She's done this again & again & again & there isn't any way to stop her. Friend filed a complaint, which SS kicked to the state offices because allegedly it "isn't in their jurisdiction" or some shit like that. State SS offices are indifferent. So she gets to keep saving them money. This is something our tax dollars go towards: paying SS evaluators to lie about potential benefit recipients so that the gov can hold on to SS tax money we've been paying into the system all our working lives.
It takes months. I think he waited something like 7 months to see a neurologist. He has a TBI, which is why he applied for SSDI in the first place.
Incidentally, if anybody whinges at you about how great US healthcare is because it takes forever to see a doctor if you're in, say, the UK or Canada, please tell them to shut their goddamn piehole. It takes just as long to see a doc in the US. If you're poor, that endless wait might be measured not in months, but literal decades.
This entire process has been a stellar example of why I believe the US is *inhumane*.
Friend paid all his working life into Social Security. He is as entitled to receive benefits from it as anyone else who's paid taxes into it. He is EXACTLY the person SSDI was intended for. Yet he is unable to access the funds he is arguably entitled to because we have convinced ourselves, collectively, that the poor are thieves & undeserving.
I will continue to help my friend where & when I can. He'll definitely have a seat at my table anytime he needs it. I'm glad that at least the state-level folks are trying to help him too. & what's happening to him is exactly why my politics are radical. SS needs a complete overhaul, or some sort of progressive reform, or to be torn down & rebuilt from the ground up into something better.
@Impious_Jade Next step would be a class action if you can find other victims. it's one thing to deny, but to actively make things up is certainly actionable. :(
@sfleetucker Definitely. A significant challenge is that the class affected is incredibly vulnerable, especially financially, usually physically, and has trouble gathering the resources to spend many years of their lives on a draining legal fight. But, there is power in numbers, so I won't say it's impossible.
The good news is that folks on the *state* level have actually been awesome. Friend managed to connect with counselors who connected him with social workers who have gotten him onto benefits programs like SNAP and Aged/Disabled/Blind cash benefits, so at least he isn't starving, and he has a little bit of money for things like gas or toiletries. He also got on Medicaid, so has been able to establish primary care & see a couple of specialists.