From a press release:
U.S. Senators Ron Wyden, D-Ore.[Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over Social Security], Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio [Chairman of the Finance Committee's Social Security Subcommittee], and Bob Casey, D-Pa., urged the Social Security Administration (SSA) to provide additional information on the scope and magnitude of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiaries who had their benefits suspended and were assessed an overpayment due to receiving Economic Impact Payments (EIPs)[a pandemic program]. ...
Between April 2020 and July 2021, these payments were disregarded as countable resources for 12 months for purposes of SSI eligibility. In August 2021, SSA announced that EIPs would not be counted toward eligibility and payment amount for SSI purposes indefinitely. However, SSA suspended benefits and assessed overpayments to individuals receiving SSI benefits because of the stimulus payments.
Senator Wyden previously raised this concern with SSA in two separate hearings in 2021, and the agency responded stating they had updated its policy guidance for SSA staff. However, recent reporting has shown that SSI beneficiaries continue to receive overpayment notices because of the EIPs.
To understand the scope and magnitude of beneficiaries affected, and the actions SSA has taken to resolve such suspensions and overpayments, the senators asked the SSA Acting Commissioner to provide the following information:
1. The number of individuals who had their benefits reduced or suspended because of the EIPs during the following periods:
a. March 2020 to July 2021;
b. August 2021 to December 2022; and
c. January 2023 to September 2023.
2. Of those individuals identified in Question 1:
a. The number of individuals whose benefits were reinstated without an appeals hearing.
b. The number of individuals whose benefits were reinstated due to an appeals hearing.
c. The number of individuals whose appeals are pending.
d. The number of individuals who appeals were denied.
3. A list of the agency’s past and ongoing actions to address people who received overpayment notices resulting from EIPs?
4. The number of claimants who were denied SSI benefits because of the EIPs.
5. Whether SSA has required each beneficiary impacted to file an appeal.