Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Social Security wrongly declares 14000 people dead each year - CNNMoney


Laura Brooks discovered she had been mistakenly declared dead when she stopped receiving her disability checks, and her rent and student loan payments unexpectedly bounced.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- More Americans are being erroneously killed off by the Social Security Administration every day.
Of the approximately 2.8 million death reports the Social Security Administration receives per year, about 14,000 -- or one in every 200 deaths -- are incorrectly entered into its Death Master File, which contains the Social Security numbers, names, birth dates, death dates, zip codes and last-known residences of more than 87 million deceased Americans. That averages out to 38 life-altering mistakes a day.
While these errors occur online, in the depths of the administration's database, they have a very real impact on the people who have effectively been declared dead.
"Erroneous death entries can lead to benefit termination, cause severe financial hardship and distress to affected individuals, and result in the publication of living individuals' [personal identifying information] in the [Death Master File]," the Inspector General said in its most recent evaluation of the database.
Laura Brooks, of Spotsylvania, Va., discovered she had been declared dead when she stopped receiving her disability checks, and her rent and student loan payments unexpectedly bounced.
She went to her bank and a representative said her account had been closed because she was dead. Brooks, a 52-year old mother of two, was already on permanent disability because of a severe depressive disorder, so hearing this turned her already difficult world completely upside down.
"It was one of those surreal things, like seeing a UFO," said Brooks. "When you are a person who already thought that maybe you should be dead because life was so bad to you, I thought this could be a premonition."
The bank representative told Brooks she couldn't reopen her account until she could prove she was alive. When she went to the Social Security office in January 2001, she found out she was declared dead on Dec. 6, 2000. To correct this, she had to submit the pay stubs she was receiving from a program that helps people on disability get back to work.
It took two months for the Social Security Administration to finally "revive" her. The administration later explained that a funeral director had mistyped a Social Security number when submitting a death notice to the agency.
Because of that misstep, Brooks said she accumulated between $300 and $400 in fees for bounced checks, and she hadn't received the more than $1,000 in disability payments she was owed. Once she was declared alive again, the Social Security Administration only resumed her payments -- it wouldn't reimburse her for missed payments, she said.
"Those disability checks were everything I had, and the $300 to $400 I had to pay in fees was more than half of that weekly income," she said. "But more than the financial impact of all of this was the psychological shock -- it spiraled me into further depression and really started me on the road to questioning authority."
Making matters worse, Brooks said the Social Security Administration had somehow lost the file containing all of her information, including her disability benefit records and medical history. It took her two years to rebuild it.
Eleven years after being declared dead by the Social Security Administration, Brooks claims the agency has yet to apologize to her for the debacle.
The Social Security Administration said it cannot comment on specific cases but said it works as quickly as it can to fix these types of mistakes and that two months is too long for an error like this to be resolved.
36,657 erroneous deaths in three years
Of course, Brooks isn't the only living person to have been put in the Social Security graveyard. In a recent investigation, the Social Security Office of the Inspector General, which oversees the Social Security Administration, discovered that the Death Master File contained 36,657 death entries between May 2007 and April 2010 for people who were very much alive.
In fact, the Social Security Administration admits that erroneous entries slip through the cracks.
"It is unfortunate, but some of the death data that we post to our records ... proves to be wrong and we correct it as soon as possible," said administration spokesman Mark Hinkle. "Usually the error was inadvertently caused because of a human typing error when death information was entered into a computer system."
This inaccurate information is then sold to the public, as well as to banks and credit bureaus.
Those who are declared dead not only lose their ability to apply for credit or receive benefits, but they are also at a high risk for identity theft now that all of their personally-identifying information has been made public.
In one review, the Inspector General found that months after the Social Security Administration deleted incorrect information from the database, the personally identifiable information of 28% of the individuals was still publicly available on at least one other web site.
What to do if you've been declared dead
To avoid the financial hardship or risk of identity theft as a result of being named to the Social Security's death list, the Identity Theft Resource Center recommends that you do the following:
First, find out who reported you as dead.
Then, get a copy of your death certificate from the county clerk's or recorder's office where the death was reported, and fill out a form to amend the certificate. The death certificate will include the name of whoever reported your death. This person is typically contacted to sign the amendment as well.
To remove your name from the database, you need to make an appointment at your local Social Security office. Bring a photo ID and the certified copy of the amended death certificate, the ITRC said.
Once you correct the information with Social Security, you may need to contact your bank, credit bureaus and any other entities that are under the impression that you're deceased to let them know you've been born again.
Social Security's Hinkle said it's typically easier to fix than this.
"It normally involves seeing the person face-to-face and verifying some form of current ID," he said, adding that the administration occasionally writes letters that people can present to other entities to prove they are alive.
"We take these situations seriously and wish they didn't happen at all, but when we find out it has occurred, we help the person fix it," said Hinkle.
Have you been wrongly declared dead? E-mail blake.ellis@turner.com if you would like to share your story.  To top of page
First Published: August 17, 2011: 5:21 AM ET
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Do Disability Benefits Discourage Work? - National Center for Policy Analysis

Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) is intended to replace lost income for people suffering from a disability that is likely to cause substantial long-term losses in earnings.  A concern has been that SSDI may have a disincentive effect on the willingness of recipients to work -- that is, that some SSDI beneficiaries would work if they did not receive benefits, say Nicole Maestas and Kathleen J. Mullen of the RAND Corporation.

The authors examined SSDI applications between 2005 and 2006, focusing on a "natural experiment" that arises from the disability determination process itself:  Some of the disability examiners who decide these cases are more stringent than others.  This allowed Maestas and Mullen to compare work activity among similar applicants who were initially allowed or denied benefits only because their applications were randomly assigned to disability examiners with different propensities to allow benefits.

Maestas and Mullen found that those who have impairments that are on the margin of allowance for SSDI benefits are strongly discouraged from returning to work if they are awarded benefits. They also found that those who are relatively less impaired are substantially more likely to return to work if denied benefits, whereas beneficiaries with the most severe impairments would not be any more likely to work if they had not received SSDI.

The finding highlights a major inefficiency in program operations: potentially redundant and inconsistent processing of a large fraction of applicants who are ultimately allowed to receive benefits.  This kind of evidence should be useful to policymakers and taxpayers who are interested in constraining the growth of the SSDI program.

Source: Nicole Maestas and Kathleen J. Mullen, "Do Disability Benefits Discourage Work?" RAND Corporation, August 2011.

For text:

http://www.rand.org/pubs/working_briefs/WB111.html

For more on Economic Issues:

www.ncpa.org/sub/dpd/index.php?Article_Category=17



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Monday, June 27, 2011

How The Social Security Administration Determines If You Are Disabled - U.S. Politics Today

June 26, 2011

The Social Security Administration uses a complicated process to determine if you are disabled. Here is some of the information they will consider when hearing your claim.

June 26, 2011 /24-7PressRelease/ -- How The Social Security Administration Determines If You Are Disabled

When you apply for Social Security disability benefits from the Social Security Administration (SSA), a complex, five-step process is used to determine if you are disabled.

The process involves an examination of the work you did, the skills you learned and if your injuries prevent you from returning to that work or some other type of work.

The agency is interested in your medical condition, age, education, training, and work experience to see if you are able to return to the workforce.

The Five-Step Process

Step One:

-Are you working?

Step Two:

-Is your condition "severe"?

Step Three:

-Is your condition found in the list of disabling conditions?

Step Four:

-Can you do the work you did previously?

Step Five:

-Can you do any other type of work?

How the Process Works

The first three steps are straightforward; if you are working and making more than $1,000 a month, you won't qualify for disability benefits. If your condition is "severe," meaning it interferes with your ability to work, they then move to step three, where if you match a condition on the list, you generally qualify.

If you don't match a condition listed, the SSA will determine if your condition is of equal severity to one that is listed. If they determine it is of equal severity, you generally qualify as disabled. If not, the SSA then moves to step four.

Step Four

Step four is very involved and entails an examination of your previous work history. This is used to create a baseline from which they can determine what capability you had and what remains in your current condition. The SSA takes into consideration what work activities you can do with your medical condition.

If you are determined to have a medical condition that affects your ability to work on a regular basis, but it is not as severe as any impairment described in the Listing of Impairments, the agency will assess your "residual functional capacity" (RFC).

Your RFC is based on all of the evidence about your condition and used to determine what you can still do, despite any limitations caused by your impairment and related symptoms, such as pain and fatigue.

To decide whether you can do your past work, SSA looks at a great number of factors, such as your ability for sitting, standing, walking, lifting, carrying, pushing and pulling; your ability for reaching, handling large objects, using your fingers, feeling, stooping, balancing, climbing stairs or ladders, kneeling, crouching and crawling.

They consider environmental conditions, such as temperature extremes, wetness, humidity, noise, hazardous working conditions like moving machinery or heights, dust, fumes, odors, gases, poor ventilation, vibrations.

Other general factors include your ability to see, hear, speak, maintain concentration and attention at work and understand, remember and carry out instructions.

Your Work History

The Social Security Administration then looks at the demands of your recent past work and compares them with their assessment of your remaining ability to do basic work activities. They only look at past work that they consider relevant.

What information do they need about your past work? A list of things they consider include:

-Main responsibilities of your job(s)

-Main tasks you performed

-Dates you worked (month and year)

-Number of hours a day you worked per week

-Rate of pay you received

-Tools, machinery and equipment you used

-Knowledge, skills and abilities your work required

-Extent of supervision you had

-Amount of independent judgment you used

-Objects you had to lift and carry and how much they weighed

-How much you had to sit, stand, walk, climb, stoop, kneel, crouch, crawl, balance

-How you used your hands, arms and legs

-Speaking, hearing and vision requirements of your job(s)

-Environmental conditions of your workplace(s)

And There Is More

There are still more factors they examine in making the determination. As you can see, they will require a very detailed list of information about your condition, abilities and training. Providing this information is absolutely essentialto your claim. SSA notes on their website the following:

It is your responsibility to see that we get the information we need to determine whether you are disabled. If you do not provide the information we need about your medical condition(s) and your work history, we will deny your claim for disability.

A Complex Process

If, after all the questions in step four, they determine you cannot perform your previous type of work, they then move to step five, which decides you can do some other type of work.

In this step, the SSA looks at another long list of elements:

-If you can adjust to other work

-Your age

-Your education

-Your work experience

-Your recent education that may provide you skills you can use

-Your age, education and work experience on your remaining capacity for work

In terms of complexity, the application for social security disability benefits is vastly more complex than filing a federal income tax form, but the consequences can be just as severe. If you make a mistake or forget to supply the appropriate information, your claim will be rejected.

For this reason, speaking with an attorney knowledgeable with the Social Security Act, regulations and SSA procedures is very valuable as a way of obtaining your benefits. The process is complex and can be confusing. An attorney can help you understand how to file a claim and assist with the necessary procedures you must follow.

It should be noted that in the discussion of the five steps, the Social Security Administration includes a disclaimer that states:

The following is general information only. The Social Security Act and related regulations, rulings and case law should be used or cited as authority for the Social Security disability programs.

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Economix: Men, Unemployment and Disability - New York Times (blog)

In the worst economic times of the 1950s and ’60s, about 9 percent of men in the prime of their working lives (25 to 54 years old) were not working. At the depth of the severe recession in the early 1980s, about 15 percent of prime-age men were not working. Today, more than 18 percent of such men aren’t working.
That’s a depressing statistic: nearly one out of every five men between 25 and 54 is not employed. Yes, some of them are happily retired. Some are going to school. And some are taking care of their children. But most don’t fall into any of these categories. They simply aren’t working. They’re managing to get by some other way.
For growing numbers of these men, the federal disability program is a significant source of support. Disabled workers — men and women — received $115 billion in benefits last year and another $75 billion in medical costs. (Disability recipients become eligible for Medicare two years after starting to receive benefits.) That $190 billion sum is the equivalent of about $1,500 in taxes for each American household.
Yet disability usually goes unlargely uncovered by the media. Lately, it hasn’t. Motoko Rich of The Times and Damian Paletta of The Wall Street Journal have both written richly detailed articles recently.
Mr. Paletta explains:
The [disability program] is set to soon become the first big federal benefit program to run out of cash — and one of the main reasons is U.S. states and territories have a large say in who qualifies for the federally funded program. Without changes, the Social Security retirement fund can survive intact through about 2040 and Medicare through 2029. The disability fund, however, will run dry in four to seven years without federal intervention, government auditors say.
Perhaps the worst thing about the disability program is that, once in it, many people never leave. They were eligible for disability because of a legitimate injury. But once they stop working, many become less appealing job candidates and less motivated to find work. Their chances of finding well-paying work shrivel. Relative to a low-paying job, especially if the job exacerbates a chronic injury or chronic pain, the modest monthly disability payment of about $1,100 on average can look appealing.
As the economists David Autor and Mark Duggan have written, “the program provides strong incentives to applicants and beneficiaries to remain permanently out of the labor force, and it provides no incentive to employers to implement cost-effective accommodations that enable employees with work limitations to remain on the job.”
In that same paper (a joint effort of the Center for American Progress and the Hamilton Project), Mr. Autor and Mr. Duggan suggest some changes to the system. The two economists, as Ms. Rich writes, propose:
that disabled workers be offered partial income support and services to remain in the workplace. Moreover, they advocate for employers to purchase mandatory disability insurance as they do unemployment insurance and workers’ compensation, giving them incentive to accommodate workers rather than send them to the federal benefit rolls.
The more workers who went on disability, the higher a company’s insurance costs would be.
Given how much variation already exists in states’ approaches to the program — as Mr. Paletta’s article details — you could imagine how an innovative governor might try to make his or her state a model for others to follow. And reforming disability should be part of any solution to our huge looming budget deficits.
Three articles from The Times have more details on the problems with the system. So does Ms. Rich’s blog post from Thursday.
View the original article here

Social Security disability for CSRS employee - Federal Times (blog)

April 1st, 2011 | Uncategorized

Q. I am 58 years old with 35 years’ service and I am eligible for optional civil service retirement. After I retire, can I apply for Social Security disability benefits ? I have had some serious health conditions and my CSRS annuity will not be enough for us to live on. I have credit for 64 Social Security quarters from other jobs I have had.
A. Yes, you could apply for Social Security disability benefits; however, the criteria for Social Security disability benefits is much higher than those for retirement under CSRS or FERS. To be approved for them, you would have to be found so disabled that you were incapable of any gainful employment.
Tags: CSRS, disability, SOCIAL SECURITY
FedLine Home | Permalink | April 1st, 2011
PLEASE NOTE! Do not submit ANY questions via the Comments form. Instead, please send your questions directly to fedexperts@federaltimes.com. Questions submitted via the Comments form will NOT be answered!
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Pay Back the Money Borrowed From Social Security - Huffington Post (blog)

Throughout its 75 year history, Social Security has provided critical economic security to millions of retirees, families, children and the disabled. Social Security is paid for by the dedicated contributions of workers and their employers, has administrative costs of less than one percent, and since it cannot borrow to fund its operations, Social Security does not contribute to the deficit. No wonder that Americans from all walks of life consistently and overwhelmingly support our nation's most successful social insurance program -- a level of support that is not achieved by other governmental programs.
Social Security currently has a $2.6 trillion surplus which has been building up since the 1983 amendments and is intended to help absorb the retirement of the baby boomers. This surplus is invested in US Treasury securities that are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. According to the Social Security Trustees 2010 report, Social Security can pay full benefits until 2037, at which time, if nothing were done to strengthen its financing, Social Security would still be able to pay about 78 percent of benefits. This quarter of a century means there is time to strengthen its financing without cutting benefits for future beneficiaries. The American people will insist that Congress do what is needed for the program to pay full benefits and protect these benefits they were promised and have earned.
Social Security Opponents Use Fear to Manipulate Debate
Opponents of Social Security have been working for many years to tell a much different story about Social Security in order to influence how the media and Washington decision makers view it. One example of this is Wall Street insider Pete Peterson who has dedicated $1 billion of his Wall Street fortune to the destruction of Social Security as we know it. Peterson is joined in his efforts by other wealthy special interests that have much to gain if Social Security is cut or eliminated.
Despite the overwhelming public support for Social Security and the critical retirement, survivors and disability insurance it provides to millions of Americans, Peterson and his Wall Street friends want to reduce Social Security's protections and force average working Americans to put their future retirement, life and disability security in the hands of Wall Street -- the same crowd that nearly caused a collapse of our economy and pushed the country into the Great Recession.
It would be very unpopular for the opponents to simply state that their goal is to reduce or eliminate Social Security, requiring politicians to eat from a poison apple. Instead, the opponents try to create false fear about the future of Social Security by making it seem as if the program contributes to the nation's budget deficit and debt. The same Wall Street firms that needed the taxpayers to bail them out -- and individuals like Peterson who took advantage of a tax loophole that enabled him to pay taxes on his Wall Street profits at the same rate as a janitor cleaning his office -- are conducting a massive lobbying campaign to reduce Social Security protections for working Americans and their families by claiming it is a way to lower the federal budget deficit.
The opponents' tactic of setting up Social Security as a false culprit in the deficit problem diverts attention away from the real causes of the deficit -- two wars not paid for, the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, and the costs associated with the economic crisis, such as the Wall Street bailout. If the opponents of Social Security are able to cut Social Security's benefits, they will accomplish two objectives: (1) reducing Social Security protections while driving retirees into the hands of Wall Street; and (2) hiding the real causes of the deficit and the debt from honest budgetary scrutiny. A look at their claims about Social Security and the budget reveals the falsehoods they continue to promote.
Social Security -- the most fiscally responsible program
Social Security is self-financed, cannot borrow, spends less than one percent on its administrative costs, has a $2.6 trillion surplus which will continue to grow for a number of years, and is off-budget. It does not contribute to the federal deficit or the debt. The Social Security surplus is invested in US Treasuries which enables the federal government to borrow less from other sources. The government borrows these Social Security funds to pay for other government spending -- but is obligated to pay interest on these borrowings -- and pay back the borrowed funds in full when they are needed by Social Security for benefit payments.
Opponents of Social Security obscure the real facts, but they are easy to see in the graph below. The planned build-up of the Social Security Trust Funds since 1983 makes it clear that Social Security has a $2.6 trillion surplus today that will continue to grow.

The Federal Budget -- Red Ink
A look at the federal budget over the same time frame reveals a starkly different picture -- many years of deficits, with only a few years of surplus -- a surplus that disappeared during the G.W. Bush Administration. In 1993, a Democratic Congress and President Clinton, without a single Republican vote in either the House or Senate, enacted a budget plan that put it on a path to elimination of the deficits --and brought the budget into balance, and then later into surplus. In his 1999 State of the Union address, with the budget then in balance, Clinton called for the Social Security surplus investments to be held in a special reserve and not used for other government spending.
As a candidate for president, Vice President Gore made a central part of his campaign a plan to put Social Security's surplus in a "lockbox" to keep its assets from being used for other government spending. When the Supreme Court decided the 2000 election in favor of Bush, however, a very different view of the Social Security surplus became operative.


The federal budget surplus of 2000 quickly disappeared when Bush took office, turning into a sea of red ink. Bush borrowed heavily from the Social Security surplus to help obscure the fact that federal taxes were not bringing in enough revenue to pay for the wars and his tax cuts.
Given this history and the fact that Social Security has not and does not contribute to the deficit, Social Security should not be "on the table" for deficit reduction now. In fact, it should not be part of the deficit debate at all.
The Costs Imposed on Social Security by Wall Street's Failures
In a recent paper on deficit reduction for the Roosevelt Institute, Nobel prize-winner and Columbia University Professor, Economist Joseph Stiglitz noted about the Wall Street banks: "Even if the banks were to pay back every dime that they received, they would not have come close to compensating the country for the full costs (now in the trillions of dollars) that they have imposed on others. "
These costs were imposed on Social Security as well -- Wall Street's failures have increased Social Security costs while also reducing revenues to Social Security. Social Security revenues were reduced by 1.13 percent of payroll from its annual balance in 2010 -- more than $60 billion in one year -- from what the Trustees projected last year "due to a deeper recession and slower recovery than had been expected." This does not reflect the costs to Social Security in 2008-09, nor does it reflect future costs of continued high unemployment, which reduces revenue, and higher benefit payments to beneficiaries forced to take benefits sooner than they otherwise had planned.
As a result of the Great Recession triggered by the economic bubble Wall Street created, Social Security revenues were less in 2010 than benefits paid out. This required Social Security to use a portion of its interest earnings on the surplus to pay benefits -- an event that would have happened several years in the future were it not for the recent economic downturn.
Opponents have used the negative impact of the economy on Social Security to make it seem as if Social Security was failing, as if it had fallen into a deficit of its own. These claims are false. The interest the government owes to the Social Security Trust Fund for the funds it has borrowed from Social Security represents a legal obligation of the government. Interest earned on Social Security investments has always been used to pay Social Security benefits.
But opponents pretend the interest should not be counted as savings that add to Social Security's annual balance. This makes no sense. When Social Security claims the interest it has earned to pay benefits, the government is required to pay back the interest it owes to Social Security. This is what the opponents don't like. Social Security did not create the economic problem or the budget deficit. Wall Street and other government spending did. But the opponents of Social Security don't want to pay back all the money that was borrowed from Social Security, including the interest earned. Instead, they want to cut Social Security benefits.
The taxpayers of America bailed out the banks -- wouldn't it be fair now to ask the banks to pay back what they have cost Social Security? A tax on financial transactions and a tax on Wall Street bonuses, with revenues dedicated to Social Security, would pay back to Social Security and its contributors what has been taken from them.
Pay Back Social Security -- The Government Has Borrowed More from Social Security than any Other Entity or Foreign Government
Another argument made by Social Security opponents to raise fear about the national debt is how much our government has borrowed from China. They never mention how much our government has borrowed from Social Security. In fact, the government has borrowed more from the Social Security surplus than it has from any other source in the world, including China. As a result, Social Security now "owns" nearly 18 percent of the federal debt, making it the largest single holder of US debt. The government owes almost twice as much to Social Security as it does to China and Hong Kong.
Why aren't the opponents worried about paying back Social Security -- why aren't they talking about repaying this debt to the American people?
According to the U.S. Treasury Department's "Monthly Statement of the Public Debt of the United States" (9.30.10), the total debt was $13.562 trillion and was held as follows:
US Holders of Debt
42.1 % -- US Individuals and Institutions
17.9 % -- Social Security Trust Fund
6.0 % -- US Civil Service Retirement Fund
2.1 % -- US Military Retirement Fund
Foreign Holders of Debt
11.7 % -- Oil Exporting Countries
9.5 % -- China and Hong Kong
6.3 % -- Japan
1.4 % -- United Kingdom
1.3 % -- Brazil
1.6 % -- All other foreign countries

House Republican Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) provided some insight to their Social Security views in a recent NPR interview when he was talking about Social Security and said, "We are going to have to come to grips with the fact that these programs cannot exist if we want America to be what we want it to be."
If the American public were asked about what priority should be placed on the debt owed to Social Security, we have no doubt that they would resoundingly say: "Pay Us Back -- pay back the money borrowed from Social Security!"
Former Senator Donald W. Riegle, Democrat, represented Michigan for 18 years in the US Senate and 10 years in the House of Representatives. Lori Hansen served on the Social Security Advisory Board and was a Technical Assistant to Robert M. Ball, former Commissioner of Social Security, in his capacity as a member of the 1982-83 Social Security Commission.
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Social Security Disability Trust Fund Could Go Bust in 2018 - Online Journal

Apr 8, 2011, 10:42 by Victor Ryan

The Social Security Disability Trust Fund, which provides monetary assistance to more than 8.2 million disabled Americans, is projected to run out of money by 2018, the New York Times reports.

The forecast is based on the fact that more in benefits have been paid out than payroll taxes have taken in for the last five years. It's largely because the number of Americans receiving disability checks have risen from 5 million in 2001 to 8.2 million today. About $115 billion is now spent annually on Social Security Disability benefits.

The difficult job market has also played a major role in the depletion of the disabled trust fund, which was originally designed for those "permanently and totally disabled." Some economists say the benefits have become "kind of a shadow safety net" for those unable to find work.

"In an atmosphere in which there is a concern about fiscal problems, it's always easy to point the finger at groups and say, 'These people should be working,'" said Prof. John Bound, an economist at the University of Michigan.

The New York Times notes another reason for the situation is that a 1999 law that launched the Ticket to Work program has had little success transitioning those with moderate disabilities back into the workforce.

The New York Times reports that over the last 18 months, only 13,656 people out of 12.5 million eligible for the program have found work. Only one-third of those earned enough to drop their benefits.

Social Security officials said the Ticket to Work program has been modified since its inception, but it will likely never to have a big impact on the disability trust fund.

"We could make this program exponentially more successful and it wouldn?t be enough to dramatically improve the solvency picture," said Michael J. Astrue, the commissioner of Social Security. "You do it because work--for people who can work--gives them dignity and improves their economic condition.?


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Appeals Process For Social Security Disability Benefits Denial


Many applicants who submit their information to receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) will be denied. They have the right to appeal the decision through a serious of processes designed to change the decision of the Social Security Administration (SSA) if the applicant truly has a disability preventing them from working. The SSA is very strict about their decision making to prevent people from receiving benefits that they truly do not need or deserve.

The first step in the appeals process is called a reconsideration. The applicant will complete the forms and then the SSA will send them to the State Disability Determination Services office where the applicant resides. This office will review the applicant's medical records and then make a determination about their application. The applicant is allowed to submit additional information in addition to the documents from the first application. If the application is denied, the second step is called a hearing.

The applicant will complete a request for hearing by an administrative law judge and an appeal disability report. These forms will be sent to the Office of Disability Adjudication and Review. The office might request further information from the applicant to clarify their claim of disability. The applicant can also request a face to face meeting with a judge. If the claim is again denied, the next step is a review with an appeals council.

The Appeals Council Review will appoint someone in their office to review the applicant's medical records and make a determination about benefits. It is the right of the Appeals Council to deny the request for a review if they believe that the previous hearing resulted in a proper and legal ruling.

The final step to the appeals process, if necessary, is filing a case against the SSA in federal district court. The applicant must be represented by an attorney for this action. A district court judge will hear the case and make a ruling about SSDI for the applicant.

Those who file any type of appeal must be meticulous with their recordkeeping and be able to provide medical documentation of their disability. They must also be patient, as the appeals process can be lengthy and frustrating.








For more information, please visit SocialSecurityNetHelp


Tuesday, April 12, 2011

What Can Go Wrong With Your Social Security Disability Claim?


In a perfect world, each and every individual who is entitled to Social Security Disability benefits would be able to submit a simple and straightforward disability application and be awarded benefits in a relatively short period of time. Unfortunately, we do not live in a perfect world. A number of things can go wrong with a disability application, causing a delay in approval or even the outright denial of a disability claim. If you want to make sure your claim for disability benefits has the greatest chance of success, you need to know what can go wrong. Knowing what can go wrong can help you avoid the common pitfalls associated with disability applications.

Providing Inadequate Information

When submitting a claim for disability benefits, it is crucial that you provide as much documentation as possible to the SSA. Your medical records are going to make or break your disability claim. If you do not have enough documented evidence proving the extent of your disability and how your condition prevents you from performing substantial gainful work activity, your claim for benefits will be denied. Discuss your condition at length with your doctors and make sure they understand your need for disability benefits. Your doctor can help you gather the medical records and evidence needed to qualify for benefits.

Re-Applying Instead of Appealing

Many applicants are upset and surprised when their initial application for disability benefits is denied. The fact of the matter is that most applications are not approved at the initial stage of the claim process. Do not make the same mistake that so many other applicants make and try to re-apply for benefits rather than filing an appeal of your denied application.

Unless your initial application for benefits had been missing some vital information or your condition has suddenly gotten significantly worse, re-applying for benefits is only going to result in another denial and you will find yourself back at square one with the SSA. The truth is that only 30 percent of initial disability applications are approved. Thus, most people are awarded benefits at the hearing stage of the appeal process. Instead of re-applying for benefits all over again, contact a disability attorney to represent you during your disability appeal and have your case heard before an Administrative Law Judge.

Not Communicating with Your Lawyer

It is in your lawyer's best interest to win your disability case for you. He or she will not be paid unless you are awarded benefits. Make sure you communicate with your disability lawyer and provide him or her with whatever information or documentation is required. When your lawyer gives you advice regarding what to say and do at your disability hearing, follow it. Disability attorneys know what it takes to win a disability claim and they truly have your best interest in mind.

Never Lie to Your Lawyer or the Administrative Law Judge

When it comes to disability applications, honesty is the best policy. Never be dishonest with your lawyer and never lie to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). Lying to your disability attorney or being dishonest with the ALJ who is hearing your case will likely result in a denial of your disability benefits. In fact, dishonesty can cause you to be denied for benefits when you may actually have been awarded disability payments had you been honest in the first place.

The Bottom Line

The disability application process is anything but simple and straightforward. Fortunately, it is not impossible to navigate. You simply need to keep the above advice in mind and, if your application for benefits is denied, make sure you hire a qualified Social Security attorney. While many things can (and sometimes do) go wrong with a disability application, having the legal guidance of a qualified lawyer can help minimize your chances of experiencing any of the common pitfalls.








Social Security Disability
Social Security Attorney


Social Security Disability and Smoking, Alcohol, Drugs, and Jail


Some people applying for Social Security disability benefits wonder if they still qualify if they smoke, drink, use drugs, or are (or have been) in jail. Here we will discuss what Social Security looks at to make a disability decision.

Many applicants smoke, and it may not affect your claim all that much. However, if your disability is emphysema or COPD, or another breathing disorder that is probably linked to your smoking habit, Social Security will ask if you have attempted to quit. Those who have quit the habit or have drastically cut back on smoking have a much better chance of being approved for disability. Those who are aware of the harmful effects smoking has on their body, but have not cut back at all, are frowned upon and may have their claim denied unless other disabilities exist.

When it comes to alcohol and drug addictions, Social Security has completely changed the system in the last decade or so. There used to be a listing that allowed those who were addicted to alcohol or drugs to be approved, under the reasoning that they had an uncontrollable addiction. However, Social Security realized that these recipients were probably using taxpayers' money, or their disability checks, to fuel their habits. So Social Security turned things around. Now, if it is determined that an applicant has "any material involvement" with drugs or alcohol, they are denied.

That being said, if an applicant has a disability that may possibly be related to alcohol or drugs, but it is questionable, there is still a chance of being approved for disability (for instance, liver failure). These situations are sometimes hard to prove, but it happens quite often.

If an applicant applies for Social Security disability benefits while in jail, it probably won't affect his or her disability claim much unless the period of disability is relatively the same period as the person was in jail. For instance, if a claimant says he has been disabled for three years, and has spent a month in jail, Social Security will consider the time before and the time after the jail sentence. If a claimant says he has been disabled for two years, and most of that period was spent in jail, Social Security may deny the claim. Generally speaking, a person is ineligible for disability benefits while he or she is in jail or prison.

If a person already receiving benefits spends time in jail, and the time is less than a year, Social Security will suspend the disability benefits only during that period of time. When the person is released, benefits will begin again automatically. If the period of time is over a year, however, the person must reapply and begin the process all over again.

One more thing to note is that the severity of the crime he or she has been convicted for may have a bearing on a Social Security decision. For instance, using or selling drugs would probably result in a denial.

Whatever situation you are in, and wherever you are in the process, best of luck.








Becca has been involved in the Social Security world since 1995 and enjoys watching the program change peoples' lives.


How Does the Social Security Administration Approve a Social Security Disability Claim?


The Social Security Disability application process can be confusing, stressful, overwhelming and lengthy. It is often hard for disability applicants to navigate their own responsibilities regarding their disability claim, let alone try to understand how the SSA will decide whether they will approve or deny their claim for benefits. If you are applying for disability benefits and want to understand how the SSA reviews and approves claims for disability benefits, the following information can help.

What Does the Social Security Administration Look For in a Disability Claim?

There are a few things the SSA looks for when an applicant files a claim for disability benefits. If you are applying for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), the SSA will determine whether or not you have enough work credits to qualify for disability payments. If you are filing for Supplemental Security Income (SSI), the SSA will check to see if your household income falls below the set limits.

Meeting the SSA's Disability Guidelines

If all of the other criteria set forth by the SSA are met (e.g., work credits or income requirements), the SSA will then need to determine whether or not you are disabled, the severity of your disability and whether your disability meets their specific guidelines. This is why it is crucial that you provide as much medical documentation as you can with your initial disability application.

When reviewing claims for disability benefits, the examiner reviewing your claim will refer to a published listing of impairments known as the Social Security "Blue Book." This Blue Book lists all of the disabling conditions that could qualify an individual for Social Security Disability benefits. The Blue Book also contains guidelines for each listed condition and applicants must meet the guidelines set forth in the section that pertains to their specific disability in order to be approved for benefits. For example, if you are suffering from a traumatic brain injury, that condition is indeed listed in the Social Security Blue Book. However, a diagnosis of a traumatic brain injury in and of itself will not qualify you for benefits. The Blue Book lists symptoms from which an applicant must suffer in order to qualify under this section of the publication. If you have a traumatic brain injury that does not meet the published guidelines, you will not qualify for disability benefits.

If your condition is not included in the SSA's Blue Book, you may still qualify for benefits but will need to prove that your disability prevents you from performing any type of work-related activity. In order to prove your disability and the severity of your condition to the SSA, you will need to provide as much medical documentation as possible. Make sure you include all medical records and the names and addresses of all of your doctors when submitting your application for benefits. If you have had hospital stays, emergency room visits or trips to an urgent care center because of your disability, make sure the SSA is provided with information about each and every encounter. You can never provide too much information when filing a disability claim. Provide as much documentation as possible to help the SSA approve your disability application.

When reviewing your claim for disability benefits, the SSA will also look at your work history and your age. It is sometimes easier for those who are more advanced in age to qualify for disability benefits than it is for a younger person. For example, if a fifty-year-old man who has always worked in construction suffers a back injury and is unable to perform work because of the injury, he is more likely to be approved for benefits than a twenty-five-year-old male who suffered the same injury and had the same occupation. This is because the twenty-five-year-old could, if necessary, change to a different career path and perform a different type of work, whereas it would be nearly impossible for the fifty-year-old male to make a career change so late in his life.

What to Do if Your Application for Benefits is Denied

If your initial application for disability benefits is denied, do not be alarmed. The fact of the matter is that nearly 70 percent of disability applications are not approved at the initial stage of the application process. If your application is among those that are denied, it does not mean that you can't receive the disability benefits you need. It only means that you will need to go on to appeal the SSA's decision to deny your benefits.

If you have received notice from the SSA that your claim for benefits has been denied, contact a Social Security Disability attorney. Your chances of successfully appealing the SSA's decision to deny your disability benefits are statistically higher with proper legal representation.








Social Security Disability
Social Security Attorney


Overview of Social Security Disability Benefits


The Social Security Administration (SSA) provides Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) to workers who are unable to keep working due to a disabling condition, illness, or disease. Those receiving SSDI monthly benefits must meet certain requirements to qualify.

Workers who apply for SSDI must have a work history and must have paid Social Security taxes during their previous employment. Workers are given "credits" for their past work history and must meet a certain amount of credits to apply for SSDI. They also must have recent work experience, which is all calculated based upon a person's age. Their disability must be expected to last for at least one year or be expected to lead to the worker's death. The SSA has a detailed list of accepted medical disabilities that is routinely updated. Examples of disabilities include, but are not limited to:

? Cardiovascular disorders - chronic heart failure, congenital heart disease, peripheral arterial disease

? Immune system disorders - HIV, inflammatory arthritis, scleroderma

? Respiratory disorders - cystic fibrosis, asthma, persistent lung infections

? Malignant diseases - lymphoma, breast cancer, leukemia, carcinoma

? Mental disorders - mental retardation, schizophrenia, anxiety related disorders, autistic disorder, personality disorders.

There are many more examples of medical disabilities in the SSA's handbook. There are also examples of conditions not listed in the handbook that would qualify a person for SSDI.

In order to prove a disability, applicants must provide detailed medical information including medical histories, treatments, medications, and the contact information for all doctors who treated the applicant. They must prove to the SSA that their condition is disabling enough that they cannot perform basic work functions such as sitting, writing, lifting, or using cognitive memory skills. They must also show that they have tried treatments or medications that have not helped improve the condition.

Some workers who apply for SSDI are not able to continue with their current work due to a disability. However, if the SSA rules that the worker is able to perform any different form of work, even if the type of work pays less than their current work, they do not meet the definition of disabled.








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How to File Your Application for Social Security Disability Benefits


Filing your Social Security disability or Supplemental Security Income claim is a simple and brief process. Social Security disability programs are available to individuals who have long term, serious medical problems that prevent them from working. Social Security does not offer any short term disability benefits, nor is there such thing as a partial disability benefit. To qualify your disability must be significant and be expected to last 12 consecutive months.

Start Your Disability Claim by Calling Social Security

There is not cost or obligation involved in filing a claim for benefits. You can begin the process by calling 800-772-1213, SSA's toll free number. After navigating several layers of automated attendant prompts, you will find yourself speaking with a live operator who will take your claim. When you speak to the operator, make sure to tell her that you wish to claim both Title 2 disability and Title 16 SSI benefits. You want to get a protective filing date for both claims even if it later turns out that you do not qualify for one of them.

Meet With a Representative at Your Local Social Security Office

You can also file for SSDI or SSI by visiting your local Social Security office.

File for SSDI or SSI Online

A third alternative is to start your disability claim on-line at the official Social Security web site. Social Security's on-line filing system does not always work well. The on-line system prompts you to fill out page after page of information. If you do not happen to have all of this information handy, you have the option of saving your place and logging back in later.

Because Social Security's on-line system permits you to review only one page of the on-line form at a time, there is no way to know what is coming and no way to know what type of medical records or other necessary information. In my view, this absence of a complete form to review prior to actually filing is a drawback to the on-line application system.

Social Security Disability Claim Forms Can Be Confusing

Because Social Security does such a poor job presenting its forms and explaining how to fill them out, I wrote a book for claimants that explains how to fill out the forms correctly. My book is called the Disability Answer Guide and is available on the Internet.

My overall observation about Social Security's forms, especially the forms you fill out to start your claim, is that SSA will ask you the same question three or four times. This may be because SSA personnel keep adding questions to the forms, but no one seems willing to delete any redundant questions.

What You Need to Start the Disability Claim Process

You will need to have handy as much information as possible about the doctors, hospitals, diagnostic clinics and other health care providers who have seen you. You will need the name, current address, phone and fax for these medical providers.

You will also need a list of every job you have held over the past 15 to 20 years, the name and address of your employer, the dates of employment and a brief description of your work tasks. Do not worry if you do not have all of this employment information at hand - it is ok to estimate. Your official Social Security file has the name and address of all of your employers and you can update the job list later.

The Social Security representative may not accept your claim if you are still working. If you are working in a "special circumstances" work environment, make sure to advise the rep so that she will take your claim.

Start Your Claim As Soon As Possible

Finally, I advise my clients to file their claim as soon as possible after they stop working. SSDI claims are payable only if you have enough credit hours shown in the SSA system. Once you stop working, you will stop earning credit hours. Normally, you remain insured for SSDI benefits for three or four years after you stop working, but I have seen some cases where SSDI insured status runs out more quickly. Everything else being equal, file your disability application as soon as you realize that you will be out of work for an extended period of time.








Jonathan Ginsberg is a practicing Social Security disability lawyer in Atlanta, Georgia. In addition to his law practice, Jonathan is the editor and publisher of several national Social Security disability related web sites, including the Social Security disability information, and the Social Security disability blog at www.ssdAnswers.com


Appealing Your Social Security Disability Decision


If you're reading this, you've most likely been denied for Social Security Disability benefits. And, you most likely are faced with the decision of whether or not to appeal. Here we will talk about what will happen if you appeal, and the benefits of doing so, as well as what will happen if you do not appeal and/or start a new disability claim.

If your initial application was denied, in order to appeal you will need to file your Request for Reconsideration (in most states). What you should know is that Social Security denies most initial disability applications (up to 75% in some states), so you are not alone. Some applicants, discouraged by the denial, give up. Others allow the 60 days to expire before deciding they want to appeal the decision and keep trying, but it is too late. The only exceptions to the appeal period are if the appeal was sent before the 60 days and got lost in the mail or wasn't received by Social Security in time, or perhaps if an emergency has arisen. Otherwise, if you wait until the 60 days are up--too bad. You start all over.

If you decide to appeal and file your Request for Reconsideration, your file will be sent to the Disability Determination Services, at which point your medical records may be requested from your doctors. You may be sent to see Social Security doctors if you haven't seen one in awhile, or simply for a second opinion. With all the work Social Security does at this point, you would think that your chances of being approved would increase. But unfortunately, even more are denied at this level than at the initial level. If you receive a denial at the Reconsideration level, APPEAL.

The reason you are so strongly encouraged to appeal is because the next step is the hearing level. The disability hearing is your greatest chance of being approved. Social Security will assign an Administrative Law Judge to hear your case, and will choose a date and time for you to appear before him. Then the judge can see you, evaluate your disability, and make a determination. If you have a disability attorney, your chances of being approved at this level are excellent. If you are unrepresented, your chances are still good if you are prepared. Unfortunately, while the hearing level has the greatest possibility of success, it also has the longest wait. Many applicants wait a year or more to have their Social Security Disability. hearing scheduled. Meanwhile, those who are truly disabled may be living with friends or relatives, barely scraping by. This is one circumstance that the Social Security Administration is trying to change.

Once you receive the decision from the judge, and if it is unfavorable, you have another choice to make. The next appeal is a very long one, and the chances of being approved at that level are low. Sometimes your disability case is remanded back to the judge to review again, often with the same result. Another option is to start another claim, or even start your new claim while the first is pending at the appeal, if allowed by your state. It is possible that the new disability claim may be approved before the first, or at least you may get a different judge at the second hearing. Again, though, the problem is the long wait.

No matter what point you are at in the Social Security disability process, the recommendation is to APPEAL. Do it quickly. Show that you are sincere in your efforts, and don't be discouraged when your disability claim is denied, which it probably will be at least once. Perseverance is the most important factor if you are seeking Social Security disability benefits. Best of luck.








Becca has been involved in the Social Security world since 1995 and enjoys watching the program change peoples' lives.


Monday, April 11, 2011

Family Benefits Under Social Security Disability: What Are They?


Qualifying for Social Security Disability is something you can do if you have become disabled and are unable to work. Qualifying for yourself is one thing, but what you may not realize is that some of your family members may also qualify for disability benefits if you are receiving them. There are very specific situations in which this may occur and it is quite possible that your family members should be receiving benefits. If you are unsure about how the process works, simply consider the following information. Disability benefits may be able to assist you with your financial needs.

What Are the Types of Benefits?

Individuals who qualify for disability benefits receive an income or monthly payment from the SSA. These individuals are unable to work, or are unable to work in such a way as to support themselves. If you qualify for disability, this means that your physical condition is in some way limited. Your family, then, may be in need of additional financial support since you are unable to provide it. Because of your condition, your family members may also qualify for benefits from the SSA. However, there are limits and other steps that need to be taken to make this happen.

Who Is Your Family?

Not everyone living with you will qualify for disability. Although you may have numerous people counting on you to provide for them, only a select few will qualify under the SSA's guidelines for family benefits. These include:


Your spouse will qualify for benefits.
If you are divorced, your ex-spouse is likely to qualify unless he or she has remarried or does not meet the requirement of the SSA.
Your children will qualify, usually until they reach 18 years of age.
If you have a disabled child, he or she also qualifies.
If you have these members in your family, it may be beneficial to encourage them to apply for disability benefits under the family benefits plan offered by the SSA. Keep in mind that there may be additional qualifying members, such as children you have adopted. If you are unsure whether a family member qualifies, simply request additional information from the SSA or discuss your options with a disability attorney.

What Benefits Are Available?

Simply qualifying for disability benefits is not sufficient. Rather, it is important to know how much can be received. Unfortunately, this is a set number and is based on a variety of factors. The first factor is the amount of money you are receiving. Keep in mind that your family members will each receive their own benefits check from the SSA. In doing so, the family members will be able to use those funds as needed. The family member does not receive a portion of your disability insurance, but the amount he or she does receive is based on the amount of your benefits.

Each family member may receive up to 50 percent of the disability rate you are receiving. If you are earning $1000, for example, each family member may be eligible up to 50 percent of that, or up to $500. However, the Social Security Disability benefits also factors in how many family members are receiving disability payments and the total amount received. There is a limit to the amount the SSA will pay out to your family.

What does this mean for your family? The total amount that is paid out in family benefits will be unique to your family, based on your circumstances. However, in general, the total amount of money received by your family members will be about 50 to 80 percent of your disability benefit. Going back to the earlier example, if you qualify for benefits of $1000 per month, the combined total for benefits for your family will be between $500 and $800 per month. In some situations, it may be less than this, too. In situations where the sum of the benefits is more than the family limit in place, the benefits to each family member will be reduced along the same scale.

Keeping this in mind, Social Security Disability benefits like this should be applied for by each member of your family. You will need to provide the SSA with your Social Security numbers, birth certificates and marriage licenses, as they apply, to help determine the amount each family member will receive. The process of determining the value of family benefits seems difficult, but the SSA will handle the processing for you.








Social Security Disability
Disability Benefits


Should You Get Early Retirement or Social Security Disability Benefits


If you are 50 years old and have poor physical health should you retire or file for Social Security Disability Insurance benefits (SSDI)? If you are unable to continue to do your job because of your physical limitations you should file for SSDI benefits instead of filing for early retirement.

What is Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)? SSDI benefits fall under title II of the Social Security Act. In order to qualify for SSDI you must have worked long enough and paid Social Security taxes. SSDI works similarly to a pension, where you pay into the plan throughout your working years.

The SSA establishes whether you have worked long enough by assigning work credits to your wages/FICA taxes you paid per year. For adults you need 40 work credits. Once you have 40 work credits you have "insured status." SSDI benefits are paid to those who have been found disabled as defined by the SSA and have "insured status."

What is the benefit of filing a SSDI claim instead of filing for early retirement?


If you start collecting Social Security retirement benefits early (before the age of 67, for people born in 1960 or later) your benefits are reduced for each month before you reach your full retirement age.
If you receive SSDI you receive full monthly benefits and annual cost of living increases. You are entitled to Medicare and prescription drug coverage.
When you reach retirement age your SSDI will be converted automatically into retirement benefits.
When the SSA calculates your retirement benefits the years you receive disability insurance is not included and your retirement benefits will be higher because your earnings are averaged over a shorter period of time. The earnings from SSDI are considered but the number of years you were disabled is not. It ends up looking like you earned more money per year, which equals a higher monthly retirement check.

How can a Disability lawyer help? If you are between the ages of 50 and 64 and you stopped working because physically you just could not do your job anymore, you may be entitled to SSDI. SSDI are benefits funded by the taxes you paid during your working years. SSDI is not welfare. A lawyer can evaluate your individual case and help you with the application process. The lawyer will represent you at your hearing in front of the administrative law judge. SSDI are benefits you are entitled to if you have a strong work history and are found disabled as defined by the SSA.








by Sandra Haas, Esq.

Disability Group was founded on the principles of dignity of respect. We are a national law firm focusing exclusively on helping people get the Social Security Disability benefits they deserve. For more information about Social Security or to see if you qualify for benefits, visit http://www.socialsecuritylaw.com


Additional Relief For Your Social Security Disability Clients From an Employment Law Standpoint


Social Security disability attorneys or representatives are often not familiar with some of the civil rights laws and other remedies which may be available to their clients, beyond, or in lieu of, Social Security disability benefits, and which may result in additional or alternative sources of financial proceeds for their clients. Also, as Social Security disability claims have greatly increased due to the lagging economy, client advocates may encounter many persons who will not meet the stringent Social Security disability standards, but may be able to qualify for other relief. This article will explore some of these laws and remedies.

Due to the complexity of some of the remedies and the intricate interaction between them, which often require balancing and negotiation, it will be beneficial to client advocates to establish a relationship with one or more attorneys who practice in the areas of law noted below if they do not, in order to determine if other remedies may exist for their clients. As many of these additional remedies have stringent time deadlines, inquiries should be made as quickly as possible to other counsel as to whether a client has additional remedies and the viability of pursuing them. Indeed, failure of an attorney or a representative to consider these remedies may be the source of a professional liability issue depending on the outcome of a client's case.

An applicant for Social Security disability benefits frequently has a history, such as his medical conditions or work history, which has brought him to the position of applying for this type of benefit, which requires that he is deemed unable to perform substantial gainful work for a minimum of twelve (12) months or he has a condition that will result in death. That history often involves his employment situation and the nature of that situation can serve as the basis for additional remedies. Therefore, a thorough interview with a potential client should determine:

? Whether that person suffered an injury at the workplace;

? Whether his employer terminated him as a result of suffering the injury after the employer was informed that it was a work-related injury;

? Whether the injury, work-related or not, still permitted him to work for his employer with a reasonable accommodation by the employer. The courts' interpretation of "reasonable accommodation" is discussed below;

? Whether the employer refused to make the reasonable accommodation and instead laid off or terminated the employee;

? Whether the employee, who formerly did not have any or few performance problems, suddenly received discipline or write-ups after the injury;

? Whether the employer should have been aware that the employee was suffering from physical or mental problems, and instead of helping him manage those problems, terminated him, laid him off, or eliminated his position;

? Whether the employee had available to him short and/or long-term disability benefits, some type of retirement disability or union benefits for which he could apply.

THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITY ACT AND ITS AMENDMENTS

Significant legislation has been enacted to protect employees who have been injured in and out of the workplace and who are suffering from an illness. The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (hereinafter "ADA") was intended to "provide a clear and comprehensive national mandate for the elimination of discrimination against individuals with disabilities." 42 U.S.C.A. ?12101 et seq. The Act applies to employers with 15 or more employees and prohibits discrimination against qualified individuals on the basis of a disability in regard to job application procedures, hiring, advancement, termination, compensation or job training. See 42 U.S.C. ?12112(a).

In the years since the Act's passage into law, the U.S. Supreme Court has handed down specific opinions which have curtailed the reach of the ADA and have greatly limited the definition of a disability under the ADA. Large clusters of people, initially covered by the ADA, have been shut out from the intended far-reaching protections as a result of those court opinions. The result has put a heavy burden of proving a disability on the plaintiff, which was clearly against Congress' intent. See Sutton v. United Airlines, Inc., 527 U.S. 471 (1999) and its companion cases and in Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Kentucky, Inc. v. Williams, 534 U.S. 184 (2002). As a result of these Supreme Court cases, lower courts have found that individuals with a range of substantially limiting impairments are not people with disabilities.

In order to rectify this situation, Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act (hereinafter "ADAAA"), which became effective on January 1, 2009. The ADAAA greatly broadens the relevant definitions of the ADA and gives renewed hope to disabled individuals who are ready, willing and able to work with a reasonable accommodation. The Act's new language also enlarged the definition to include a larger array of individuals who are "regarded as" having a disability. Additionally, mitigating factors are no longer assessed in the evaluation of an individual as disabled.

If one has a client who lost his job due to a negative job action and who is covered by the newly expanded ADAAA, but had no recourse but to initiate a Social Security disability claim, either because his condition worsened or because he could not locate another job with his disabilities, he will be required to file a claim with a government agency at the local, state or federal level in order to protect his rights and preserve his right to bring later litigation, if necessary. That government agency may hold a fact-finding conference or a mediation, depending on the agency's practice, and while the matter is at the agency level it may be settled without resorting to litigation. Bear in mind that the ADA claim can proceed independently and concurrent to the Social Security disability claim.

Employers are required by the ADAAA to reasonably accommodate those employees known to have a disability to allow for the fulfillment of essential job functions. However, these employers will not be required to make accommodations which will cause an undue hardship. Under U.S.C. ?12111(9), those reasonable accommodations include, but are not limited to, (1) making existing facilities used by employees readily accessible to and usable by individuals with disabilities, (2) job restructuring, (3) modification of equipment or devices, (4) appropriate adjustment or modifications of examinations, training materials or policies, and (5) the provision of qualified readers or interpreters.

It is the employee's responsibility to inform his employer that an accommodation is necessary in order for that employee to fulfill his essential job functions. It is also important to know that the new amendments make it clear that employees who are simply "regarded as" having a disability are not eligible for the aforementioned accommodations. Once the eligible employee requests an accommodation, an interactive process with the employer regarding the appropriate accommodations will begin. U.S.C. ?12111(10) enumerates factors that would cause an undue hardship on the employer when accommodating an employee and are thus not mandated under the law. That list includes: (1) the nature and cost of the accommodation, (2) the overall financial resources of the facility or facilities, (3) the overall size of the business and (4) the type of operation.

It is also significant to note that simply because an employee's doctor sends a note to the employer limiting the employee's ability to work, requesting time off for the employee, requesting reduced hours, or asking that the employee be assigned to light duty, the employer is not necessarily governed by the doctor's request. Legions of employees have been terminated because an employer either did not feel the need to honor a doctor's request or seized upon the doctor's request to terminate an employee because, according to the doctor, the employee cannot do the job as required. An employee would be wise to seek legal help, if possible, in negotiating a disability accommodation from an employer.

It is not uncommon for employers to begin plotting for an employee's termination shortly after they are informed, formally or informally, of the employee's illness. Red herrings often used by employers to terminate or alternatively force an employee to resign include giving an employee a series of baseless poor performance evaluations, job restructuring rendering the affected employee's position nonessential, suddenly changing absence policies, or engaging in poor treatment of an employee which encourages his resignation.

THE REHABILITATION ACT

The Rehabilitation Act Title V entitled "Nondiscrimination under Federal Grants and Programs" 29 U.S.C.A. ? 720 et seq. protects those with disabilities from discrimination on the basis of those disabilities in programs organized by or receiving money from the federal government. The standards for determining employment discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act are the same as those used in Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act described above.

THE PREGNANCY DISCRIMINATION ACT

The two primary laws that protect women during pregnancy are the Pregnancy Discrimination Act and the Family Medical Leave Act ("FMLA"). An amendment to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act was established in 1978. The Act requires employers with 15 or more employees to treat employees with pregnancy-related conditions in the same manner required by law as those with other health conditions. For example, if an employee with a serious medical condition is permitted to take leave or work a modified schedule under FMLA, the pregnant woman will be afforded the same options. The Act also prevents an employer from firing or refusing to hire a woman based on her pregnancy or ability to take maternity leave. In that same light, an employee cannot lose credit accrued for seniority or retirement benefits during her leave. Lastly, an employer is required to keep the job open and maintain health care benefits as though the woman was on sick or disability leave.

Pregnant women also rely heavily on FMLA. As previously discussed, expecting and new mothers can take up to 12 weeks off within a 12 month period to care for the birth of their child. One key distinction between FMLA and the Pregnancy Discrimination Act is that FMLA only applies to employers of 50 employees or more. Moreover, the employee must have worked either one full year or 1250 hours to request FMLA leave.

THE AGE DISCRIMINATION IN EMPLOYMENT ACT

The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 ("ADEA") protects those employees over the age of 40 from workplace discrimination based on age. 29 U.S.C. ? 621 et seq. It applies to employers with 20 or more employees, state, local and federal governments, and employment agencies and labor organization. Under this Act, it is unlawful for employers to discriminate against employees or job applicants with respect to any term, condition, or privilege of employment, including hiring, firing, promotion, layoff, compensation, job assignments and training. As with the ADAAA, this Act also makes retaliation relating to the aforementioned unlawful.

Although an employee can be asked to waive their rights under the ADEA when signing a severance agreement, a clearly established protocol must be followed. The agreement must be (1) in writing and understandable; (2) specifically refer to ADEA rights; (3) not waive rights or claims that may arise in the future; (4) offer valuable consideration; (5) advise the employee in writing to consult with an attorney prior to execution of the waiver; (6) allow for 21 days in which the employee can consider the agreement; and (7) allow for 7 days within which the employee can revoke the agreement after signing it. Consider this protocol if a severance agreement concludes one's client's disability matter.

THE FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT

The Family Medical Leave Act, (P.L. 103-3, 107 Stat. 6) ("FMLA") was enacted on February 5, 2003 for the purpose of helping people who were stressed about trying to balance the competing demands of work and family life. The FMLA allows an employee to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave in a 12 month period for the birth or adoption of a child, to care for a family member, or to tend to his own serious health problems. The employee has three options from which to choose when deciding how to take time off. He can take the entire 12 weeks at once, take leave as needed following proper procedures, or he can simply work a reduced schedule. Note that FMLA time off may be combined with paid time off and employers generally have an option of requiring that employees use up their sick/vacation/personal time prior to using FMLA time. Employers have the burden of providing employees with information, notice and guidance about FMLA requirements.

It is important that any FMLA documents completed by the client and their doctors be reviewed by an attorney if possible. Moreover, an attorney or representative should ensure that the FMLA documents conform or are at least considered when applying for other types of disability. Often these documents will have different or contradicting onset dates, diagnoses, prognoses, or levels of severity of condition which will complicate the Social Security disability application procedure. The FMLA leave documents can be of assistance and provide documentary support in a Social Security disability claim.

The Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division published a Final Rule under the FMLA in January 2008 which became effective on January 16, 2009, and an updated set of regulations by the Department of Labor were published. The FMLA benefits provided to military families (referred to as military caregiver leave and covered service-member leave) greatly expand the usual 12 weeks of FMLA leave up to 26 workweeks of leave in a single 12 month period to care for a covered service member with a serious illness or injury incurred in the line of duty on active duty. Also, the time spent performing light-duty work doesn't count against the 12 week FMLA leave. The regulations provide added guidance of what a "serious health condition" is.

Implementation of the ADA and the FMLA sometimes cause friction between an employer's right to know about an employee's condition and an employee's right to keep his medical conditions private. Relying on a medical treatment source for this information is not suggested, as doctors have been known to tell patients they are not required to reveal any information about their medical conditions, when that is not always the case, which can result in an employee's termination for refusal to divulge information an employer has a right to know.

Generally, the information that must be revealed by an employee or his medical treatment sources under the FMLA must be enough to permit the employer to know how to best accommodate an employee, or to provide the information on Department of Labor Form WH-380E, which is a certificate of health care provider for an employee's serious health condition. This information, requested from a doctor, includes, among other things, the beginning date of the condition, dates treated for the condition, probable duration of condition, medication prescribed, treatments, referrals made to other health care providers, and whether an employee can perform certain job functions.

Employees on FMLA must follow an employer's usual and customary procedures for reporting an absence, barring an usual circumstance. Further, an employer's direct supervisor cannot contact health care providers and cannot ask for additional information beyond that required on the certification form, as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPPA") is invoked to limit this information. There are also provisions for certification of ongoing conditions and fitness for duty certifications.

FECA AND FELA CLAIMS AS OPTIONS FOR FEDERAL EMPLOYEES

The Federal Employees Compensation Act ("FECA"), 5 U.S.C.A. ? 8101 et seq., provides federal employees with compensation benefits for work-related injuries or illnesses. Administered by the Department of Labor's Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, all claims generally must be brought within three years of the date of injury. The federal employee will continue to receive compensation benefits as long as they remain totally or partially disabled. The federal employee will receive two-thirds or three-fourths of their salary at the time of the injury depending on whether the employee has dependents.

Another piece of federal legislation that attorneys who handle disability matters should be familiar with is Federal Employers' Liability Act ("FELA"). 45 U.S.C.A. ? 51 et seq. This Act was initially meant to protect the rights of railway workers who were injured while at work in this country. Since its enactment, FELA has been greatly expanded. There is a three year statute of limitations from the date of the injury. Generally the statute begins running when the employee knew or should have known of the existence of the injury and that the FELA statute of limitations is triggered in an occupational injury case when the injured worker knew or should have known: 1) of the existence of the injury; and 2) that workplace exposure was a cause

SHORT AND LONG-TERM TERM DISABILITY POLICIES AND ERISA

Clients frequently are not aware that they are entitled to make a claim which entitles them to receive some form of some short and/or long-term disability payments as a general benefit of their employment, membership in a union or because they have opted to receive additional benefits paid for through payroll deductions. Employees may also have disability coverage they have purchased privately.

However, simply because this type of benefit exists does not mean that it is easily procured. Disability insurance carriers may be reluctant to approve clients for benefits, particularly long-term disability benefits, and if they are approved, carriers often attempt to terminate the employee prematurely. Employees are sometimes lulled into thinking that because they have received short-term disability benefits easily that receiving long-term disability benefits will also be an easy process. Moreover, if an employee is receiving long-term disability benefits, this normally indicates that the injury is not work-related, because a worker's compensation claim would ensue instead.

Insurance disability carriers tend to have little respect for the fact that a claimant has been awarded Social Security disability benefits prior to or even after an ALJ's decision, and this type of award does not have significant impact on a carrier's decision to award long-term disability benefits. However, a detailed decision by an ALJ judge, the Appeal's Council or a court, will usually be helpful in a long-term disability claim. In the event that a client suffers from physical and mental impairments, because many policies limit the number of years of benefits for mental impairments, carriers may seize on a decision and allege that the mental impairments take priority over the physical impairments, so one should use care in emphasizing the nature of the disability claimed.

Most insurance carriers require that a successful applicant for long-term disability benefits apply for Social Security disability benefits, and if that claim is successful, those benefits will be offset against any amount paid to the applicant under long-term disability coverage, after the deduction of any attorney's fees. If that claim is not successful, it should not impact on private disability insurance benefits.

There are several levels of administrative appeal in the long-term disability denial process and insurance carriers frequently extend the administrative process as long as possible, hoping to wear out the applicant. It is important that each stage of the administrative process be followed, and that any and all medical evidence is submitted to the insurance carrier during the administrative process. This is because there is case law which states that evidence submitted after the administrative process cannot be introduced if a denial is later litigated under The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA"), found in the U.S. Code beginning at 29 U.S.C. ?1001.

ERISA is a federal law which mandates minimum standards for most voluntarily established pension and health plans in private industry. The result is additional protection for individuals with covered plans. Long-term disability appeals are included in the health care plans covered by ERISA. Being familiar with ERISA is particularly important when dealing with denials of long-term disability benefits in that this federal law preempts the vast majority of state and local laws pertaining to similar subject matter.

ERISA dictates an administrative process which must be fulfilled in its entirety before the employee obtains the right to sue. The administrative processes differ from policy to policy but the common thread running through every policy is that stringent timelines must be followed in order to safeguard the claim. ERISA also provides for an internal appeal process. Once this process is complete, a lawsuit can be brought.

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE BENEFITS

Although there may be risks if a claimant applies for both unemployment insurance ("UI") benefits and Social Security disability benefits contemporaneously, for those who don't have a financial choice, one is not precluded from filing for both benefits contemporaneously. In order to receive UI benefits, one must assert that he is ready, willing and able to work but cannot find employment. Conversely, to file for Social Security disability benefits one must show that his medical condition prevents him from working in his previous position or any other field and he is not currently seeking employment.

Although there appears to be an inherent conflict in these positions, in Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems Corp, 526 U.S. 795 (1999) the U.S. Supreme Court held that: (1) claims for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits and for ADA damages did not inherently conflict, and (2) an employee was entitled to an opportunity to explain any discrepancy between her statement in pursuing SSDI benefits that she was totally disabled and her ADA claim that she could perform essential functions of her job. A similar analysis can be applied to the receipt of UI benefits where one alleges an ability to do some type of work.

Administrative law judges may not look favorably upon Social Security disability claims where the employee is receiving UI benefits, but they should consider a claimant's application for and/or receipt of UI benefits as only one of the statutory factors adversely impacting the claimant's credibility in assessing the ability to work, and it should be considered as part of the five step sequential evaluation process and the totality of circumstances.

Holding oneself out as being able to work is not the same as being able to work and perform substantial gainful activity. Also, a mere desire to work is not proof of the ability to work, because many employers will not hire someone with a myriad of medical problems, despite that person being willing to make a work attempt.

A November 15, 2006 Memorandum from Chief Judge Frank A. Cristaudo to Regional Chief Judges and Regional Office Management Teams, states that "[t]his is a reminder that the receipt of unemployment insurance benefits does not preclude the receipt of Social Security disability benefits. The receipt of unemployment benefits is only one of many factors that must be considered in determining whether the claimant is disabled. See 20 CFR 404.1512(b) and 416.912(b)." The Memorandum states that Social Security Ruling 00-1c incorporates Cleveland. A long line of Appeal's Council and ALJ Decisions prior to Cleveland support this analysis, which requires consideration of all of the evidence and the totality of circumstances, making the ability to receive both types of benefits possible.

Some advocates delay the date of onset of the condition in a Social Security disability claim paving the way for a client to receive UI benefits for a period of time. However, the Social Security disability process can be quite lengthy, and may not always be successful for claimants, so it may be desirable for them to have a stream of income pending the Social Security disability process. UI benefits are not offset by Social Security disability and therefore can serve as additional funds for claimants during the Social Security disability application process.

THE PUBLIC POLICY EXCEPTION AS APPLIED TO EMPLOYEES AT WILL AND EMPLOYEES WITH WORKER'S COMPENSATION CLAIMS

Since 1891, Pennsylvania common law held that in the absence of a specific statutory or contractual restriction, an at-will employment relationship could be terminated by either the employer or the employee at any time, for a good reason, a bad reason or no reason at all. Henry v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Co., 139 Pa. 289, 21 A. 157 (1891). It was not until almost 100 years later that this holding was reevaluated in Geary v. United States Steel Corporation, 456 Pa. 171, 319 A.2d 174 (1974). In Geary, an employee was terminated for warning his fellow coworkers of the valid dangers posed by the new product the company was manufacturing. Interpreting Geary, Yaindl v. Ingersoll-Rand Co. held "when the discharge of an employee at will threaten public policy, the employee may have a cause of action against the employer for wrongful discharge." 281 Pa.Super. 560, 422 A.2d 611, 617 (1980).

Some states may have statutory or common law making it a violation to terminate an employee who has been injured during the course of employment. In Pennsylvania, for example, the courts have established a narrow exception to the standard employment at will doctrine which permits employers to terminate their employees for minimal reasons, stating that it is a violation of public policy to terminate an employee who initiates a claim of worker's compensation. Rothrock v. Rothrock Motor Sales, Inc., 810 A.2d 114 (Pa.Super. 2002). However, this is often a difficult standard to meet and employers often ignore this exception, taking the risk that an injured employee will not have the substantial resources necessary to sue the employer for violation of the policy.

In September 2009, a record setting consent degree was entered into between Sears, Roebuck and Co. and former employees who were allegedly discriminated against when Sears maintained an inflexible workers' compensation leave exhaustion policy and terminated employees rather than providing them with reasonable accommodations for their disabilities in violation of the ADA. The case was docketed as EEOC v. Sears Roebuck & Co., N.D. Ill. No. 04 C 7282. The Chicago based U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission declared that the class action lawsuit it had initiated would be settled for $6.2 million with additional remedial relief. Many attorneys in the workers compensation field believe that this settlement will lead to important changes in how companies structure their leave policies.

However, the Pennsylvania public policy exception to the employment at-will doctrine will not apply where a statutory remedy is available. For example, an employee who was terminated based on race, color, religion, national origin, or sex is entitled to file under Title VII and similar state statutes, although he may be permitted to raise the exception as an ancillary state claim.

SEVERANCE AGREEMENTS IN LIEU OF COURT PROCEEDINGS

Another helpful tactic which should be considered if Social Security disability standards cannot be met but an employee must leave his position because he can't perform his job duties due to some disability and/or his employer can't reasonably accommodate his disability, is negotiating a severance agreement to include additional funds for a client and/or lengthen his entitlement to health insurance benefits. The agreement will be enforceable so long as the scope is reasonable, no laws are violated, consideration is present and the agreement is knowingly and voluntarily entered into.

Employers are oftentimes willing to enter into a severance agreement to avoid the lengthy discrimination agency or litigation process. It may be far more cost effective for an employer to give these concessions early in the negotiation process. It is important to exhaust all other remedies discussed earlier if a severance agreement is to be signed because standard severance agreements terminate the employee's right to sue the employer for any actions that took place during a certain time frame, with the possible exception of worker's compensation claims, depending on state law.

CONCLUSION

It is not unusual to have a client suffering from a job-related injury or illness who would have been able to continue to work given a reasonable accommodation under the ADAAA or following a FMLA leave. Instead, many employers terminate, lay off, or force these employees to resign in violation of the law and the public policy exception to the employee-at-will doctrine and the aforementioned statutes, depending on state law. That client, in addition to the receipt of Social Security disability benefits, could potentially receive worker's compensation benefits, short and/or long term disability benefits, retirement disability and/or a settlement from an employer due to alleged violations of one of the civil rights acts or policies. Note that there may be financial offsets from receipt of more than one of these types of benefits. Also, a negotiated severance agreement or settlement may include severance pay, extension of insurance benefits and attorney's fees and costs for a client.

In conclusion, there is no doubt, as outlined by the various remedies above, that the disability field of law is often confusing as it requires interaction with various laws and policies which often have not only varying, but conflicting, burdens of proof. However, a practitioner who is at a minimum familiar with other possible remedies can be of great help to his client. Also, this help may result in additional sources of income to the client and to the practitioner who undertakes these additional claims or refers them to other attorneys and is able to collect referral fees depending on state guidelines.