They know when Timmy is a penny short or a minute late.
One department might. The agency as a whole does not.
These separate departments don't know what the others are doing. It's like what happens when you sever the connection between the hemispheres of the brain, with each department behaving independently with little oversight.
The department that's paid to do clawbacks has nothing to do with fraud prevention, and neither has anything to do with the department that processes applications.
Some dude from Lexis Nexus Risk solutions said you could save a ridiculous amount of money by ending "self-certification." I tried to look up what that is. It's not a keyword with a lot of hits. But I think it refers to the fact that the SSA just presumes submitted information to be accurate.
What we really need are the numbers before covid and after it.
Somebody had head office should have seen the body count reflect in their stats.
Just as a point of showing how on-point their systems are.
They know when Timmy is a penny short or a minute late.
One department might. The agency as a whole does not.
These separate departments don't know what the others are doing. It's like what happens when you sever the connection between the hemispheres of the brain, with each department behaving independently with little oversight.
The department that's paid to do clawbacks has nothing to do with fraud prevention, and neither has anything to do with the department that processes applications.
The entire edifice is dysfunctional.
Some dude from Lexis Nexus Risk solutions said you could save a ridiculous amount of money by ending "self-certification." I tried to look up what that is. It's not a keyword with a lot of hits. But I think it refers to the fact that the SSA just presumes submitted information to be accurate.