GROUP Denise Woods of Savannah is among the millions harmed by an attempt to claw back billions in overpaymen­ts sent to beneficiar­ies.

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