ASTM A 992 is not "dual grade" steel. "Dual grade" steel met requirements of both A 572 Gr. 50 and A 36--in other words, it met the minimum yield and ultimate of 50 and 65 ksi, respectively, and also the max ultimate of 80 ksi and slightly higher ductility that the A 36 spec carries. Most steel labeled either A 572 Gr. 50 or A 36 really meets both grades, regardless of whether it's specifically labeled "dual grade". (The answer to designers saying, "No, don't give me dual grade, if I say A 36 then what I want is A 36!" was simply to leave off the "A 572" notation.)
A 992 has the same minimum yield and ultimate as Gr. 50, but instead of capping the ultimate at 80 ksi they cap the yield at 65 ksi. It used to be a special version of A 572 Gr. 50 and then they made it official. So all A 992 is theoretically "dual" graded with A 572 Gr. 50, but that doesn't say much, and that's not what people are talking about when they say dual grade. If it meets the 80 ksi max ultimate and the higher elongation requirements, it'll be dual (or triple) grade.
A 992 is replacing A 36 and A 572 Gr. 50 for wide-flange beams.
Regarding whether you should bother designing for A 36...
it's not the big savings you imagine and that we were taught in school. It is no longer the case, and hasn't been for decades, that Gr. 50 is some high-strength specialty material to be brought in when A 36 just isn't enough. The cost difference fluctuates, isn't usually that much, and sometimes, depending on market forces etc., there is even a cost premium on the A 36 because the max ultimate makes it a rarer commodity than the Gr. 50. For built-up plate girders, I don't see the point of 36/50 hybrid girders; any possible cost savings would probably be offset by the effort spent tracking two kinds of material and the extra trouble to design a hybrid cross-section. (Gr. 70 is another story.)
Either way, you can't assume that the yield strength you design for is the exact yield strength you get--those specs are minimums. You can't assume that if you have 50-ksi columns and 36-ksi beams, that you're getting "weak beam strong column" ductile failure modes. A 36 and A 992 both have maximums of some sort that you can count on--but unless that maximum is less than the minimum of some other grade, you still can't guarantee that the supposedly lower-graded steel will fail first, especially because lower grades of steel tend to be more ductile.
If you want a quick side-by-side comparison of all these grades, check out ASTM A 709. A 709 Grades 36, 50, and 50S are equivalent to A 36, A 572 Gr. 50, and A 992, respectively.
Hg