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"Unfit for Work: The startling rise of disability in America"


Posted: Mar 27, 2013

http://apps.npr.org/unfit-for-work

 

UNFIT FOR WORK

The startling rise of disability in America

By Chana Joffe-Walt

In the past three decades, the number of Americans who are on disability has skyrocketed. The rise has come even as medical advances have allowed many more people to remain on the job, and new laws have banned workplace discrimination against the disabled. Every month, 14 million people now get a disability check from the government.

The federal government spends more money each year on cash payments for disabled former workers than it spends on food stamps and welfare combined. Yet people relying on disability payments are often overlooked in discussions of the social safety net. People on federal disability do not work. Yet because they are not technically part of the labor force, they are not counted among the unemployed.

In other words, people on disability don't show up in any of the places we usually look to see how the economy is doing. But the story of these programs -- who goes on them, and why, and what happens after that -- is, to a large extent, the story of the U.S. economy. It's the story not only of an aging workforce, but also of a hidden, increasingly expensive safety net.

For the past six months, I've been reporting on the growth of federal disability programs. I've been trying to understand what disability means for American workers, and, more broadly, what it means for poor people in America nearly 20 years after we ended welfare as we knew it. Here's what I found.

One In Four

Credit: Brinson Banks for NPR
Hale County, Alabama

In Hale County, Alabama, 1 in 4 working-age adults is on disability. On the day government checks come in every month, banks stay open late, Main Street fills up with cars, and anybody looking to unload an old TV or armchair has a yard sale.

Sonny Ryan, a retired judge in town, didn't hear disability cases in his courtroom. But the subject came up often. He described one exchange he had with a man who was on disability but looked healthy.

"Just out of curiosity, what is your disability?" the judge asked from the bench.
"I have high blood pressure," the man said.
"So do I," the judge said. "What else?"
"I have diabetes."
"So do I."

There's no diagnosis called disability. You don't go to the doctor and the doctor says, "We've run the tests and it looks like you have disability." It's squishy enough that you can end up with one person with high blood pressure who is labeled disabled and another who is not.

I talked to lots of people in Hale County who were on disability. Sometimes, the disability seemed unambiguous.

"I was in a 1990 Jeep Cherokee Laredo," Dane Mitchell, a 23-year-old guy I met in a coffee shop, told me. "I flipped it both ways, flew 165 feet from the Jeep, going through 12 to 14,000 volts of electrical lines. Then I landed into a briar patch. I broke all five of my right toes, my right hip, seven of my vertebrae, shattering one, breaking a right rib, punctured my lung, and then I cracked my neck."

Other stories seemed less clear. I sat with lots of women in Hale County who told me how their backs kept them up at night and made it hard for them to stand on the job. "I used to cry to try to work," one woman told me. "It was so painful."

People don't seem to be faking this pain, but it gets confusing. I have back pain. My editor has a herniated disc, and he works harder than anyone I know. There must be millions of people with asthma and diabetes who go to work every day. Who gets to decide whether, say, back pain makes someone disabled?

As far as the federal government is concerned, you're disabled if you have a medical condition that makes it impossible to work. In practice, it's a judgment call made in doctors' offices and courtrooms around the country. The health problems where there is most latitude for judgment -- back pain, mental illness -- are among the fastest growing causes of disability.

Graph: Newly Disabled=Source: Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR

In Hale County, there was one guy whose name was mentioned in almost every story about becoming disabled: Dr. Perry Timberlake. I began to wonder if he was the reason so many people in Hale County are on disability. Maybe he was running some sort of disability scam, referring tons of people into the program.

After sitting in the waiting room of his clinic several mornings in a row, I met Dr. Timberlake. It turns out, there is nothing shifty about him. He is a doctor in a very poor place where pretty much every person who comes into his office tells him they are in pain.

"We talk about the pain and what it’s like," he says. "I always ask them, 'What grade did you finish?'"

What grade did you finish, of course, is not really a medical question. But Dr. Timberlake believes he needs this information in disability cases because people who have only a high school education aren't going to be able to get a sit-down job.

Dr. Timberlake is making a judgment call that if you have a particular back problem and a college degree, you're not disabled. Without the degree, you are.

  • Dr. Perry Timberlake poses for a portrait in an examination room at the Hale County Hospital Clinic on in Greensboro, AlabamaIn Hale County, there was one guy whose name was mentioned in almost every story about becoming disabled: Dr. Perry Timberlake, shown in an examination room at the Hale County Hospital Clinic in Greensboro, Alabama.Credit: Brinson Banks for NPR

Over and over again, I'd listen to someone's story of how back pain meant they could no longer work, or how a shoulder injury had put them out of a job. Then I would ask: What about a job where you don't have to lift things, or a job where you don't have to use your shoulder, or a job where you can sit down? They would look at me as if I were asking, "How come you didn't consider becoming an astronaut?"

One woman I met, Ethel Thomas, is on disability for back pain after working many years at the fish plant, and then as a nurse's aide. When I asked her what job she would have in her dream world, she told me she would be the woman at the Social Security office who weeds through disability applications. I figured she said this because she thought she'd be good at weeding out the cheaters. But that wasn't it. She said she wanted this job because it is the only job she's seen where you get to sit all day.

At first, I found this hard to believe. But then I started looking around town. There's the McDonald's, the fish plant, the truck repair shop. I went down a list of job openings -- Occupational Therapist, McDonald's, McDonald's, Truck Driver (heavy lifting), KFC, Registered Nurse, McDonald's.

I actually think it might be possible that Ethel could not conceive of a job that would accommodate her pain.

‘We're Just Hiding You Guys’

Credit: John Lloyd / Flickr
Aberdeen, Washington

There's a story we hear all the time these days that doesn't, on its face, seem to have anything to do with disability: Local Mill Shuts Down. Or, maybe: Factory To Close.

Four years ago, when I was working as a reporter in Seattle, I did that story. I stood with workers in a dead mill in Aberdeen, Washington and memorialized the era when you could graduate from high school and get a job at a mill and live a good life. That was the end of the story.

But after I got interested in disability, I followed up with some of the guys to see what happened to them after the mill closed. One of them, Scott Birdsall, went to lots of meetings where he learned about retraining programs and educational opportunities. At one meeting, he says, a staff member pulled him aside.

"Scotty, I'm gonna be honest with you," the guy told him. "There's nobody gonna hire you … We're just hiding you guys." The staff member's advice to Scott was blunt: "Just suck all the benefits you can out of the system until everything is gone, and then you're on your own."

Scott, who was 56 years old at the time, says it was the most real thing anyone had said to him in a while.

There used to be a lot of jobs that you could do with just a high school degree, and that paid enough to be considered middle class. I knew, of course, that those have been disappearing for decades. What surprised me was what has been happening to many of the people who lost those jobs: They've been going on disability.

Applications for Disability Rise and Fall With the Unemployment RateSource: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR

Scott tried school for a while, but hated it. So he took the advice of the rogue staffer who told him to suck all the benefits he could out of the system. He had a heart attack after the mill closed and figured, "Since I've had a bypass, maybe I can get on disability, and then I won't have worry to about this stuff anymore." It worked; Scott is now on disability.

Scott's dad had a heart attack and went back to work in the mill. If there'd been a mill for Scott to go back to work in, he says, he'd have done that too. But there wasn't a mill, so he went on disability. It wasn't just Scott. I talked to a bunch of mill guys who took this path -- one who shattered the bones in his ankle and leg, one with diabetes, another with a heart attack. When the mill shut down, they all went on disability.

I don't know what that rogue staffer meant when he told Scott Birdsall they were trying to hide those mill guys. But signing up for disability benefits is an excellent way to stay hidden in one key way: People on disability are not counted among the unemployed.

Graph: Percentage of Population Age 18-64 on Workers' Disability (2011)Source: Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR

"That's a kind of ugly secret of the American labor market," David Autor, an economist at MIT, told me. "Part of the reason our unemployment rates have been low, until recently, is that a lot of people who would have trouble finding jobs are on a different program."

Part of the rise in the number of people on disability is simply driven by the fact that the workforce is getting older, and older people tend to have more health problems.

But disability has also become a de facto welfare program for people without a lot of education or job skills. But it wasn't supposed to serve this purpose; it's not a retraining program designed to get people back onto their feet. Once people go onto disability, they almost never go back to work. Fewer than 1 percent of those who were on the federal program for disabled workers at the beginning of 2011 have returned to the workforce since then, one economist told me.

People who leave the workforce and go on disability qualify for Medicare, the government health care program that also covers the elderly. They also get disability payments from the government of about $13,000 a year. This isn't great. But if your alternative is a minimum wage job that will pay you at most $15,000 a year, and probably does not include health insurance, disability may be a better option.

But going on disability means you will not work, you will not get a raise, you will not get whatever meaning people get from work. Going on disability means, assuming you rely only on those disability payments, you will be poor for the rest of your life. That's the deal. And it's a deal 14 million Americans have signed up for.

Kids

Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR
Jahleel Duroc is on disability

As I got further into this story, I started hearing about another group of people on disability: kids. People in Hale County told me that what you want is a kid who can "pull a check." Many people mentioned this, but I basically ignored it. It seemed like one of those things that maybe happened once or twice, got written up in the paper and became conversational fact among neighbors.

Then I looked at the numbers. I found that the number of kids on a program called Supplemental Security Income -- a program for children and adults who are both poor and disabled -- is almost seven times larger than it was 30 years ago.

Graph: Children on Disability (1974-2011)Source: Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR
Note: To see the number of disabled children on disability as a percentage of children eligible for the benefits, go here.

Jahleel Duroc (pictured above) is gap-toothed, 10 and vibrating with enthusiasm. He's excited to talk to someone new, excited to show me his map of his neighborhood in the Bronx. He's disabled in the eyes of the government because he has a learning disability.

"I like school," he told me. "My favorite periods are math and science and art, and lunch and recess and snack … social studies and writing are my favorite."

His favorite thing about school, in other words, is everything.

When you are an adult applying for disability you have to prove you cannot function in a "work-like setting." When you are a kid, a disability can be anything that prevents you from progressing in school. Two-thirds of all kids on the program today have been diagnosed with mental or intellectual problems.

Jahleel is a kid you can imagine doing very well for himself. He is delayed. But given the right circumstances and support, it's easy to believe that over the course of his schooling Jahleel could catch up.

Let's imagine that happens. Jahleel starts doing better in school, overcomes some of his disabilities. He doesn't need the disability program anymore. That would seem to be great for everyone, except for one thing: It would threaten his family's livelihood. Jahleel's family primarily survives off the monthly $700 check they get for his disability.

Jahleel's mom wants him to do well in school. That is absolutely clear. But her livelihood depends on Jahleel struggling in school. This tension only increases as kids get older. One mother told me her teenage son wanted to work, but she didn't want him to get a job because if he did, the family would lose its disability check.

I haven't taken a survey or anything, but I'm guessing a large majority of Americans would be in favor of some form of government support for disabled children living in poverty. We would have a hard time agreeing on exactly how we want to offer support, but I think there are some basic things we'd all agree on.

Kids should be encouraged to go to school. Kids should want to do well in school. Parents should want their kids to do well in school. Kids should be confident their parents can provide for them regardless of how they do in school. Kids should become more and more independent as they grow older and hopefully be able to support themselves at around age 18.

The disability program stands in opposition to every one of these aims.

The End Of Welfare As We Knew It

Credit: J. Scott Applewhite / Associated PressBill Clinton signs welfare reform into law (1996).

A federal program for disabled people was first proposed in the 1930s. Even then, a Social Security actuary was worried. "You will have workers like those in the Dust Bowl area, people who have migrated to California and elsewhere, who perhaps have not worked in a year or two, who will imagine they are disabled," the actuary wrote. The cost of the program could be higher than "anything that can be forecast."

The actuary's warning gets at a central tension in a much bigger debate: What should we, as a country, do for people who aren't making it? Americans want to be generous. But Americans don't want to be chumps.

The first key pieces of the modern safety net were created in the 1930s, under Franklin Roosevelt. The first federal disability program was created in the '50s. A few years later, Lyndon Johnson pushed to expand the federal safety net further.

In the '80s, Ronald Reagan argued that a robust economy would do more to eliminate poverty than any federal program. When Reagan used the term "welfare queen," it was clear where he stood. He didn't want to be a chump.

Bill Clinton tried to appease both sides. He expanded many programs for the working poor, but he also promised to "end welfare as we know it" -- to nudge people off of public assistance, give them some job training, and force them to make it on their own. "A society rooted in responsibility must first promote the value of work, not welfare," Clinton said. History has judged Clinton's welfare reform a big success.

But when you include disability in the story of welfare reform, the picture looks more ambiguous.

Graph showing as the number of families on welfare declines the number of low-income on disability rose and the number of former workers on disability went upSource: Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR

Part of Clinton's welfare reform plan pushed states to get people on welfare into jobs, partly by making states pay a much larger share of welfare costs. The incentive seemed to work; the welfare rolls shrank. But not everyone who left welfare went to work.

‘Can you think of anything else that’s been bothering you and disabling you and preventing you from working?’

Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR

A person on welfare costs a state money. That same resident on disability doesn't cost the state a cent, because the federal government covers the entire bill for people on disability. So states can save money by shifting people from welfare to disability. And the Public Consulting Group is glad to help.

PCG is a private company that states pay to comb their welfare rolls and move as many people as possible onto disability. "What we're offering is to work to identify those folks who have the highest likelihood of meeting disability criteria," Pat Coakley, who runs PCG's Social Security Advocacy Management team, told me.

The company has an office in eastern Washington state that's basically a call center, full of headsetted women in cubicles who make calls all day long to potentially disabled Americans, trying to help them discover and document their disabilities:

"The high blood pressure, how long have you been taking medications for that?" one PCG employee asked over the phone the day I visited the company. "Can you think of anything else that's been bothering you and disabling you and preventing you from working?"

The PCG agents help the potentially disabled fill out the Social Security disability application over the phone. And by help, I mean the agents actually do the filling out. When the potentially disabled don't have the right medical documentation to prove a disability, the agents at PCG help them get it. They call doctors' offices; they get records faxed. If the right medical records do not exist, PCG sets up doctors' appointments and calls applicants the day before to remind them of those appointments.

PCG also works very, very hard to make the people who work at the Social Security happy. Whenever the company wins a new contract, Coakley will personally introduce himself at the local Social Security Administration office, and see how he can make things as easy as possible for the administrators there.

"We go through even to the point, frankly, of do you like things to be stapled or paper-clipped?" he told me. "Paper clips wins out a lot of times because they need to make photocopies and they don't want to be taking staples out."

There's a reason PCG goes to all this trouble. The company gets paid by the state every time it moves someone off of welfare and onto disability. In recent contract negotiations with Missouri, PCG asked for $2,300 per person. For Missouri, that's a deal -- every time someone goes on disability, it means Missouri no longer has to send them cash payments every month. For the nation as a whole, it means one more person added to the disability rolls.

The Disability-Industrial Complex

Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR
Files at Binder and Binder, a law firm that handles some 30,000 disability cases each year.

In the past few decades, an entire disability-industrial complex has emerged. It has just one goal: Push more people onto disability. And, sometimes, it seems like the government is outmatched. This is especially true in the legal system.

Daytime TV in many places is full of ads from lawyers who promise to fight the government and win the disability benefits you deserve. There are tons of YouTube videos about getting disability -- one lawyer, one webcam. The standard form is a let's-get-real chat about how to win this thing.

There is one man who takes much of the credit for this industry: Charles Binder. "When we started," Binder told me, "I don't think anybody else was advertising." What's more, most people who applied for disability were denied and never had a hearing. Binder, and the lawyers who followed him, changed that. "I've created some of the problems for the government because so many people appeal," Binder says.

When he started in 1979, Binder represented fewer than 50 clients. Last year, his firm represented 30,000 people. Thirty thousand people who were denied disability appealed with the help of Charles Binder's firm. In one year. Last year, Binder and Binder made $68.7 million in fees for disability cases.

The way Binder tells it, he's is a guy helping desperate people get the support they deserve. He is a cowboy-hatted Lone Ranger going to court to fight the good fight for the everyman.

Who is making the case for the other side? Who is defending the government's decision to deny disability?

Nobody.

"You might imagine a courtroom where on one side there's the claimant and on the other side there's a government attorney who is saying, 'We need to protect the public interest and your client is not sufficiently deserving,'" the economist David Autor says. "Actually, it doesn't work like that. There is no government lawyer on the other side of the room."

The Social Security Administration says disability hearings were never meant to be adversarial. In these courtrooms, the judges are employees of Social Security. So the judges are supposed to both represent the government and make a fair and objective determination. But the judges themselves say this role can be difficult.

Judge Randy Frye, who hears disability cases in North Carolina, told me he often finds himself glancing to where he imagines there should be a chair for the government attorney, as there would be in a normal case. "There are always moments where you are concerned maybe you missed something," he says.

"You would turn to that chair and say, 'Counsel, I'm having trouble with this issue. Why does the government think this case should not be reversed?'"

GraphSource: Social Security Administration
Credit: Lam Thuy Vo / NPR
Note: To see the percentage of all eligible adults who are on disability, go here.

Somewhere around 30 years ago, the economy started changing in some fundamental ways. There are now millions of Americans who do not have the skills or education to make it in this country.

Politicians pay lip service to this problem during election cycles, but American leaders have not sat down and come up with a comprehensive plan.

In the meantime, federal disability programs became our extremely expensive default plan. The two big disability programs, including health care for disabled workers, cost some $260 billion a year.

People at the Social Security Administration, which runs the federal disability programs, say we cannot afford this. The reserves in the disability insurance program are on track to run out in 2016, Steve Goss, the chief actuary at Social Security, told me.

Goss is confident that Congress will act to keep disability payments flowing, probably by taking money from the Social Security retirement fund. Of course, the retirement fund itself is on track to run out of money by 2035.

Goss and his colleagues have worked out a temporary fix under which the retirement and disability funds will both run out of money by 2033. He says he hopes the country will have come up with a better plan by then.

;

I was going to post this very one. Big problems have - a way of forcing some kind of solution,

[ In Reply To ..]
but too often, like this, it's a bad one.

When I worked in property and casualty insurance, I discovered how the lack of universal medical care in the U.S. had turned homeowner, auto, and business policies into an adjunct healthcare delivery system via liability claims.

(To encourage claimants not to hire an attorney is the precise reason these policies all carry NO-FAULT accidental medical coverage. A claimant is not required to prove your kitchen floor was wet and caused her to fall, just to present the bills for ruling out a broken hip and her lost wages while she recovered. Of course, our premiums reflect this unofficial healthcare cost, plus the need for healthcare became a major driver in the explosion of liability lawsuits--many claims exceed the basic no-fault coverage limit.)

Bottom line, when a problem is big, and/or chronic, refusing to meet the needs of many in a proper fashion doesn't mean we won't end up paying anyway, in an improper fashion.

I am about to come down with back issues also - pain in my backside

[ In Reply To ..]
Its too easy, and it pays more than MT.

Sign me up.

Careful what you wish for. I have a potentially progressive disease - and don't dare challenge fate. :) nm

[ In Reply To ..]
x

disability - hello

[ In Reply To ..]
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/03/27/why-a-ba-is-now-a-ticket-to-a-job-in-a-coffee-shop.html

Maybe not really disabled - Cynical MT

[ In Reply To ..]
I know a woman who is on disability/free housing and every other kind of free rider program because of her diabetes. Yet she owns and manages a highly successful cleaning service, earns big bucks ($20/hour) for which she is paid in cash and on which she pays no taxes. Disabled? You betcha.

Report her. - VP

[ In Reply To ..]
If she is not supposed to be working and you know for a fact that she is, turn her in. However, it is possible to be on disability and also work part time (I have a relative with SEVERE epilepsy who holds a part-time job and have had several friends with mental disabilities who worked part-time in order to remain active in the community). If this isn't the case for her, why stand by and watch when you know she's milking the system? Turn her in.

BTW, this example you provided should in no way be considered the norm for folks on disability.

Yes report - BillyJoe

[ In Reply To ..]
There is nothing that irks me more than when people say "My neighbor is doing this" or "I was behind this lady using food stamps at the store and she had bling, a cell phone, a fur coat AND she got into an escalade in the parking lot". REPORT REPORT REPORT. Get the plate number and call a fraud hot line. There are only so many people assigned to dig up fraud. Instead of people sitting back and complaining (if the story is true, and I am not saying yours isnt, the grocery store ones always make me giggle) DO SOMETHING and help preserve the system for those it is truly intended for, in the blink of an eye or flash of lightning it just may be YOU someday.

i just had to laugh - OHMT

[ In Reply To ..]
At the end of this article is a pop-up ad for applying for SSI Disability!

Excellent article. Thanks for posting!

You're welcome. That wasn't just a coincidence with the ad, though. - sm

[ In Reply To ..]
Many ads are actually produced by mining the data on the page for terms so that they'll be pertinent and related. Now I'll have to go turn off my Adblock Plus so I can see it myself. ... Yep, sure enough. :)

Now we can get ready for offers to freeload showing up on - other sites we visit, too. nm

[ In Reply To ..]
x
Disability - allrelative
[ In Reply To ..]
This is the major problem of SSI in our country currently,that the evaluation and decision process is too subjective and scattered among disability offices.

They are really cracking down on those who do not really need disability. And that includes folks who have back pain, knee troubles, BUT are able to work perfectly fine in a sedentary job. Their litmus test, so to speak, is if you can perform ANY job available where you live. Now, it doesn't say if the job is HIRING, but if you are able work any job, you are NOT disabled.

And one aspect to SSI that is going to be changing is that when one is awarded disability insurance, that it not mean FOREVER. In a lot of cases, folks are able to return to work in a year or so.

It's a great program for many folks who cannot work and typically, if one is truly disabled, they would probably prefer to work than go on SSI.

The government is increasing the amount of CDRs they do (continuing disability reviews), and they are watching folks who seem suspicious, even videotaping them.

I guess there are bad actors in every good thing.

Video taping, yes. Subrosa surveillance. - Nacho
[ In Reply To ..]
Used in Workers' Comp and disability.
That might be a new career for some MTs. I briefly - worked for a private investigation firm
[ In Reply To ..]
that did these surveillances occasionally. Their investigators were all ex-cops, though, and too expensive to sit around all day waiting to see if someone would trot out with a garbage can. Don't know what a marketable credential would be, but we're already used to sitting for hours. This might be just the thing for someone who feels working to stay awake sounds better than working the fingers. :)

Disability - Interesting article

[ In Reply To ..]
Well this article raises some thoughts.

I know a person who is able to jog many miles and go to the gym every day, garden, hike, go bowling or dancing,karate and so forth. They are on a full disability for a neurological disorder that keeps them from holding a job day in and day out.

As I understand the definition of disability is not how fit and physically capable you are but whether or not you can hold down gainful employment. The criteria for approval can be complicated and there are silent disabilities that don't seem obvious.

This person does not seem in pain nor are they hampered in any way especially by the activities they want to do but are completely unable to work not even part-time. This person states that work causes stress and stress causes the symptoms to flare, and also the stress of the diagnoses and worrying about their health so they cannot work. And this person has their health care fully paid for. Doesn't that help with at least some of the stress? It would for me. Without knowing the full details it would be unfair for me to judge though.

What does bothers me is this person refers to their check as getting paid. To me the definition of disability has changed over the years if one refers to some form of government assistance as a paycheck. It seems that this is how some people who are on public assistance view their assistance check - as money earned.

Yes we do pay into taxes and are entitled to goverment benefits if we qualify, I understand that. To me it still VERY different from money earned by working.



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Subject: The Deplorables Rise Up 60 Million+ Deplorables This wasn’t an election. It was a revolution. It’s midnight in America. The day before, sixty million Americans got up and stood in front of the great iron wheel that had been grinding them down. They stood there even though the media told them it was useless. They took their stand even while all the chattering classes laughed and taunted them. They were fathers who couldn’t feed their families anymore. The ...

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I will try to be brief here.  It is hard to put details of an extremely complicated life situation into words.  My sister and I are in our 50s.  In September, my neice committed suicide.  Oh my, even typing that makes me cry.  She was one week short of 27 years old.  Not sure why this happened but that's another discussion.  My sister was absolutely shattered.  Got a call today that my sister collapsed at her job and is now in the psych ward, under se ...

Social Security DisabilityJul 11, 2010
Does anyone know what percentage of your income you receive if you are on Social Security Diability?  I am being encouraged to apply but not sure if I can afford it.  TIA! ...

This Is Obama's People (the LIV) And Their Rise Jan 07, 2013
Our tax dollars at "work".     ...

The Rise Of The 4th Branch Of GovernmentMay 25, 2013
The rise of the fourth branch of government Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University. There were times this past week when it seemed like the 19th-century Know-Nothing Party had returned to Washington. President Obama insisted he knew nothing about major decisions in the State Department, or the Justice Department, or the Internal Revenue Service. The heads of those agencies, in turn, insisted they knew nothing about major decisions by the ...

I Have 2 Questions About An Ortho Exam And DisabilityNov 28, 2011
1)  I had a GAU evaluation (for general assistance in WA state) earlier this year and am now up for an ABD eval. (Aged, Blind, and Disabled assistance).  The GAU examiner seemed to want to tank the exam and I found she lied in the report with respect to the ortho portion. I'm planning a letter to DSHS, her clinic's Director, and possibly the State Board. I had a later eval. at another clinic by a doctor who found a source of my ortho problem and thinks I need an MRI; also, I ...

Social Security Disability InsuranceJul 25, 2017
Seems I may be disabled according to grid guidelines (age, inability to use 2 limbs).  Watched the YT videos but am unable to find out the approximate time of when the medical examiner approves and the check arrives.  Am trying to save my home and believe bank will work with me if they knew my future held a reliable income.  I am unable to find a job in MT and have not had an income for 6 months. Running out of things to sell and am 2 months late on mtg. Does anyone have any expe ...

...and The Dollar Continues To Rise This Week Against The....Dec 16, 2009
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Medicare Part D Costs Will Rise By 3% According To The CBOMar 19, 2010
  http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/113xx/doc11355/Comparison.pdf ...

Poverty To Rise Under Obama Watch ..Sep 13, 2010
WASHINGTON – The number of people in the U.S. who are in poverty is on track for a on President Barack Obama's watch, with the ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels that led to the national war on poverty.Census figures for 2009 — the recession-ravaged first year of the Democrat's presidency — are to be released in the coming week, and demographers expect grim findings.It's unfortunate timing for Obama and his party just seven weeks before important ...

Health Care Costs RiseSep 12, 2012
While annual health care premiums for job-based family plans rose a seemingly respectable 4 percent this year, premiums averaged $15,745, with employees picking up more than $4,300 of that tab, according to an annual employer survey released Sept. 11.  According to an Associated Press report, the costs are a reminder that the U.S.’s struggle with unaffordable medical care is still significant.  Overall, "it's historically a very moderate increase in premiums," said Drew Al ...

How Did Sheila Jackson Lee Rise To Power? Oct 14, 2013
Sheila Jackson Lee: The Race Card Hits Its Debt Limit Posted By Daniel Greenfield Two days after being sued for discrimination by a disabled aide, Representative Sheila Jackson Lee stood on the floor of the house and accused opponents of the debt limit hike of racism. The race card she was using had expired long ago, but the media has never gotten the message. Instead it’s pushing stories about the FBI investigating racist cartoons sent to Jackson Lee’s fax machine. It’s an old comforta ...

AP FACT CHECK: Premiums To Rise Under ObamaCareMar 17, 2010
WASHINGTON — Buyers, beware: President Barack Obama says his health care overhaul will lower premiums by double digits, but check the fine print. Premiums are likely to keep going up even if the health care bill passes, experts say. http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iVn9wrhB-3SF-Svo9kZyXd4bHRLAD9EG84VO0 ...

As Worries Over The Power Grid Rise, A Drill Will Aug 17, 2013
New York City during a blackout in 2003. More than 150 companies and groups will take part in a drill that will simulate attacks on the power grid. By MATTHEW L. WALD Published: August 16, 2013 FACEBOOK TWITTER GOOGLE+ SAVE E-MAIL SHARE PRINT SINGLE PAGE REPRINTS   WASHINGTON — The electric grid, as government and private experts describe it, is the glass jaw of American industry. If an adversary lands a knockout blow, they fear, it could black ou ...

Cool Debt Clock. Watch Our Deficit Rise.Mar 23, 2011
On the left side is also more statistics on unemployment real and reported, births, etc. Near the bottom is corporate assets, small business assets, personal assets. There's also a lot more. Check it out. The moving numbers may get ya dizzy, though.    http://www.usdebtclock.org/ ...

Oil Prices Rise On Middle East, Bernanke CommentsMar 01, 2011
Yikes!  It's a good thing we're drilling for oil here in the U.S.!  Oh wait, never mind. Even still, I bet the rising oil prices are Bush's fault like before when oil prices went up.  Oh wait, he didn't ban off-shore drilling - never mind. "Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress Tuesday that a prolonged rise in oil prices would hurt the U.S. economy."  Oh really? Doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that one out, does it? Duh. Th ...

Americans: Rise Up Against Entrenched Pieces Of Disgusting CrapSep 09, 2016
Let me explain this to sincere liberals who love this country: Your last hope is not Clinton, but Trump. Remove the party blinders. There have been nearly 70 years of liberal dominance in this nation's inner cities and other poor communities. There has been no shortage of money (almost $11 trillion). ...Now, if you DARE, take a drive around any inner city. Okay - did you survive? Great! And what did you see that the liberal philosophy has given us? Vote the same, get the ...

Flashback. Clinton Faults Obama For Rise Of ISISAug 12, 2016
have allowed Islamic terrorists to gain a better footing in the Middle East, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said this week. Clinton, a potential 2016 presidential contender, told The Atlantic in an interview published Sunday that the failure to build up Syrian rebels battling President Bashar Assad "left a big vacuum, which the jihadists have now filled." Some have criticized Obama for not helping Syrian rebels early on in the rebellion in order to combat al Qaeda-inspired terrori ...

U.S. Monthly Job Gains Largest In Three Years; Wages Rise. SmDec 05, 2014
Tell me how this is not good news. ...

Climate Change Directly Related To Rise In Terrorism.Nov 14, 2015
Can someone explain that as it totally went over my head. ...

Compensation For The Boards Of Directors Of The Nation’s Biggest Banks Continues To RiseApr 01, 2013
Excerpt from the NY Times: "Some Wall Street insiders also question the need to pay bank directors more than their counterparts at other big corporations, arguing that the increased regulation has actually limited bank boards’ ability to perform important tasks, like raising capital and issuing dividends. Even when it comes to paying senior executives, boards have less leeway because regulators have pressured boards to bring down executive pay. “About the only thing bank directors h ...