You are invited to attend a Free Social Security educational session. Eleven different locations and times for you to choose from, including Kalamazoo!!!!Please share this with those that you feel would benefit from this information.Seating is limited at all 11 locations so it is important to RSVP.Let me know if you have any questions. Thank you!!Vonda VanTilPublic Affairs SpecialistSocial Security3045 Knapp St NEGrand Rapids MI 49525w. 1-877-322-5883 X 18872c. 616-304-7642f. 616-363-5827
Tag Archives | Social Security
Social Security Educational Session
Michigan Social Security January Update
January 2013 marks the 100th issue of Michigan Updates!
This newsletter is packed with new and exciting information about Social Security’s online enhancements. It includes ways to order free posters and educational brochures.
Open it, read it and share it!!! Thank you!
Vonda VanTil
Public Affairs Specialist
Social Security
3045 Knapp St NE
Grand Rapids MI 49525
w. 1-877-322-5883 X 18872
c. 616-304-7642
f. 616-363-5827
vonda.vantil@ssa.gov
Requesting a Social Security Award Letter
It looks like the Social Security website has been updated as of this week…there was previously a function that allowed recipients to request a proof of income letter through the social security website without having an online account (by entering the person’s name and social security number). The letter was then mailed to the individual within 7 to 10 days. Has anybody been able to locate the new link for this feature on the website, or has it disappeared?
http://www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount/?URL=/apps6z/BEVE/main.html
Social Security Offices to Shorten Hours
From AARP Blog:
You may want to call ahead to check the hours of operation if you’re planning to visit your local Social Security office anytime soon.
Beginning Monday, Nov. 19, the more than 1,200 field offices around the country will begin closing 30 minutes earlier. Generally, offices that are now open from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. will close at 3 p.m.. Come January, they’ll begin closing at noon every Wednesday.
[Use AARP’s calculator to estimate your benefit.]
Budget cuts are to blame for the shortened hours.
According to Social Security spokeswoman Kia Green, closing the office to the public earlier will allow employees to work their regular hours and not rack up overtime.
Due to budget deadlocks, the federal government is now operating under a continuing resolution, which essentially extends the previous year’s levels of funding.
“We are operating on significantly less funding than either the agency or President Obama requested,” Green told AARP in an email.
During fiscal 2012, 20 field offices were consolidated; 11 were consolidated during the 2011 fiscal year. The 2013 fiscal year began on Oct. 1.
Some 182,000 people visit Social Security offices each day and about 445,000 call daily for assistance. With many baby boomers hitting Social Security eligibility age, these already astounding numbers are likely to continue to grow.
“You can imagine the level of frustration many folks will experience,” says Timothy Gearan, a senior legislative representative at AARP.
If the SSA “already isn’t meeting its stated goals for reducing the backlog on disability claims and not meeting targets for processing retirement claims, that will cause dissatisfaction to people who are entitled to prompt and efficient delivery of service,” he adds.
President Obama’s re-election, and the continuation of the Republican-dominated House, seem to suggest big challenges when it comes to budget resolutions. Congress faces sequestration — across-the-board cuts that affect many federal agencies including the SSA budget. Those cuts are scheduled to go into effect at the beginning of January if lawmakers fail to act.
Gearan says those budget cuts could force the SSA to shed as many as 2,000 jobs on top of the 7,000 jobs that were lost over the last few years.
“There’s got to be a breaking point somewhere in the next three weeks or three months or three years. That breaking point will come,” Gearan says.
http://blog.aarp.org/2012/11/07/social-security-offices-to-shorten-hours/?sf7198441=1&sf7207055=1
Social Security Michigan November Update
Michigan Social Security October Update
Welcome!
The October issue celebrates National Disability Employment Awareness Month.
October 15 is also the beginning of Medicare’s Open Enrollment – a very important time for Medicare Beneficiaries.
A very inspiring Ticket to Work success story is a must read.
One of Social Security’s most popular internet sites – the FAQs- are always most helpful.
Money Mondays: Find out what that’s all about.
Vonda VanTil
Public Affairs Specialist
Social Security
3045 Knapp St NE
Grand Rapids MI 49525
w. 1-877-322-5883 X 18872
c. 616-304-7642
f. 616-363-5827
vonda.vantil@ssa.gov
Safeguarding Social Security Checks as They Go Electronic – NYT
From New York Times:
by Ann Carrns, 9/24/12
Consumer groups — along with paper-producing interests – -are urging the federal government to improve safeguards for Social Security recipients, as the government phases out paper checks for beneficiaries in favor of electronic deposits.
Beginning in March, all Social Security checks will be deposited electronically unless recipients apply for and receive a waiver to keep getting payments via paper checks.
Recipients must receive the payments by direct deposit to a bank account, or to a debit card, including the government’s DirectExpress card. The debit cards allow beneficiaries to make retail purchases with the card or withdraw the funds from automatic teller machines. If current recipients don’t choose a deposit option by March 1, they’ll automatically be sent a DirectExpress card to avoid any delay in receipt of benefits, the Social Security Administration says.
The move is part of an continuing effort by the federal government to reduce paper and cut costs by going electronic for all sorts of things, including savings bonds, unemployment benefits and Social Security benefit statements. Already, 94 percent of beneficiaries receive payments electronically, according to the Office of Inspector General for the Social Security Administration.
But in testimony before a congressional committee this month, consumer advocates urged the government to make sure that safeguards are in place to prevent fraud, like re-directing recipients’ electronic payments, and that the waiver process for recipients who do not want electronic deposits is clear and straightforward.
Beneficiaries aged 92 and older are exempt from the electronic deposit requirement, and others who still want to get paper checks can apply for a waiver. But according to testimony from the National Consumer Law Center, the waiver process is so difficult that few waivers actually have been granted. The group urges the government to liberalize the waiver process, so people who are more comfortable getting paper checks may continue to do so.
While the vast majority of recipients already have voluntarily switched to electronic deposit, “the
population that has resisted doing so to date generally has a good reason,” according to testimony from Margot Freeman Saunders, a lawyer with the consumer law center. They include people who don’t have a bank account; those who don’t understand or feel comfortable with direct deposit; and people who already have workable and affordable methods of receiving their benefits.
Of the over 72,000 calls received by Treasury between May 1, 2011 and July 30, 2012 regarding a waiver, only about 14,000 were even sent a waiver packet with instructions, she said. Then, only 281 notarized responses were received back by Treasury. Those numbers, Ms. Freeman Saunders said, are a “clear illustration” that the need for the waiver far exceeds the number of people actually obtaining one.
Fraud is another concern. The Inspector General of the Social Security Administration said in testimony to Congress this month that it has received more than 19,000 reports about questionable or unauthorized changes to recipients’ direct-deposit information, apparently as part of efforts to illegally re-direct monthly payments. “These reports have involved either an unauthorized change to direct deposit information, or a suspected attempt to make such a change,” according to testimony by Patrick P. O’Carroll Jr., the inspector general for the SSA.
The Inspector General has recommended Social Security make changes to prevent fraudulent redirection of deposits, like developing an automatic notification system to alert recipients of any changes to their deposit information.
On a less dramatic level, consumer groups caution that debit cards may pose challenges for some senior citizens, who may not be used to using PINs and many not know how to properly safeguard them. The cards also carry fees that seniors may be unaccustomed to paying. Fees under DirectExpress are relatively limited; the card offers one free A.T.M. withdrawal after the funds are deposited, and subsequent withdrawals carry a 90-cent fee. Fees also apply for receiving a monthly paper statement (75 cents) and for transferring funds to a personal bank account ($1.50).
A new advocacy group, Consumers for Paper Options, argues that the move will present a hardship for many elderly check recipients. The group has asked the government to retain paper checks as the default option, with electronic delivery available if requested by recipients.
“We think people ought to have a choice for important financial information,” said John Runyan, executive director of Consumers for Paper Options. He said the non-profit is primarily backed by “paper-based communication interests,” like the Envelope Manufacturers Association, the American Forest Paper Association and various paper companies.
Do you or your relatives receive a paper Social Security check? Are you concerned about the move to electronic payments?
Nursing Home Payment
The question was asked, when will a nursing home start “taking” a person’s social security check when they are receiving services at the nursing home … and is there anything that can be done to stop this?
Ann Kraemer states, “I want to reinforce that nursing homes don’t “start taking” resident’s social security. As Brenda notes [below], Medicare & other insurance programs pay for some of the person’s stay in a nursing home. If the resident’s Medicare days run out, (ref Brenda’s reference to the 21-100 days Medicare & related insurance limitations) then the resident has to pay for his/her stay in the nursing home. Residents typically “turn over” their social security checks to the nursing home for a portion of their payment. Keep in mind that nursing homes charge on the average $6-7,000/month so most nursing home residents are looking for ways to pay that tab when their health insurance won’t pay.”
Brenda Carney adds, “For traditional Medicare, Medicare pays 100% of the first 20 days, and then a daily co-payment thereafter for days 21 – 100, as long as they meet the criteria for Medicare Skilled Care. If they have a secondary insurance (besides Medicaid), they may pick-up some to all of the daily co-payment. If their secondary insurance is Medicaid, then at day 21 they start charging the daily co-payment until all but $60 of their social security check is depleted then Medicaid kicks in. If they DO NOT have Medicaid, then the co-payment starts at day 21 and continues until discharge from Medicare. Therefore, it is HIGHLY recommended that they apply for Medicaid should they not have any savings (over $2000) as it could cost them A LOT. Nursing Home Medicaid is different than community Medicaid, so it is worthwhile applying for …
Having said ALL of this, there is a Special Director or Olmstead exception that they can apply for which will possibly waive part to all off the monthly payment to the nursing home out of the Social Security check. Below is a link that explains this application process. The nursing home social worker should be able to assist with this process. They have to provide supports for all NECESSARY bills that they need to maintain their apartment while they are in the nursing home. It does not include Cable TV, etc. I have applied for this on behalf of a resident successfully and partially successfully. Do not anticipate that the entire social security check will be preserved.
http://www.mplp.org/Issues/mplpissue.2010-05-05.9554801510
As for food stamps and SSI, while you are in a nursing home, these items are items that can be cut. However, it does not consistently happen, depending on how long the individual is in the nursing home and the speediness at which the billing office at the nursing home submits and the State changes the resident’s status as Nursing Home in the State computer. There is no work around that I know of … and cannot be applied for until after they are discharged from the nursing home. There is a code in the State Medicaid system that needs to have them reflected as being community living for them to be eligible for Food Stamps and SSI. Conversely, it can take a while when the person is OUT of the nursing home to resume these services as it depends on the speed of the billing office at the nursing home to submit and DHS to change the State database.”
Social Security Michigan Updates
- Find out how to work with Social Security from home.
- Check out the numerous resources and opportunities available for youth with disabilities.
- Sign up for the latest Webinar which covers the frequently asked questions regarding working while receiving disability benefits.
- Celebrate a 40 year anniversary and much more………………………
Social Security Michigan August Updates
- Huntington’s Disease Added to List!
- Stay Connected!
- Ticket Training Tuesdays!
- Support for those Ready to Work!
- SSI Employment Supports!
- Mandatory Direct Deposit!
