Patricia Heimerl landed her first job in high school, bought a house at 22 and worked the last eight years of a long office career at Intel. She paid her bills, built a retirement account and, like most Americans, watched as Social Security took its cut from every paycheck.
Part of those deductions went to an insurance fund that pays benefits to people who become too sick or injured to work. Heimerl couldn't imagine that would ever mean her.
Then it did.
Doctors diagnosed her with fibromyalgia, which causes chronic muscle pain. Heimerl couldn't hold a job.
In January, the Social Security Administration decided the 55-year-old McMinnville, Ore., resident was disabled and approved her for benefits.
Here's what it cost her: six years.
Six years fighting Social Security's delays. Six years dealing with lawyers and paperwork. Six years burning through savings and selling her house to survive.
Aug 10, 2008
Waiting In Minnesota
From the St. Paul Pioneer Press:
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