How Our Morristown Lawyers Can Help with Your Social Security Application
If you have become disabled and unable to work, you may be able to receive financial assistance through obtaining Social Security Disability benefits. Unfortunately, many who have paid into the system and have a legitimate disability that prevents them from working are still denied benefits.
That is why it is critical to have an experienced team of Morristown Social Security Disability attorneys on your side. At The Terry Law Firm, we are able to help clients with every aspect of the SSDI process, from the initial application process all the way through the most complex appeals. Our priority is taking whatever legal route necessary to get you the benefits you need and are entitled to receive.
Below are the steps in the Social Security Disability application process:
- Submit your application, along with all necessary medical evidence and supporting documentation, to the Social Security Administration
- Receive a response within 90-120 days telling you whether your application was approved or denied
- If your application was denied, submit an appeal, also known as a request for reconsideration, within 60 days
- Receive a response within 3-5 months telling you whether your appeal was approved or denied
- If your appeal was denied, request a hearing before an administrative law judge within 60 days
- If your appeal before an administrative law judge results in a denial, you may appeal the decision before the Appeals Council or a Federal District Court
Contact a SSD Attorney to Help Your Application Get Approved
With more than 50 years of experience under our belt, our Morristown Social Security Disability attorneys know exactly how to take the proper steps to make sure your claim is approved. Whether you are at the initial application stages or need legal assistance for making an appeal, we are here to help.
Schedule your free consultation now by calling us at (423) 586-5800.
Social Security will pay you benefits if you cannot work because you have a medical condition that is expected to last at least one year or result in your death. This description is the federal government’s definition for disability and will be used to determine whether your situation qualifies you for disability benefits. The definition limits the disability payments to long-term only and does not give money to people with partial disability or short-term disability. Primarily, if you have paid enough in Social Security taxes – at least half of the working quarters since you turned 21 years of age – you are eligible to file a claim for Social Security Disability if you become disabled.
To get disability benefits, in addition to meeting the disabled definition, you must also meet two different earnings criteria:
- A “recent work” test based on your age at the time you became disabled; and
- A “duration of work” test to show that you worked long enough under Social Security.
The Social Security office will review your application to determine whether you worked enough years to qualify and to assess the level of your current work activities. If you meet these criteria, your application will be passed on to the Disability Determination Services office in your state which completes the disability decision for the Social Security office.
The state agency will ask your doctors and specialists for information about your condition and will consider all the facts in your case. They will use the medical evidence from your doctors and hospitals, clinics or institutions where you have been treated and all other information.
Specifically, they will ask the medical team for the following information:
- What your medical condition is
- When your medical condition began
- How your medical condition limits your activities
- What the medical tests have shown
- What treatment you have received
In addition to the above, they also will ask the doctors for information about your ability to do work-related activities, such as walking, sitting, lifting, carrying and remembering instructions. Your doctors are not asked to decide if you are disabled. Additional medical information may be needed before a final decision can be made. It is possible that the state agency will ask you to go for a special examination. Although the preference is to use your current doctor, the exam may be conducted by another qualified physician.
According to the Social Security Administration the length of time it takes to receive a decision on your disability claim can take from three to five months.
It can vary depending on several factors, but primarily on:
- The nature of your disability;
- How quickly medical evidence is obtained from your doctor or other medical source;
- Whether it is necessary to send you for a medical examination in order to obtain evidence to support your claim; and
- If your claim is randomly selected for quality assurance review of the decision.
Yes. The Social Security Disability Insurance has an initiative called Compassionate Allowances (CAL). This is a process whereby the Social Security office can provide benefits quickly to applicants whose medical conditions are so serious that their conditions obviously meet disability standards. There are 88 qualifying rare diseases and cancers on the list. Compassionate allowances allow the office to quickly identify diseases and other medical conditions that qualify under the Listing of Impairments, based on minimal objective medical information. Compassionate allowances allow Social Security to quickly target the most obviously disabled individuals and get their benefits to them.
It is possible that certain members of your family qualify for benefits based on your condition and your previous work.
Those family members include:
- Your spouse, if he or she is 62 or older
- Your spouse, at any age if he or she is caring for a child of yours who is younger than age 16 or disabled
- Your unmarried child, including an adopted child, or, in some cases, a stepchild or grandchild. The child must be under age 18 or under age 19 if in elementary or secondary school full time
- Your unmarried child, age 18 or older, if he or she has a disability that started before age 22. (The child’s disability also must meet the definition of disability for adults.)
- Your divorced spouse may qualify for benefits based on your earnings if he or she was married to you for at least 10 years, is not currently married and is at least age 62. The money paid to a divorced spouse does not reduce your benefit or any benefits due to your current spouse or children.