Making Work Part of the Plan Work Incentives for People with Disabilities
Dec 25, 2015
Making Work
Part of the Plan
Work Incentives for People with Disabilities
For people with disabilities… the unemployment rate is roughly
10 times higher than the national average
What keeps people with disabilities from working?
The Landscape
Attitudes… Fears… Misconceptions…
• Family, friends, employers and society
• People with disabilities can’t work
• People with disabilities will lose benefits if they work – especially health care
MA-EPD
A work incentive/health care program
Medical Assistance for Employed Persons with Disabilities
MA-EPD Eligibility at a glance
• Age 16 to 64• Certified disabled • Employed• Pay taxes• Meet $20,000 asset limit• Pay premium
MA-EPD Eligibility
• Individuals must be at least 16 but less than 65 years old
• Individuals must be certified disabled by either the Social Security Administration or the State Medical Review Team (SMRT)
Continued on next slide
• Individuals who can’t be certified by SSA due only to earnings over SGA ($900/month in 2007) may be certified disabled through SMRT.
• Individuals on extended Medicare continue to be certified disabled by SSA even though their cash benefits have ended. Refer to SMRT prior to Medicare coverage ending.
MA-EPD Eligibility
• Individuals must be employed
•To be considered employed, a person must have average gross monthly wages or countable self-employment earnings of more than ??
$65
• Enrollees must receive earned income each month, unless:•They change jobs and receive no pay
check for 1 month because of different pay periods
•They are on a temporary medical or job loss leave
Continued on next slide
Earned Income
Safety Nets
• 4-Month Medical Leave:Enrollees may have an interruption of employment due to a physician verified medical condition for up to 4 months.
• 4-Month Job Loss Leave:Enrollees who lose their job, through no fault of their own, may remain on MA-EPD for up to 4 months while looking for another job.
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• There is no limit on the number of leaves a person can use, as long as they return to work in between.
• A job loss leave can be used immediately following a medical leave.
• A medical leave cannot be used immediately following a job loss leave.
• For retro months, use actual gross wages or countable self-employment income received in that month
Determine countable self-employment income by deducting allowable costs of doing business from gross receipts.
• For current and future months, use the average anticipated earned income (MAXIS: fiat EBUD)
Continued on next slide
Calculating Earned Income
• If six-month averaged earned income is more than $65, the individual is eligible for MA-EPD though the 6-month budget period as long as all other eligibility factors are met.
E.g., Budget period November – April. Projected earnings of $120 in November, February, March and April but $60 in December and January due to reduced hours during holidays. Six-month averaged income is $100/month, therefore, the client is eligible for the entire budget period.
• If the 6-month averaged earned income is $65 or less, determine earned income eligibility separately for each month.
• E.g., Budget period May – October. • Projected earnings of $90 in May, June and
July.• Client reports surgery scheduled in August
resulting in $0 earnings for August, September, and October.
• Six-month averaged earned income would be $45/month, which would make client ineligible for entire budget period.
• Instead of averaging, look at each month individually. (Client would be eligible for 4-month medical leave for August, September and October.)
• Acceptable earned income verifications include:• pay stubs•employer statement (DHS-2146)•tax forms or business records
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Earned Income Verification
• Examples of acceptable self-employment business records include:
•Detailed, hand written or computer generate records of gross receipts and expenses
•Business quarterly report•Signed statement from the business’s
accountant verifying projected business income or expenses
Taxes
• To be considered employment, Medicare and Social Security taxes must be paid or withheld from earnings
• Proof of state or federal income tax being paid is not required.
Continued on next slide
• Acceptable Medicare and Social Security tax withholding/payment include:•Wages
Pay stubs Written Employer Statement (DHS-2146)
•Self-employment: Quarterly Schedule ES or Schedule SE Annual federal income tax return Business records
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• Generally, quarterly estimated tax payments are required by the IRS only if taxes of $1,000 or more are owed.
• If the client does not file quarterly, accept the annual federal tax return from the previous year
• If the client hasn’t been in business long enough to file taxes or has not filed taxes in the past, accept business records until the review due following the next filing deadline
Assets
• Individuals must have assets of less than$20,000
• Exclude standard MA assets plus retirement accounts, medical expense accounts set up through an employer and all spousal assets.
• People on MA-EPD who lose employment for any reason retain the MA-EPD asset limit and rules for up to 12 months.
Premiums
• Individuals must pay a premium of $35 or more, based on their income and household size
• People with unearned income must pay ½ % of their unearned income.
• Both are calculated on MAXIS/EBUD Continued on next slide
• Counties bill and collect initial premiums
• Eligibility cannot be approved until premium is paid
• Applicants can choose which month(s) they want eligibility and pay only those months
• Counties must work the “overdue premiums” report each month
Continued on next slide
• Clients with overdue premiums will show on the report until they’ve paid all past due premiums
• Over due MA-EPD premiums do not affect eligibility for other programs
• Notify DHS Special Recovery of new, changing or discontinued premiums via MAXIS email “MADE”
• Ongoing premiums can be paid by mail, in person, by auto-withdrawal, or online at
http://payments.dhs.state.mn.us/selectthepaymenttype.asp
• MA-EPD premium estimator online at:www.dhs.state.mn.us/maepd (scroll down to “MA-EPD monthly premium esitmator”)
Still more…• Do not switch people eligible for
1619(b) to MA-EPD
• Counties must reimburse Medicare Part B premiums for MA-EPD enrollees with income below 200% FPG who are not eligible for QMB/SLMB
• DHS mailing to MA/DX enrollees
Still need more?
Disability Linkage Line1-866-333-2466
Beth GrubeDHS Health Care Eligibility/Pathways to
Employment
[email protected] email “QS”
Work Incentives Connection
Work Incentives Planning and Assistance (WIPA)
Yikes---The Connection Again?
The Connection
Goal: assist people with disabilities to return to work; to increase work effort; or to work off benefits.
Method: answer, “What will happen to my benefits if I work?”
Partnership: DEED, DHS & SSA, funded mostly by SSA. Now equal $$$$.
News: Became a nonprofit agency in October 2006.
Connection Services•Focused on providing information.•Provided through phone hotline.
Primary services include:•Specialized information and referral•Problem-solving and advocacy•Benefits Analysis•Outreach on changes in benefit
programs.
What are Work Incentives??
Work Incentives are special rules that Social Security uses to encourage an individual to work.
• On Supplemental Security Income (SSI), work incentives increase the amount of the SSI payment.
• On Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), work incentives let individual keep their SSDI cash payment when earning more than $900 in 2007.
Work Incentives To Look For:
• Impairment Related Work Expenses (IRWE)
• 1619(b) to continue Medical Assistance
• Plans for Achieving Self-Support (PASS)
“THE FORMULA”
Gross Earnings:Minus General Exclusion:
Minus Earned Income Exclusion:
Divided by 2:Countable Earnings
2007 Federal Benefit Rate (FBR):Minus countable earnings:
SSI PAYMENT:
$615 - 20$595 - 65$530÷ 2
$265
$623- 265$358
Impairment Related Work Expenses (IRWE)
• An IRWE allows certain expenses, necessary to go to work, to be disregarded from individual’s earned income.
• An IRWE expense must be:• paid for by the individual;• related to serious medical condition;
& necessary in order to work• Approved by SSA
Examples of IRWEs
• Medication copays• Adaptive Equipment• Transportation different from what
non-disabled worker use for work• Special assistance – note takers,
readers, interpreters.
Impairment Related Work Expense (IRWE)
Gross Earnings:Minus GE and the EIE:
Impairment Related Work Expense:
Divided by 2:Countable Earnings
2007 Federal Benefit Rate (FBR):Minus countable earnings:
SSI PAYMENT:
$615 - 85$530 - 80$450÷ 2
$225
$623- 225$398
SSI with & without IRWEs
Mike is on SSI, earning $615/month. He has $80 in IRWEs each month that have been approved by the SSA.
•Without IRWEs, SSI payment is $358.•With $80 in IRWEs, SSI check is $398.
The IRWE results in a $40.00 increase in SSI payment!
SSI and High WagesStep 1. $1,350.00 Earned Income - 20.00 General Income Exclusion $1, 330.00Step 2. - 65.00 Earned Income Exclusion
$1,265.00Step 3. ÷ by 2 = $632.50 Countable Income
Step 4. $623.00 2007 Federal Benefit Rate - 632.50 Countable Income
$ 0 SSI Payment
What happens to Medical Assistance eligibility?
Work Incentives 1619(b)!
Allows Medical Assistance (MA) coverage to continue after the individual’s earned income becomes too high to allow an SSI cash payment.
1619 (b) continued
• To qualify for 1619(b) the individual must:
have been eligible for an SSI cash payment for at least one month;
still be disabled; meet non-disability requirements; & need and use MA.
• 1619(b) can continue until person reaches MN’s 1619(b) threshold of $44,009 per year.
Plan for Achieving Self-Support (PASS)
PASS allows an individual to set aside income or resources for a set amount oftime to achieve a specific vocational
goal.
• Examples of possible PASS goals include:Education Equipment Transportation
• The funds that are set aside are not used to calculate the individual’s SSI payment.
PASS EXAMPLE:
Gross Earnings:Minus GE and the EIE:
Countable EarningsDivided by 2:
PASS deposit:
2007 Federal Benefit Rate (FBR):Minus countable earnings:
SSI PAYMENT:
$615 - 85$530÷ 2
$265-$265
0
$623- 0
$623
Myths about working and
benefits
• Working will cause you to lose your benefits and this is a bad thing!
• You will be worse off financially by working!
• You will lose your health care if you work!
MYTH BUSTING Using Benefits Analysis and
Work Incentives
Benefits Analysis (BA)Comprehensive look at how all benefitsare affected by work.
Includes:• Benefits verification/information finding• Identification of work incentives• Development of examples of different levels
of earnings----individual’s goals• Exploration of health care options• Comparison of finances before & after
working• Benefit management help & follow-up
Anne, Not Working
SSDI $575.00SSI $ 68.00MSA $ 81.00MA YesMedicare YesFood Support $ 10.00Subsidized Housing -
$207.00Available Income
$527.00
Earning $650 per month vs. not
working
$237.50 - A 45% increase in available income
Wages:Minus 15% taxes
SSDI:SSI:
MSA:MA:
Medicare:Food Support:
Subsidized Housing:Available Income:
Not Working
$0.00$0.00
$575.00$68.00$81.00
YesYes
$10.00-$207.00$527.00
Earning $650/mo.
$650.00 -$ 97.50
$575.00$ 0.00$ 0.00
YesYes
$10.00 -$373.00
$764.50
Anne
Anne earning even more!
Wages:Minus 15%
taxes:SSDI:
SSI:MSA:
MA:Medicare:
Food Support:Subsidized
Hsng.:Available Inc.:
Not Working
$0.00$0.00
$575.00$68.00$81.00
YesYes
$10.00- $207.00$527.00
$650/mo$650.00- $97.50$575.00
$0.00$0.00
YesYes
$10.00- $373.00$764.50
$875/mo$875.00
- $131.00$575.00
$0.00$0.00
YesYes
$10.00- $446.00$883.00
$356.00 - A 67.5% increase in available income!
Significant Earnings for Anne
Wages:Minus 15% taxes:
SSDI:SSI:
MSA:MA:
Medicare:Food Support:
Subsidized Housing:
Available Income:
NotWorkin
g$0$0
$575.00$68.00$81.00
YesYes
$10.00$207.00
$527.00
Earning $1,400/mo
$1,400.00$ 210.00
$0$0$0
Yes, 1619(b)
Yes$0
$409.00$781.00
$254 - A 48% increase in available income!
Healthcare with SSDI and working
Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)
• Medicare – after 24 months on SSDI. • Extended Medicare---off SSDI, but may continue
to receive Medicare for at least 93 months after the end of the Trial Work Period. Still disabled.
• Medical Assistance for Employed
Persons with Disabilities (MA-EPD)• State Medical Review Team process if no longer
eligible for SSDI benefits. Still disabled.
Healthcare with SSI
Medical Assistance – Automatic eligibility with SSI, but must apply at the county.
• 1619(b) – When work off SSI
• Medical Assistance for Employed Persons with Disabilities (MA-EPD) – If working and 1619(b) eligibility ends.
ONE MORE THING…….Disabled Adult Child
What are DAC benefits?
•DAC stands for Disabled Adult Child. •The child:
•receives SSA benefits based on a parent’s work record not their own
•disabled prior to age 22---meets SSA’s definition of disability
• is at least age 18•has a parent who is eligible for
disability or retirement benefits, or is deceased
DAC Disregard for MA
• DAC payment may make individual ineligible for SSI (thus losing MA without a spenddown).
• The Disabled Adult Child (DAC) Disregard
allows the DAC payment to be excluded when calculating the spenddown for MA. Only applies to people who lose SSI eligibility due to receipt of the DAC payment.
DAC Disregard for MA cont . . .
Qualifiers:
• Must be 18 years old or older, and • Were blind or disabled before age 22, and • Were eligible for SSI due to disability, and• lost SSI after 7-1-87 due to receipt of DAC
benefits under a parent’s record.
DAC Disregard for MA cont . . .
Spenddown Calculation:
• The DAC Disregard allows the spenddown to be calculated without using the DAC payment in the calculations. It has the effect of reducing or eliminating the MA spenddown, due to the receipt of DAC benefits.