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30
Jul
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by Jim Swanson
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By Richard Wolf
USA TODAY
The Social Security Administration faces a record - and rapidly growing - backlog of appeals by people who claim they are too disabled to work. Through June, it had just over 745,000 cases pending, and the wait for a hearing averaged 17 months, also a record.
Claimants in some parts of the country must wait up to 31 months, according to the agency. “People have died waiting for a hearing,” Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue says.
The agency says the backlog doubled in six years and could reach 1 million by 2010.
FEELING PAIN: Delays can lead to personal havoc; wait times in your city
Astrue is trying to reduce the waits, but Congress has provided nearly $1 billion less than President Bush sought over the past six years. Field offices have lost more than 2,300 workers in less than two years, leaving the agency with its lowest staffing level since the early 1970s. The agency froze staffing levels for nine months last year after threatening furloughs.
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Filed: Health Care, Society

Claimants in some parts of the country must wait up to 31 months, according to the agency. “People have died waiting for a hearing,” Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue says.




