The Forsythe Firm helps the disabled in Alabama and Tennessee to obtain Social Security disability and SSI benefits. We are dedicated to excellence in individualized representation and never charge a fee unless we are successful. (256) 799-0297.
Thursday, May 14, 2020
BEWARE OF SOCIAL SECURITY DEADLINES
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
HOW UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION AFFECTS A SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY CLAIM
Monday, May 11, 2020
NO INSURANCE. NO DOCTOR. CAN YOU GET DISABILITY BENEFITS?
Saturday, May 9, 2020
HELP! WHERE ARE MY DISABILITY BENEFITS - ALABAMA EDITION
Friday, May 8, 2020
WHO YOU MAY ENCOUNTER IN DEALING WITH SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Who are you likely to encounter in trying to get Social Security disability?
- The Social Security Field Office. This is your local Social Security office. It is responsible for collecting all the forms and pieces of the application for benefits. It can also answer basic questions for you.
- The Disability Determination Service (DDS). This is a state agency that works under contract with Social Security to process disability claims. The DDS will order your medical records, review them and make the initial decision about whether you meet the rules to get a disability benefit.
- Disability Specialist - This is a state employee who works for the Disability Determination Service and manages your claim while at the DDS level. You may get mail from this person or speak to them on the phone.
- Office of Hearings Operations (OHO). This is the office that handles your appeal if your claim is denied at the initial level and at Reconsideration, and you file an appeal.
- Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). This judge works for the Social Security Administration and conducts hearings when your claim for benefits has been denied. You have a right to appear before this judge in person and you may be represented by legal counsel (who may appear with you). Most claims get resolved here. You must file a timely appeal to get a hearing.
- Vocational Expert (VE). A vocational rehabilitation counselor who is called by Social Security to testify at a hearing. The VE will classify each of the claimant's past relevant jobs and will answer a series of hypothetical questions posed by the administrative law judge concerning the ability to work under various restrictions. The VE's testimony is very pertinent to the decision that will be rendered by the ALJ.
- Payment Processing Center. After your claim has been approved, it goes to a payment processing center where benefits are calculated and checks are written to the claimant and representative (if any).
- The Appeals Council (AC) - is the group of administrative law judges in Falls Church, Virginia which reviews hearing decisions on appeal. This is the final administrative appeal. There is no hearing and neither the claimant or representative appears before the AC for this appeal. The Council will review the administrative law judge's handling of your hearing to see if it properly considered all the evidence and applied the rules of the Social Security Administration correctly. The AC does not try to re-examine whether the claimant is disabled.
- Federal District Court (DC) - may review a denied claim upon appeal by the claimant--after the case has been denied by both an administrative law judge and the Appeals Council. Only about 1 percent of all Social Security disability claims go to this level. A federal district court challenge involves a federal lawsuit by the claimant against the Commissioner of Social Security.
DISABILITY: WHAT YOUR DOCTOR CAN AND CANNOT DO
WHAT KIND OF INCOME AFFECTS MY SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFIT?
ONE SINGLE KEY TO SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Thursday, May 7, 2020
SHORT TERM DISABILITY, LONG TERM DISABILITY, AND SOCIAL SECURITY
- You usually must apply for benefits and get your doctor to submit forms
- STD is often easier (and faster) to get started than Social Security.
- STD is sold by private insurance companies, usually to businesses, to cover their employees. Many insurance companies sell it.
- Receiving STD will not hinder Social Security claims and will not make you ineligible for SSDI.
- Coverage may be offered free by your employer or you may have to request enrollment and contribute to the cost to be covered.
- You generally cannot enroll in LTD after a disability strikes. (You must get it before you need it, like all insurance).
- Each employer has a policy from the insurance company which spells out coverage terms and conditions.
- Most LTD policies require the worker to file for Social Security Disability (SSDI) benefits as soon as LTD benefits start to pay.
- You, the disabled employee, are responsible for filing for SSDI and your LTD company will generally require you to appeal a denial by Social Security in order to keep STD payments.
- You may hire your own advocate or attorney to represent you with Social Security; you don't have to us the insurance company's lawyer.
- If you eventually get Social Security benefits (SSDI), your LTD company will usually reduce its payments by the amount of the SSDI award.
- Getting LTD payments will NOT interfere with your ability to receive SSDI benefits.
- Be careful about voluntarily giving up any LTD benefits, even after you start getting an SSDI benefit.
- Obligations of the LTD company may not completely end when you get approved for Social Security disability. They may still owe you payments, depending on your policy's terms.
SOCIAL SECURITY WIDOWS OR SURVIVORS BENEFITS
SOCIAL SECURITY MAY PROVIDE FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR A SURVIVING DIVORCED SPOUSE
If your ex-spouse dies and you were married at least 10 years you may be eligible for Social Security survivor’s payments on your ex-spouse's earnings record. Basically, Social Security treats you like a widow or widower if you were in a marriage for at least 10 years.. This reflects the reality that the economic circumstances of any marriage that lasts at least a decade probably will have a financial impact on the standards of living for the rest of the spouses’ lives.
ELIGIBILITY
To determine eligibility for benefits under an ex-spouse's work record,, the Social Security Administration (SSA) applies a formula. SSA considers how many work credits the deceased worker earned as well as the deceased’s spouse's age at time of death.
If a surviving divorced spouse cares for a biological or adopted child of their deceased ex-spouse, and that child is either disabled or under age 16, they may be eligible even if the marriage lasted less than 10 years.
My firm recently represented a widow in just this type of situation. She had been married more than 10 years, her husband had passed away a couple of years ago, and the woman herself (over 50) is unable to work. She had applied for Social Security survivor's benefits but was denied, which happens all too often. She came to my office in desperation, wandering how she was going to survive financially with no Social Security support. It became apparent to me that she had been unjustly denied survivor's benefits. I filed a petition for appeal and the case wound up before a federal administrative law judge. During a one-hour hearing, the judge found that my client was eligible for Social Security survivor's benefits based on her deceased husband's work record. The judge not only allowed monthly payments to begin, but also approved retroactive pay back to the date of the original claim.
I fear that many women, especially, find themselves in this situation after the death of a spouse. They have not worked sufficiently to get benefits under their own work record. Their spouse supported the family until his death. When the woman applies for Social Security disability, she is told that she doesn't have enough work credits for SSDI or Title 2. Or, She may be told that she is not disabled "according to the rules of the Social Security Administration." In either event, her benefits are denied.
This is time to get competent representation and take the case higher up the chain of command to a judge. This can easily be done with no upfront cost.
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The Forsythe Firm
7027 Old Madison Pike - Suite 108
Huntsville, AL 35806
Consultations by phone or by appointment only
(256) 799-0297
I LIVE IN HUNTSVILLE AND NEED DISABILITY BENEFITS. GUESS WHO I FOUND WHO COULD HELP?
TOGETHER WE GET YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS!
- You pay nothing upfront, no fee, no deposit, nothing.
- If your case wins, you still owe us nothing unless we collect back pay for you.
- If there is back pay, Social Security will approve and pay a small percentage of the back pay to cover our fee.
Monday, May 4, 2020
WHO ULTIMATELY DECIDES DISABILITY CASES?
A hearing, which lasts about one hour, considers your testimony, your attorney's arguments, the medical evidence, and the testimony of a vocational witness.
Specific factors which play a large part in the judge's decision include:
- Age of the claimant
- Education
- Past work experience (over the past 15 years only)
- Medical Evidence
- Residual Functional Capacity
- Transferable Skills from past work
RFC is the maximum that an individual can still do in terms of work-related activity. In short, can much can the individual lift and carry? How long can he/she stand, walk and sit? How often can the claimant reach, bend, squat, kneel or balance? In terms of the mental demands of work, what is the claimant's restrictions on understanding, remembering and carrying out simple instructions? How much of the time will the individual be off task due to problems with concentration or focus?
How will these limitations affect the ability to perform jobs at the various exertion levels: very heavy, heavy, medium, light and sedentary? Will the claimant be able to perform skilled, semi-skilled or unskilled work? How many jobs are there in the national economy that fits the claimant's Residual Functional Capacity? (A question for the vocational expert).
From a practical point of view, most claims are decided on the claimant's ability to perform either light or sedentary level jobs at the unskilled level.
There are so many technical issues that go into a Social Security disability appeal that I'm surprised that anyone would undertake this venture without representation. (I think many claimants do so because they don't know what they are getting into).
It is far from just telling your story to the judge. It's more about proving that you meet all of the technical demands of Social Security's regulations.
You need an understanding of medical evidence, grid rules, Social Security Listings, transferable skills and exertion levels--just to name a few things. You will also need to know how to question (cross examine) the government's vocational expert. If the expert gives unfavorable testimony, as they often do, it leaves your decision lingering in critical condition between life and death. Asking the right questions can be the life-saver of your claim.
The judge who hears your case will require proof, not just a good story.

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGES CAN BE VERY SKEPTICAL!