How to Speed Up the Social Security
Disability Decision Making Process
by Jonathan Ginsberg
If you have filed a
Social Security disability claim, there is a very good chance
that you may be forced to wait as long as four years for a
decision. According to Social Security’s own reports, the
average claim in the United States take over three years start
to finish. In some areas of the country, SSDI and SSI claims
may take over four years because of a shortage of judges and
other Social Security Administration personnel.
These delays can cause extreme hardship to disabled
claimants who do not have savings or family support to offer
food, clothing and housing. Injured or sick workers who somehow
manage to “hold on” for six months or even a year simply cannot
survive if the delays extend beyond 12 months.
New Social Security Disability
Regulations - Designed to Reduce Delays
Social Security is trying to address this problem with a new
set of rules that go into effect starting in August, 2006. Over
the next seven years these new Social Security regulations will
be in force all over the country. Among the highlights - a new
program called QDD (quick disability determination) which is
designed to identify those cases where a claimant is clearly
disabled and is unlikely to recover. Hopefully this new program
will offer some relief to sufferers of AIDS, congestive heart
failure, brittle diabetes, multi-level disc disease and other
severe medical conditions.
The new Social Security regulations are sure to be the topic
of numerous disability blog posts and you should take advantage
of these free resources to educate yourself.
The new regulations also provide for a Federal Reviewing
Officer - a specially trained Social Security employee who has
more decision making power than the decision makers who
normally process claims.
If these new programs have been started in your area, you
should make every effort to take advantage of them. A
Social Security disability lawyer in your
area can advise you whether the new rules have gone into
effect where you live.
Your Elected Representatives
May Be Able to Move You to the Front of the
Line
Another effective strategy for getting a quick decision
requires the help and participation of your elected
representatives. Every United States Senator and most
Congressional Representatives have a Social Security liaison
staff person whose sole job is to assist Social Security
claimants. Although your Senator or Representative cannot
influence Social Security claim decisions, they can sometimes
move your case to the front of the list and get your hearing
put on a judge’s docket.
If you contact your elected representatives to ask for help
be prepared to identify a pending crisis such as a home
foreclosure or vehicle repossession and be prepared to document
that you have provided Social Security with a complete list of
treating doctors and hospitals.
Finally, do not hesitate to contact a local Social Security disability
attorney who can advise you as to the typical delays in
your area, and whether your elected representatives have
been helpful in the past.
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, the most recent of
which is the Social Security disability
blog at http://www.ssdAnswers.com
.
Article
Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jonathan_Ginsberg
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