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#11 | ||
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Junior Member
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Wow! Then what is the point of the ticket to work program? If your correct then the SSDI work program is BS!
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#12 | ||
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It is not true that everyone who ever works gets medically ceased. A person who has a spinal cord injury or who is deaf (two obvious types) who goes to work does not have medical improvement so they are not medically ceased. But for some people, being able to go back to work and sustain a job does show medical improvement for some types of disabilities, especially mental problems. That is also obvious to me. Not saying that it may be a struggle to go to work for people with disabilities, but people can get better with appropriate medical care. Holding a job may not show sufficient medical improvement to be ceased, but maybe it will. There are no definitive answers, no crystal ball that will tell you in advance what will happen. Hoosier Daddy's lawyer gave him anecdotal evidence and lawyers' clients are the ones who are dissatisfied with SSA's decisions. So his view is skewed. It may be correct though for a group of people. The SSDI recipients who do go to work and are not ceased wouldn't retain a lawyer. Same with most posters here. |
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#13 | ||
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Junior Member
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#14 | ||
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Magnate
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Attorney's will have no incentive to take his case on. Remember how they're paid (a percentage of backpay). He needs to find a non-profit advocacy group that can help him if neither of you are capable of filing the appeal. If you can't locate one, I'll try to if you provide me with your city and state (by pm is fine). |
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#15 | ||
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Junior Member
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Have your brother contact his congress person for help. Make sure he
request constituent help with a Government agency. That is different than writing a letter. If the brother is close to the congress person office, he could go in person. In my opinion it looks like Social Security violated there own rules. They can't violate there own rules. This discourage people from working at all. |
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#16 | ||
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Magnate
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Gilbert-any update? Did he file an appeal? He can request his benefits to continue you through the first 2 stages, Reconsideration and the ALJ hearing level.
http://ssa.gov/pubs/10090.html Last edited by LIT LOVE; 10-14-2011 at 09:35 PM. Reason: link fixed |
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#17 | ||
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Junior Member
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#18 | ||
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Senior Member
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Good luck to your brother Gilbert.
It is a sticky situation to be sure. I believe the Ticket To Work is a needed program. It helps people keep their benefits while they try to figure out IF they are indeed capable of working or not. I always thought the $1000/month was somewhat arbitrary. How can ANYONE know that someone who makes $999 a month is totally disabled and someone who makes $1001 is not ? Obviously it has to tie into total disablity. Many people with disabilities that are not total ARE able to work. It is more difficult for them to do then it would have been if they were not disabled, but the CAN do it. With a total disability, you CAN"T do it. I think the TTW is supposed to give us time to figure out whether we can or can't work. I don't think it was meant to have people work consistently and deliberately keep the income under $1000 just to keep their SSDI.....like if you (not you in particular, but any of us) refused an extra shift or two, not because you weren't physically able to do it, but because you wanted to stay under a certain limit. I don't think it's a specific number that they say, for instance, "okay...you can make $1001 a month therefore you are not disabled AT ALL." I think it's more of a case of, "if you can make that much, why can't you work more ? It's starting to look like you aren't TOTALLY disabled." Losing benefits doesn't mean you aren't disabled, it means SSA no longer finds you to be TOTALLY disabled. Where and how they draw that line is beyond me ![]()
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. Gee, this looks like a great place to sit and have a picnic with my yummy bone ! |
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#19 | ||
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New Member
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Unfortunately it does depend on your disability. Of course, they won't tell you that. I've had no problem with TTW after I won my disability case 7 years ago over mental health issues. Sure, I had tons of other medical problems but not enough evidence for them. I did have years of mental health evidence, and that's what they ended up basing it on. I tried to get off of SS right after that because it wasn't enough to live on, and I hated even being on it in the first place. However, I ended up being diagnosed with something else a year later - Multiple Sclerosis.
I remember once when I called Medicare about getting a new pair of glasses, and they said that they don't cover it. That ended up being bull since they will if you have a disability that causes you to go blind. Which was what happened to me in one eye. Like I said above - they just won't tell you that. |
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