Adding to this, I heard that persons with disability may not be welcomed
as emigrants to Canada as they are seen as dependents on medical
assistance. The irony is, they allow persons with Type 2 Diabetes since
it is considered a common medical problem!

Subramani 



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of pamnani
Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2007 12:32 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Disabled, and Waiting for Justice - New York Times

For those who love the USKanchan  

Disabled, and Waiting for Justice - New York Times
The New York Times

December 11, 2007
Editorial

Disabled, and Waiting for Justice

We know what is behind President Bush's sudden enthusiasm for fiscal
discipline after years of running up deficits and debt: political
posturing, just in
time for the 2008 election. But one should not forget the damage that
his administration has also inflicted by shortchanging important
domestic programs
in favor of tax cuts for the wealthy and his never-ending Iraq war.

A case in point is the worsening bureaucratic delays at the chronically
underfunded Social Security Administration that have kept hundreds of
thousands
of disabled Americans from timely receipt of their Social Security
disability benefits.

As laid out by Erik Eckholm in The Times on Monday, the backlog of
applicants who are awaiting a decision after appealing an initial
rejection has soared
to 755,000 from 311,000 in 2000. The average wait for an appeals hearing
now exceeds 500 days, twice as long as applicants had to wait in 2000.

Typically two-thirds of those who appeal eventually win their cases. But
during the long wait, their conditions may worsen and their lives often
fall apart.
More and more people have lost their homes, declared bankruptcy or even
died while awaiting an appeals hearing.

In one poignant case described by Mr. Eckholm, a North Carolina woman
who is tethered to an oxygen tank 24 hours a day has been waiting three
years for
a decision. She finally got a hearing last month and is awaiting a final
verdict, but, meanwhile, she has lost her apartment and alternates
sleeping at
her daughter's crowded house and a friend's place.

The cause of the bottlenecks is well known. There are simply too few
administrative law judges - 1,025 at present - to keep up with the
workload. The Social
Security Administration is adopting automated tools and more efficient
administrative practices, but virtually everyone agrees that no real
dent will be
made in the backlog until the agency can hire more judges and support
staff.

The blame for this debacle lies mostly with the Republicans. For most of
this decade, the administration has held the agency's budget requests
down and
Republican-dominated Congresses have appropriated less than the
administration requested. Now the Democratic-led Congress wants to
increase funding to
the Social Security Administration, and the White House is resisting.

Last month, Congress passed a $151 billion health, education and labor
spending bill that would have given the Social Security Administration
$275 million
more than the president requested, enough to hire a lot more judges and
provide other vital services. But Mr. Bush vetoed that bill as
profligate.

Democrats in Congress are working on a compromise to meet Mr. Bush half
way on the whole range of domestic spending bills. The White House is
not interested
in compromise.

If the president remains intransigent, federal agencies may have to limp
along under continuing resolutions that maintain last year's spending
levels. That
would likely, among many other domestic problems, crimp any new hiring
at the Social Security Administration and might require furloughs,
leading to even
longer waits. Mr. Bush should back down from his veto threat and accept
a reasonable compromise. Both sides should ensure that real efforts are
made to
reduce these intolerable backlogs.
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