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May
04
2012

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has made our social security statements available online. People over the age of 18 can go to the SSA website and complete a verification process. Once the verification is complete, the user will be able to access their statement for planning purposes and verifying past wage earnings over their lifetime. The average of your lifetime wages determines your available benefits so obviously it is critical to make sure your account is accurate. Here’s an excerpt from an SSA press release:

To get a personalized online Statement, people age 18 and older must be able to provide information about themselves that matches information already on file with Social Security.  In addition, Social Security uses Experian, an external authentication service provider, for additional verification.  People must provide their identifying information and answer security questions in order to pass this verification.  Social Security will not share a person’s Social Security number with Experian, but the identity check is an important part of this new, robust verification process.

For the full press release, follow this link http://www.socialsecurity.gov/mystatement/

If we can assist you with your Social Security Disability Benefits, feel free to contact us.

www.harrellandharrell.com

 

Jun
29
2011

Our lead Social Security  attorney, Mark Papa, just got out of a meeting with the Chief Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) of the Jacksonville, FL Social Security hearing office. Here’s Mark’s summary of that meeting.

The Jacksonville Hearing Office is receiving 600 new cases per month (which, according to the Chief ALJ, means they are trying to adjudicate at least 600 cases a month, with our without a hearing);

The Jacksonville Hearing Office has 6,400 active cases currently (down from almost 12,000 active cases just 10 years ago, or so);

It is taking approximately 12 months, give or take, to have a hearing scheduled from the time that a claim is received in their office (i.e. after a Request for Hearing is filed);

The Federal fiscal year ends September 30, 2011 and right now, no one knows what Social Security’s budget will be,  The rate at which the claims are processed and heard is directly related to staffing (both support staff and ALJs) at the hearing office, which is directly related to the budget. 

Currently there are 13 ALJs housed at the Jacksonville Hearing Office.

If your claim was filed in Daytona Beach, Deland, Gainesville, Jacksonville, Lake City, Palatka, or St. Augustine, your claim will be heard by a Jacksonville ALJ. 

If we can help you or someone you know answer questions about Social Security or represent you if you are denied, please get in contact with us right away.

Dec
27
2010

A quick update from our lead Social Security attorney, Mark Papa, in our Jacksonville office on the phasing out of paper checks by the Social Security Administration (SSA).

The SSA has settled on the dates when Social Security recipients will no longer be able to receive their benefits by mail. 

New recipients will have to accept paperless payments starting May1, 2011, three months later than originally proposed. 

Those already receiving Social Security benefits will have until March1, 2013 to make to make the switch to either direct deposit or debit card. 

The SSA estimates that $1 billion will be saved over the next decade from phasing out paper checks. 

The Social Security Administration will allow people who are 90 and over to continue receiving paper checks. 

If we can assist you with your claim for SSD or SSI, please contact us.

Nov
10
2010

Thanks to our lead Social Security attorney, Mark Papa, for expanding on a few recent questions submitted to our blog. His detailed explanation is below. If you have any questions regarding your benefits, please give us a call or submit your comment.

A disabled individual receiving Social Security Disability (SSD) benefits who is imprisoned more than 30 continuous days to a jail or prison because of a conviction of a criminal offense, will have his or her SSD benefits suspended.   Benefits can be reinstated starting with the month following the month of release.  “Auxiliary benefits” (those benefits that flow to a spouse or children by virtue of the disabled individual) will continue so long as the spouse of children remain eligible. 

A disabled individual receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits will have his or her SSI benefits suspended while in prison.  Benefits can be reinstated in the month of release.  However, if confinement lasts for 12 consecutive months or longer, eligibility for SSI benefits will terminate and a new application for SSI benefits will have to be filed. 

We also received an inquiry about whether or not a spouse or children of an incarcerated claimant can “stand in the shoes” of a claimant whose claim for disability benefits are pending, but became incarcerated before a decision is made. First, in order for “auxiliary benefits” to flow, there must be a finding of disability and a finding that the incarcerated claimant was entitled to benefits.  I am not aware of any provision within the Social Security Disability law that prevents an ongoing claim from moving forward based upon incarceration.  In fact, I recently conducted an SSD hearing for a client/claimant who became incarcerated during the pendency of his Social Security claim. Therefore, I believe in these instances, the claim should move forward and if a finding of disability is made and even though the incarcerated claimant may not be entitled to benefits, the spouse and children may. .

Oct
19
2010

For the second year in a row, there will be no Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) to monthly Social Security and/or Supplemental Security Income Benefits.  This means monthly Social Security and/or Supplemental Security Income benefits will remain the same for 2011.                

Social Security and SSI benefits increase automatically each year if there is an increase in the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).  Bureau of Labor Statistics data determined there was no increase in the CPI-W. 

To make up for no COLA, there is a push in Congress to give Social Security recipients a one-time payment of $250.  We’ll let you know if this passes.

Give us a call if we can answer your social security questions. Our social security lawyers are standing by and ready to speak with you.

Sep
28
2010

How do these two topics relate to each other? Here’s a summary by our attorney Mark Papa of a memo sent to all the Social Security Administartive Law Judges from their boss:

An August 9, 2010 memorandum from the Chief Administrative Law Judge to all Administrative Law Judges (ALJ) titled Receipt of Unemployment Insurance Benefits by Claimant Applying for Disability Benefits-REMINDER reiterates the following: 

  • Receipt of unemployment benefits does not preclude receipt of Social Security disability benefits.
  • Receipt of unemployment benefits is only one of many factors that must be considered in determining whether the claimant is disabled.
  • A claim for Social Security disability benefits can be consistent with a claim and/or receipt of unemployment benefits.
  • Because of the uncertainty regarding whether a claimant will be found disabled under the Social Security Act and because the decision can be lengthy, “it is SSA’s position that individuals need not choose between applying for unemployment insurance and Social Security disability benefits.”

Again, an application for or the receipt of unemployment benefits is evidence that an ALJ will consider in deciding an SSD claim.  This memorandum instructs ALJs to “look at the totality of the circumstances in determining the significance of the application for unemployment benefits and related efforts to obtain employment.” 

Please contact Harrell and Harrell, PA to discuss this and any other issues you may have with your Social Security Disability and/or Supplemental Security Income claim.

Jun
15
2010

Social Security to Phase Out Paper Checks

The Treasury Department announced that Social Security will stop issuing paper checks on March 1, 2013, at which point all payments will be made electronically.  New enrollees to Social Security programs, including Social Security Disability and Supplemental Security Income, will no longer be able to receive benefits via paper checks beginning March 1 2011.  Existing beneficiaries will have until March 1, 2013 to switch.  After March 1, 2013, all Social Security payments will be deposited electronically to a person’s bank account or to a beneficiary’s government issued debit card. 

It is estimated that this switch will save the Federal Government $300 million over the first five years and $125 million each following year.  It now costs $1 overall to cut and mail a check and only 10 cents for a direct deposit.  The Treasury Department issues more than 135 million benefit checks annually.

If you have any questions please contact Attorney Mark Papa in our Jacksonville,  FL office.

May
07
2010
The Office of Disability Adjudication and Review (ODAR) designates certain cases for “special expedited processing.”  These are deemed “critical cases.”  Currently, ODAR recognizes five situations warranting the use of expedited claims handling:
 
(1)  Where the claimant’s illness is terminal.  These are known as TERI cases.
 
(2)  Where the disability claim involves a military service personnel injured October 1, 2001 or later, regardless of how or where the disability occurred, whether in the United States or on foreign soil, provided the claimant was on active duty when the injury occurred.  This is known as an MSCC (Military Service Casualty Case).
 
(3)  Where the claim is flagged as a Compassionate Allowance case.  The Social Security Administration maintains a list of impairments that qualify as a “compassionate allowance.”
 
(4)  Where the claimant is without and is unable to obtain food, medicine, or shelter.  These are known as DIRE NEED cases.  A dire need exists when a person has insufficient income or resources to meet an immediate threat to health or safety, such as the lack of food, clothing, shelter or medical care.  The circumstances defining the ”dire need” situation must be specifically alleged.
 
(5)  Where there is an indication that the claimant is suicidal or homicidal.
 
If you have been denied Social Security Disability and/or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, please contact us to discuss your claim. 
Apr
20
2010

Thanks to our attorney Mark Papa for finding some interesting statistics regarding the Jacksonville, Florida Office of Disability Adjudication and Review: 

Through January 2010 in Fiscal Year 2010 (which began October 2009), the Jacksonville hearing office received a net of 1905 new cases and closed 2295 in the same time period.  As of January 2010, 7826 cases were pending in the Jacksonville hearing office. 

Also, on average, each Jacksonville Administrative Law Judge closed 2.31 cases per day.  This ranked 77 out of 143 hearing offices nationwide.  The highest average was Harrisburg, PA at 3.77 cases per judge per day.  The lowest average was Miami at 1.30 cases per judge per day. 

These and other statistics can be found at www.ssa.gov/appeals/publicusefiles.html 

Please contact Mark or his staff for assistance with your recent Social Security denial. Mark also informs me that he has had some great success with a large number of Georgia Social Security claims. I’d let you know his success rate bit I don’t want to jinx his success.

Apr
09
2010

Over the last year or so, the Social Security Administration began conducting disability hearings using Video Teleconferencing (VTC) with greater frequency in an effort to move cases through the system quicker.  In these hearings, the claimant may be in one location, the Judge in another location, and any witnesses in another.  The claimant sees and hears the Judge and other parties on “TV” and “talks” to the “TV” when testifying.

 

While VTC may be appropriate in some cases, they are not advisable in all cases.  For example, some claimants may simply not feel comfortable with this type of setting or as a matter of strategy, a face to face/in person hearing is felt to be critical in presenting the case. 

 

Claimants have an absolute right to refuse to appear by VTC and make their appearance before the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) in person.  Pursuant to 20 CFR 404.936(e) and 416.1436(e) a claimant’s wish not to appear by VTC will be found to constitute good reason for changing the time or place of the scheduled hearing and the hearing will be rescheduled for a time and place at which the claimant may appear in person.

 

We strongly encourage Social Security Disability and/or Supplemental Security Income claimants to consult with an attorney with any questions regarding their denied claims.