[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 129 (Wednesday, September 9, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H5860]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY TRUST FUND
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Reed) for 5 minutes.
Mr. REED. Mr. Speaker, there are a lot of important issues before the
House this week, but I wanted to take an opportunity to raise an issue
that we have been working on in our office for quite some time.
We, as a body, Mr. Speaker, will be faced with an opportunity,
hopefully, to resolve this issue here shortly in the next few months,
and that is the issue of the Social Security disability insurance trust
fund.
Not a lot of people are aware--and I just read the Social Security
trustees report over the summer--that the disability trust fund goes
insolvent in 2016. That means millions of Americans who rely on Social
Security disability benefits are looking at a situation where their
benefits are going to be cut 20 percent because of the insolvency of
the Social Security trust fund--2016, Mr. Speaker, that is right around
the corner.
When I raised this issue 2 years ago with the White House, with Jack
Lew--our Treasury Secretary--in our Committee on Ways and Means
hearing, I asked him 2 years ago: What is the plan? What is the
solution to this problem?
What I was ultimately told was this is what we are going to do: we
are just going to take money from the Social Security retirement fund
and move it over to the disability trust fund and bail it out.
Well, in my private life in business, I knew a lot of businessowners,
and what that essentially was, it is robbing Peter to pay Paul because
the Social Security retirement fund is on a path to insolvency just a
few short years down the road.
I said we could do better. That is why I was glad to join with my
colleague, Sam Johnson, who chairs the Subcommittee on Social Security
here in Washington, to change the rules to make sure that that solution
would not be the one that we follow here in 2015 and 2016. We can do
better.
You know why we can do better? It is because we care. We care about
the people that are in the disability trust fund, and we need to listen
to those people. This is what their experience is with the disability
trust fund today. They are frustrated. It is a bureaucracy. It is a
mess.
We have overpayments. We have fraudulent payments. We have a system
that penalizes people returning to work, rather than trying to
incentivize them and stand with them when they return to work.
We had an individual by the name of Mike Zelly come before the
committee and testify to us, and he is in the disability trust fund. He
was in a horrific automobile accident 36 years ago and has been in a
wheelchair ever since.
These are the people we should listen to. These are the people that
know the disability trust fund the best. What his testimony to us was,
he says we should seize this opportunity to fix this problem, take care
of the bureaucracy, make sure the overpayments don't occur because,
when an overpayment occurs to a disability recipient, guess who has to
pay it back? It is the disability recipient because of the Social
Security Administration's incompetence. That is not right. That is not
fair.
Most importantly, what he talked about in his 36 years in the
disability trust fund is that, when he tried to return to work, he was
faced with obstacle after obstacle of a bureaucracy that said, if you
do that, you will lose your benefit. That is not right.
Mike Zelly offered ideas on how we can improve the system to
streamline this bureaucracy. This is the process someone in the Social
Security disability trust fund has to go through in order to try to go
back to work. We need to simplify it, and we need to stand with the
American work ethic for the people in the disability trust fund that
want to return to work.
There was a recent Brookings Institution report that came across my
desk that I read. There was 40 percent return on the beneficiaries in
the disability trust fund that indicated they would like to return to
work, but because of the bureaucracy, there was fear. There was a sense
that, if they did that, they would lose their benefit, and they just
couldn't risk it.
That is why we are offering commonsense reforms here out of our
office, out of the Committee on Ways and Means, out of this House,
hopefully, shortly, so that what we can do is make sure that those
disability trust fund recipients don't look at a 20 percent cut in
2016.
We will hold them harmless, and we will make sure we do what is
necessary in order to make sure that our obligations and promises under
the disability trust fund are met to those individuals because that is
the right thing to do.
We cannot lose this opportunity to modernize the Social Security
disability trust fund to make sure that we stand with those that want
to return to work and believe in the American work ethic like we do.
I ask my colleagues to join with us on a bipartisan basis, and there
has been an indication of bipartisan work that we have been able to
show here in the initial conversations.
Let's modernize the disability trust fund; let's cure the waste,
fraud, and abuse, but most importantly, let's stand with the
individuals like Mike Zelly who want to return to work because it gives
him dignity and it gives him a sense that he is contributing rather
than being in any way a burden on the system.
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