Last Updated on January 1, 2021 by FERS Disability Attorney
On the one hand, objectivity can be viewed as a positive thing; for, with it, one is assured that all applications are treated equally, by the implementation of identical criteria across the board. “Gut feelings”, personal beliefs, and that “sixth sense” is eliminated; and thus is fairness achieved by the equal treatment of all cases, and “exceptional circumstances” are not, and cannot be, considered.
What such an approach gains in large-scale application, however, may lose out in individual cases. For, if experience and age accounts for anything, it should allow for decisions made outside of the mainstream of thought, based upon those very factors which make up the difference — wisdom from years of engaging in a particular endeavor.
The problem with the bureaucratization of a process is precisely that it fails to allow for exceptions; but concomitantly, it is precisely those unique circumstances which cry out for a carved-out exception. In a Federal or Postal Disability Retirement application, submitted to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, whether under FERS or CSRS, there are always cases where all of the facts and circumstances reveal eligibility; but in applying the mathematical (and thoughtless) algorithm of criteria-based analysis, there may be something missing. Perhaps the doctor would not, or could not, say exactly X; or the test results revealed nothing particularly significant.
In some ways, the medical conditions identified as Fibromyalgia or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome represent such scenarios. In those instances, it is important to descriptively convey the human narrative in a particularly poignant manner.
The administrative bureaucracy is here to remain among us; to rise above the level of thoughtless application of a criteria, however, one must creatively encourage the phoenix to rise from the ashes of boredom, and span its wings to include those others who deserve the benefits of FERS Medical Disability Retirement.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
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