Originally Posted by
twinkiedooter
If you are "advising" people who are filing for their initial claim then I sure hope you have a license to practice law. No attorney is allowed to get involved LEGALLY with a SSD claim until after the claimant has been denied at least once. What you are doing is ILLEGAL. You need to cease doing this or, trust me, you will be caught and prosecuted for practicing law without a license.
Please cite your source regarding your claims? You aren't even making any sense. First you disagreed with my post by stating the following: "twinkiedooter disagrees: A lawyer cannot legally help anyone filing a SSD claim. What you are doing is illegal." 1) Did I
ever claim to be a lawyer? No, I didn't. Don't even know where you came up with that one. Then, you contradict yourself by stating that I need a license to practice law to advise people who are filing their initial claim, and that I can be prosecuted for advising people without a license. So, which
is it? Can a lawyer advise, or not? If not, then why would someone advising others on filing a claim need a law license?
I post in a few groups which deal with disability issues, and a number of us advise, assist, and help people who post asking questions about filing initial claims. We help with appeals, reviews and other matters. One is a grouop dedicated to SSDI, and a regular there is a retired employee of SSA, who handled such claims and has a lot of experience to offer. There is also a Yahoo! Group that is dedicated specifically to people helping, advising and assisting others through the claim process for both SSDI and SSI. I guess they must be breaking the law, somebody needs to shut them down and prosecute them for practicing as attorneys.
I posted about what you and Judy claim regarding the need for one to be a licensed attorney, and said that what we are doing in these groups must be illegal then. I then asked if we may advise, assist and help claimants. The retired SSA individual posted the following:
"SSA employees are barred from helping individuals pursue their claims,
except as specified in their official capacity.
Non-SSA employees are not barred from helping anyone. Non-attorney
disability advocates even represent people in front of the ALJ.
There is no law at present that bars you from giving your opinions in
these newsgroups, blogs, etc. After all, SSA has posted their
regulations, rulings, and POMS online for the world to see. Just
point the people in the right direction and let them see for
themselves. Nothing illegal about that."
He further said:
"Rep payees help people complete their applications. They can be
friends, relatives, or even the neighborhood bartender."
A neighbor in my building had one of those, the Pastor from her church. He helped her apply for SSI, and acted as Rep Payee for her checks. She also had him appointed as Power of Attorney regarding her finances and health. He paid the bils, saw to it that she got her prescriptions, scheduled doctors visits, etc.
The retired SSA employee then provided a link to this page which talks about representing someone by appointment. It clearly differentiates the difference between an appointed representative which accepts a fee and someone just assisting a claimant.
GN 03910.020 Who Is a Representative
https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.n...0!opendocument
Some facts that can be gleaned from this page that contradict your claim.
1) A person who is not an attorney may serve as a claimant's representative...
2) Under the regulations, only individual persons may be appointed and act as representatives before SSA. A claimant may appoint more than one person as his /her representative. However, an entity such as a firm, partnership, legal corporation, or other organization is not an individual person; therefore, the claimant may not appoint an entity to act as his/her representative.
3) Persons rendering the following types of assistance are not acting as “representatives,”... : a friend or relative who accompanies a claimant to an interview and assists the claimant by, e.g. answering questions or providing evidence, but who will not act in an ongoing role as the claimant's advocate. (Which supports the comment by the retired SSA employee above regarding anyone can help, advise, assist.)
4)If an individual is assisting the claimant during an interview or telephone contact at any stage of the claims process, and it is not clear whether he/she is representing the claimant,
or only informally helping the claimant or supplying information (bold emphasis mine) *:
• advise the claimant regarding his/her right to representation (see GN 03910.030) and SSA's fee authorization processes (see GN 03920.001 ff.);
• ask the claimant whether he/she wishes the other person to act on his/her behalf as a representative; and
• have the claimant appoint the person (see GN 03910.040), if the claimant wants that person to represent him/her.
* There's another statement backing up what the retired emplyee saying about anyone can assist, advise, help claimants.
As he said, there is absolutely nothing that says one cannot advise a person during the claims process by supplying information. And we do this all the time in this SSDI group that he is a regular in, and in other disability related ones. Another group poster added the following:
"Assisting someone in completing a form with complete answers, or
answers that are phrased in a way that the system expects and
interacts is not giving legal advise.
If so every disability agency around, few of whom employ lawyers that
assist with forms completion, would be in jail."
Everyone in the groups mentioned above volunteer their time and help to the groups. None are paid, and none are lawyers.
I respectfully ask that you and Judy supply your sources that say anything I, or these others, are doing, is in any way illegal and subject to prosecution.
Originally Posted by
twinkiedooter
Just because you were approved rather quickly does not mean everyone is approved quickly. In some states you need to be denied at least 3 times prior to approval and then only after the person had an attorney help them in their appeal. I worked for a SSD attorney for years who, by law, was not allowed to help a person prior to being denied by SSD at least once. He even had to handle several appeals for one person before that person was approved. You make it out as being a slam, bam, file and get approved thing. This is totally wrong. Sorry.
Never claimed that, I only stated what happened in my own individual situation. It's a pretty well known fact the majority are denied and must go through the appeal process. I stated what happened to me, and what my caseworker told me when I asked. If you fill out the claim right the first time, your odds are better of getting approved, than if you don't. If you fail to provide the necessary information upfront, you are more likely to be denied. The retired SSA employee provided the following to further explain:
"In the disability determination process, symptoms serve to alert the adjudicator as to where to concentrate development efforts in seeking to determine whether a medically demonstrable impairment exists. If such an impairment can be demonstrated on the basis of signs or laboratory findings, the individual's symptoms are considered “explained” and may be helpful in evaluating the effects of the impairment on an adult's ability to do work-related activities in cases in which the Listing of Impairments is not equaled or met, or the ability of a child to function in an age-appropriate manner."
https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.n...0!opendocument
DI 24501.020 Symptoms, Signs, and Laboratory Findings
Originally Posted by
twinkiedooter
Also, the waiting period WAS 6 months. It was just recently changed. Same as the children of the workers getting benefits from the time the case was filed. That changed also recently.
I don't know where
you have been, but it was 5 months when I applied back in 1993, in fact the waiting period has been 5 months since
1973. Certainly not 'recently', as you claimed. Children, regardless of whether they're minor, disabled, or students, have never had their own waiting period. Their month of entitlement
Is the same as the parent, assuming that they meet all the requirements for childhood benefits. If the parent is already receiving benefits, the child is immediately eligible from the month and day of application. This happened with my former SIL. The father of her one child receives SSDI; the child became immediately eligible for benefits upon birth, as the father applied immediately after, and the benefits were retroactive. The mother receives the check because she has primary custody. The child in question is now 10 yo.
See the two links below, straight from SSA.
https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.n...0!opendocument
Scroll down to section B.
SSA Handbook §0323
I stand behind my original statements and provided the source to back them up. Your source for it being recent is..?
I wasn't even going to bother returning to this thread, until I saw the comments section while checking my account, and was wondering what in the world led to the "twinkiedooter disagrees: A lawyer cannot legally help anyone filing a SSD claim. What you are doing is illegal."