1 / 57

Social Security Administration

Social Security Administration. SSA Disability Benefit Programs. Social Security Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Based on a No work requirement; worker’s earnings income, resources are factors

nuri
Télécharger la présentation

Social Security Administration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Security Administration

  2. SSA Disability Benefit Programs • Social SecuritySupplemental SecurityIncome (SSI) • Based on a No work requirement; worker’s earnings income, resources are factors • Family members Only for individual, possibly entitled not family

  3. Definition of Disability Same for Both Programs • Physical/mental impairment expected to last (or has lasted) 12 months • & • Impairment prevents worker from engaging in “Substantial Gainful Activity” (SGA)

  4. What is “SGA”? • “Gainful activity” is work • To be considered “substantial,” gross earnings must be at least $940* monthly • * $1,570 for blind

  5. Disability “Onset Date” • Refers to earliest date condition meets medical requirements • & • Person was not working above SGA level ($940 monthly)

  6. Who Qualifies for Social Security Disability Benefits? • Worker - filing on own work record • Disabled widow(er) -filing on deceased spouse’s record; minimum age 50 • Disabled Adult Child -filing on parent’s record; over age 18, disabled before 22

  7. To be Insured, Workers need “Credits” • $1,050 earnings = one credit • Can earn maximum of four per year

  8. For Worker, Age at Onset Dictates Credits Required • Age 31 or older: - 20 credits in 40-credit period pre-onset • Age 24 to 30 - credits for half the time from 21-onset • Under Age 24 - 6 credits in three-year period pre-onset

  9. Who Qualifies for SSI Benefits? • Categories of recipients • - aged (65 and older) • - blind • - disabled adults and children • Receive cash benefits, Medicaid

  10. SSI Income Limits • Federal maximum monthly payment, no other income: • - $637 for individual • - $956 for couple (both on SSI) • If other income, $20 exclusion applies- e.g., $500 Social Security results in $157 federal SSI

  11. SSI State Supplement – Penna. • State adds up to $27.40 or $48.30 in separate check • exception: residents of Medicaid facility only due federal payment of $30

  12. SSI - Resource Limits • Resources:cash, bank accounts, bonds, stocks, non-home property • Limits: $2,000 individual $3,000 couple

  13. Filing Disability Application – Online at www.socialsecurity.gov • For Social Security disability, both medical and non-medical portions can be completed online • For SSI, only the medical portion can be completed online; non-medical must be completed in-person or by telephone

  14. Filing Disability Application – By Telephone or In-Office • Call 1-800-772-1213, weekdays 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. • Set up telephone/in-office appointment; will be sent “Disability Starter Kit” in advance

  15. Speeding Up Application • Average processing time: 92 days • Applicant can help by supplying: - names, dates, etc., of doctors, hospitals, clinics, & institutions - names of medications - medical records, lab tests - summary of jobs, type of work

  16. Who Makes Decision? • Medical information sent to Disability Determination Services (DDS) • Disability evaluation specialist, physician review evidence, make determination

  17. If Social Security Claim Approved… • Benefits due after 5-month waiting period e.g., onset date - March 10, 2008 entitlement begins - September 2008 paid - October 2008 • Medicare begins after 24 months of entitlement: September 2010

  18. If SSI Claim Approved… • Benefits usually retroactive to effective date of application • Medicaid entitlement coincides with benefit entitlement

  19. If Claim Denied… • Upon receipt of denial notice, 60 days to file hearing • If hearing denied, other appeals remain:- Appeals Council Review - Federal court review

  20. Medicare • Federal health insurance program administered by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) • SSA makes eligibility determinations, enrolls people, gets card issued

  21. Medicare – Who Gets It? • 65 or older - eligible for Soc. Sec. benefits, or - worked 10 years for government entity, paid Medicare tax • Under 65 - entitled to Soc. Sec. disab. 24 months (no waiting period for ALS) or kidney failure (& insured for benefits)

  22. Traditional Parts of Medicare • Part A - Hospital Insurance - covers inpatient care in hospital, skilled nursing facility, some home health care, hospice; but .... long-term care limited - length of in-patient stay dictates amount of coverage - no premium, but financed by worker’s 1.45% tax

  23. Traditional Parts of Medicare • Part B - Medical Insurance - outpatient procedures, medical supplies - $96.40 standard monthly premium ... .... but, sliding-scale premium for singles with income $82K+, couples with $164K+; affects 4% of beneficiaries

  24. Another “Part” of Medicare • Part C – Medicare Advantage Plan - health plan option, like Medigap plan; receive all health care services thru provider organization - includes HMOs, PPOs, special needs plans, private fee-for-service plans - pay Part B premium & plan premium; lower out-of-pocket costs, more covered services

  25. Newest Part of Medicare – Part D Prescription Drug Plan • Began 2006, CMS responsible - open to all Medicare recipients - choose from plans of private companies - important: compare current plan - enroll soon after applying for Medicare; later, can only enroll Nov. 15 – Dec. 31

  26. Part D “Extra Help” • SSA responsible • People of limited means can get help with:- premium, deductible, co-pays • Must apply, unless in “deemed” category • Apply online or use paper application

  27. Work Incentives Social Security & Supplemental Security Income (SSI)

  28. Social Security Beneficiary Returning to Work • Trial Work Period - can work in nine months - regardless of earnings, benefit paid - to count as TWP month, earnings at least $670 - nine months can be scattered over 60-month period

  29. At conclusion of TWP, ongoing work evaluated • If work “not substantial” (under $940), benefit continues • If work “substantial” ($940+), benefit paid months 10-12, then suspended

  30. Months #13 through #45 .... Extended Period of Eligibility • After 12-months TWP & grace months, “EPE” runs 33 months, to month 45 • Benefit unpaid for months #13-45 whenever SGA ($940+) performed • Likewise, benefit paid for EPE months under $940

  31. Impairment-Related Work Expenses • After TWP completed, the costs of some impairment-related items, services needed to work can be deducted from earnings in determining SGA ... $1100 earnings - $165 IRWE $935 = no SGA • Individual must not be reimbursed for item, cost must be “reasonable,” and item paid for in a work month

  32. What about Work after EPE? • Month #45 is last EPE month * SGA in month 46 or later terminates eligibility * But .....

  33. “Expedited Reinstatement” * If earnings fall below SGA, benefit reinstated...no new application needed * Request must be made within 60 months of termination * Must have same disability * Can receive up to six months of benefits, including Medicare

  34. Continuation of Medicare • All disability recipients are Medicare-eligible after 24 months of benefit entitlement • After TWP, Medicare can continue for 93 months regardless of SGA

  35. SSI Recipient Returning to Work • No TWP, no EPE • SGA not an issue • Earnings reduce payments, but benefits continue as long as income, resource limits not exceeded

  36. How Earnings Reduce SSI • Unlike unearned income, earnings don’t reduce SSI dollar-for-dollar • Subtract $65 ($85) from monthly gross earnings; half of remainder counts against SSI • $600 earnings Half of $515 = -$85 exclusion $515 remainder $257.50 SSI reduction

  37. Monthly Earnings Cut-off • Earnings of $1,359+ results in no SSI payable • $1359 earnings Half of $1274 -$85 exclusion is $1274 remainder $637 • SSI limit: $637.00 - $606.40 countable income 0 = no SSI payable

  38. Impairment-Related Work Expenses • Remember, SGA not an issue for SSI once on; but IRWE reduces countable earnings • $1267.80 earnings $1182.80 -$85.00 exclusion- $52.00 IRWE $1182.80 $1130.80 Half of $1130.80 = $565.40 countable earnings • SSI limit $637.00 - $565.40 countable income $71.60 SSI payable

  39. Continuation of Medicaid • If earnings too high to allow SSI payment, Medicaid still continues if ... .... yearly earnings don’t exceed Pennsylvania threshold: $28,554

  40. Work Exclusion for Students • Must be under age 22 and in regular school attendance • Up to $1,550 earnings excluded per month • Maximum $6,240 excluded yearly

  41. Plan for Achieving Self-Support (PASS) • Use or setting aside of income, resources to achieve work goal, increase prospects for self-support * Excluded income, resources don’t count against SSI, thereby increasing payment * Must be in writing, estimate time period for attaining goal

  42. Ticket to Work • Gives disabled choice in obtaining free rehabilitation & vocational services • Provides more incentives for disabled to work & lessen dependence on public benefits • Removes barriers that make people choose between medical coverage and work

  43. The Ticket Itself • New disability recipients, age 18-64, will be sent Ticket, letter, & booklet • Ticket certificate can be “used” to obtain free vocational, employment services from organizations called “Employment Networks” - ENs are paid, but only if disabled individuals work • Ticket program is voluntary!

  44. Upon Ticket receipt ... • Recipient not required to do anything; remember....voluntary program • But ....if interested in receiving services, call Program Manager (Maximus, Inc.) • Later ... take Ticket to an Employment Network (EN) to obtain services

  45. Employment Network (EN) • Any agency or instrument of the state, or a private entity responsible for the coordination or actual delivery of services can become EN • Can be single entity, consortium, or association of organizations collaborating to combine resources to serve Ticket holders

  46. Examples of ENs • State VR agencies • Any public/private entity providing appropriate services (job readiness, placement, voc. rehab., training, etc.) • Employers offering job training, voc. rehab., support, retention, or other types of job-related services and/or assistance for the disabled

  47. ENs Serving Philadelphia • Currently, 34 ENs signed up • Seven are based in city

More Related