13 thoughts to “The Social Safety Net for Disabled People Is Broken”

  1. Thanks for this post. I just started researching disability benefits for my spouse. Unfortunately he mostly freelanced and doesn’t qualify for SSDI. I looked into SSI and was shocked by the $2,000 asset limit. I thought that surely I just haven’t found the right agency. “Good” to know that my research is correct and I actually can stop wasting time searching for a government program that helps disabled adults.

    1. If he did things “right” and paid into the system, instead of doing a LLC and getting paid from there, maybe it’d work? If he made enough? I’m sorry, I wish your spouse qualified.

  2. As of 2024, the ABLE Act limits eligibility to individuals with disabilities with an age of onset of disability before turning 26 years of age.

    1. Yep. Good luck proving at 40+ that your disability started before your 26th birthday.

      Although at least starting 1/1/2026 that will rise to “before the age of 46”. I don’t see why they need the age limit at all….

      1. So ABLE is one of the few programs you don’t actually have to prove first. They don’t require you to give age disability proof when you apply, you just need to have it and they can request it at any time. (This is what I found out when I looked into it.)

        Also! You don’t have to get it in your state! You can get an ABLE account in any state that does it that you can get a bank account in. Different states have different fees and stuff for the accounts (some radically more expensive than others) so do the research and go with a bank in a state that has the lowest fees.

  3. If you are in the US and Canada, you can dial 211 to get connected to information on local non profits to help with a wide variety of things (food, housing, low cost legal assistance)

    Mileage may vary depending on where you are and funding levels, but it may be able to point you in the right direction or connect you to information you didn’t know or couldn’t easily Google.

  4. Thank you bitches for this amazing (yet disheartening) series. I’m a disabled adult who is (still) working. I earn more than my spouse atm, and it is difficult to imagine what we will do if/when I can’t work anymore. We’re doing our best to sock away money, though with two kids, a new home*, and my rising medical and other disability-associated expenses (increased childcare costs, housekeeping, etc), it is getting really hard to have a positive cashflow month-to-month, even with our dual income. I’ve been eyeing FI for years now as a goal, knowing that I may be forced to “retire” early – whether I’d like to or not. I would not ever qualify for SSI due to asset limits. I’m hoping against hope that my LTD insurance will provide some income replacement – although based on your series I recognize that is far less likely than I would like to believe.

    * we moved a couple of years ago to an incredibly supportive community neighborhood, which is in and of itself a better safety net than i could possibly wish for; but fuck it’s expensive.

    One specific comment I would add here is that the ADA is notoriously only enforceable in litigation. Personally, I’m facing serious employment discrimination in the form of lack of reasonable accommodations + a fun dose of retaliation to boot. As I’ve discovered in the last 2.5 years, the only way I can get my legally-protected rights under the ADA is to go the legal route (EEOC charge, and eventually a lawsuit bc the EEOC is likewise significantly underfunded and can’t truly investigate discrimination cases). I was lucky enough to find a lawyer who is willing to work on contingency, but it took a lot of digging; and it may be years before I get any resolution, of which (if there’s any monetary compensation) 40% will go to my lawyer. Meanwhile – the war of attrition with my employer is deteriorating my physical and mental health condition far worse than it’s ever been to date. A Twitter mutual of mine has the same results to a similar case. It costs the employers nothing to discriminate against us , but is costing us everything. In other words: getting the ADA to work, similarly to your description of SSDI/SSI, is likewise dehumanizing and incredibly painful and costly.

  5. I’ve done some benefits advocacy work with SSDI and SSI and yeah, it’s pretty bad, but some things have gotten better:

    If you own a home and live in it, the value of the home doesn’t count against SSI while you’re living there. It can cause problems if you move into assisted living or something like that, and they might be able to put a lien against it? But you won’t get denied or kicked off SSI over it.

    The SSI vehicle thing is weird. The general understanding is that you can have one car per “household” regardless of its value but if you have two cars it’s a big problem unless it falls into specific exceptions (the one I’m most familiar with has to do with vehicles that are modified to accommodate specific disabilities). How SSI defines “household” gets really freaking arbitrary after a while though.

    In some states (I live in NY, which is one of them) being on SSI confers “categorical eligibility” for other benefits, including Medicaid and SNAP. And in theory also Section 8 housing but yeah good luck there. Also, while it’s often a problem if you’re working when you first try to get on SSDI or SSI, once you’re on it, the cash benefit is gradually phased out after you make a certain monthly income and as long as you’re getting ANY SSI, you keep the additional benefits.

    There is a resource called How to Get On: https://howtogeton.wordpress.com – it goes over a lot of scenarios for getting and keeping disability-related benefits, and was very helpful for a friend of mine struggling with the application process. I’d also suggest reaching out to your local Center for Independent Living, which does free “information and referral” and advocacy services and can point you to resources specific to where you live.

  6. If you have a mental illness (or substance abuse issues, possibly medical issues) and you’re either homeless or at risk of homelessness (and that “at risk” is a broad category… me living with a housemate that wasn’t charging me the full half the rent & utilities & having family help with rent counted) (and the other standard disability stuff), you are eligible for the SOAR program (SSI/SSDI Outreach, Access, and Recovery (SOAR) program) for getting on disability. In short, they assign you a special SOAR process certified social worker who interviews you extensively, writes up a special comprehensive document about your disabilities & why you should be on SSI/SSDI, has your doctor sign off on it and sends it to the SSA (with other documentation) and they FAST TRACK it. You get a response within 2-3 months (mine took 6 weeks) AND people who’ve been through the SOAR process have a 65% success rate! That’s not a typo. SIXTY-FIVE PERCENT!

    My guess is they don’t publicize this program because they don’t have enough SOAR certified workers to cover all the people eligible for it. But now you know it exists! Do some research on SOAR and your state to find the SOAR coordinator and/or SOAR worker in your area.

    Here’s more on the SOAR program, made for social workers. As far as I know, there is NOT a SOAR site for the public. https://soarworks.samhsa.gov/

    Here’s another site mentioning it

    https://endhomelessness.org/blog/soar-is-designed-to-increase-access-to-ssi-ssdi-income-supports/

    But, yeah, go do the SOAR process! I went from being rejected the first time (“disabled but still can do some jobs” according to them) to being on SSDI in 5 months total.

  7. Really appreciate the chance to weigh in on this and hopefully help some people to find Help Hope Live if they are caught in these holes in the barely-there “safety net.” We always say the same thing about our nonprofit: we shouldn’t exist, but we have to.

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