Disabled beneficiaries aged 18–64 in current-payment status as a percentage of state population aged 18–64, December 2009
Aug 2, 2010
What States Have The Highest Incidence Of Disability
Disabled beneficiaries aged 18–64 in current-payment status as a percentage of state population aged 18–64, December 2009
Aug 1, 2010
It's So Easy To Get The Overpayment Waived, Why Bother Declaring It
Steve Caseley couldn't believe what showed up in the mail last week. Was it some kind of joke?
No, the letter to Lisa Moser arrived on official Social Security Administration stationery. Moser - who has Down syndrome and lives with Caseley and his wife, who is Moser's sister, in West Des Moines - owed the government $4,425.40.
"Due to incorrect computation for the period of November 1987 through June 2010," the letter said, Moser received $183,227.55 in disability insurance benefits when she should have received $178,802.15. ...
Privacy laws prohibit Social Security officials from discussing specific situations, but communications director John Garlinger did speak in general terms.
Could the source of the problem be the wages Moser earned from Panera and Wendy's? It's possible.
"Part of the definition of disabled means you can't work," Garlinger said. "If we say someone has been overpaid because they were earning too much money, they need to gather up their income tax records and bring them in. We'll go through that. It's not impossible we missed something. It's not impossible, for whatever reason, not all the income was reported."
Refugees To Lose Benefits
The Social Security Administration is about to terminate cash assistance for thousands of indigent refugees who are severely disabled or over the age of 64.
“You will lose your Supplemental Security Income on Oct. 1,” the agency says in letters being mailed to more than 3,800 refugees.
All fled persecution or torture. Many are too old or infirm to work and are not yet eligible to become United States citizens.
Federal law sets a seven-year limit on payments to refugees. ...
The extra eligibility period is now ending, and Congress has not taken action to extend it.
Jul 31, 2010
New Hearing Office In Wisconsin
Social Security Disability Awards
Social Security disability awards, 1980–2009
Jul 30, 2010
I Thought This Might Be Coming
Today, Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee Chairman Earl Pomeroy (D-ND) introduced H.R. 5987, The Seniors Protection Act of 2010. The bill would assist 57 million American seniors, retired and disabled veterans, and disabled individuals with a one-time $250 payment that they deserve in the event that no inflation adjustment is announced this Fall.
“Seniors did not cause the near meltdown of the economy that occurred in the last days of the prior Administration, yet too many are still feeling the brunt of its fallout,” said Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee Chairman Earl Pomeroy (D-ND). “Today we help seniors across the country who face the likely possibility that on October 15th Social Security will announce for the first time ever—as a result of a long-standing statutory formula—that there will not be a cost-of-living-adjustment in Social Security benefits in back-to-back years.”...
Chairman Pomeroy pledged: “This bill is responsible to seniors and to taxpayers. The authors are committed to fiscal responsibility and will ensure that the Seniors Protection Act of 2010 shall not cause an increase in the federal deficit. When the bill comes to the House floor it will include the necessary offsets to comply with the PAYGO law.”
Medicare's 45th Anniversary
Coalition Forms To Protect Social Security
- Social Security did not cause the federal deficit; its benefits should not be cut to reduce the deficit.
- Social Security should not be privatized in whole or in part.
- Social Security should not be means-tested.
- Congress should act in the coming few years to close Social Security’s funding gap by requiring those who are most able to afford it to pay somewhat more.
- Social Security’s retirement age, already scheduled to increase from 65 to 67, should not be raised further.
- Social Security’s benefits should not be reduced, including by changes to the COLA or the benefit formula.
- Social Security’s benefits should be increased for those who are most disadvantaged.