Guest guest Posted July 28, 1999 Report Share Posted July 28, 1999 Dear Sue: Well, congratulations!! I'm so glad for you. What great news! Da da ta da daaaa! I'm turning mental handsprings for you! Kathy (AIH) Seattle area Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 Kathy: Thanks but I still don't know where I am at with it. I have been asked if I would quit work, stay working or what. But right now I have to sit down and think about the pros and cons of it. I do love my job but it depends on the next six months. There is a big reorganizaation going on now and I don't know it will include me. My husband said we would lose my insurance but we have his and with the medicine bill high every month with my and his sends us medicine. So time will tell. Sue AIH Wisconsin P S The owner that is my boss now wants me to stay but his brother is take over next week and wellllll. I had him for a boss for about 8 years and I not looking forward to it again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 Don: So if I quit work in the furture should I start the paperwork then or what do you suggest? Sue AIH Wisconsin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 Sue I think your chances are much better for SSDI if you are not working. I'm not positive but I'm not sure you can apply if you are working. After you get on SSDI they do have a 9 month trial period for those who can return to work.\ Susie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 Dear Sue: In a lot of cases insurance companies will allow you to keep coverage once you've left a job. Usually at the same rate your company was paying (at least for a while). It's worth checking out. I know the idea of giving up work is hard, but after you make the adjustment it is for the best. Good luck! Kathy (AIH) Seattle area Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 > Don: Did you have long term disability when you applied for SSI? > I applied for both at the same time. Needless to say, my LTD came through long before the SSDI. Don Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 1999 Report Share Posted July 29, 1999 It took me a year and a half to get ssi, got turned down twice and was going to go tocourt, but got approved while waiting for court date. My lawyer says it is routine to get turned down twice, but usually get it when go to court. so can you start the process now? J >From: Roselle50@... >Reply- onelist > onelist >Subject: Re: [ ] Long term disability insurance >Date: Thu, 29 Jul 1999 23:32:49 EDT >MIME-Version: 1.0 >From errors-165537-4490-shireen42 Thu Jul 29 20:37:29 1999 >Received: from [209.207.164.13] by hotmail.com (2.1) with ESMTP id >MHotMailB96A68F800B8D82197A6D1CFA40D20520; Thu Jul 29 20:37:29 1999 >Received: (qmail 29838 invoked by alias); 30 Jul 1999 03:33:48 -0000 >Received: (qmail 29764 invoked from network); 30 Jul 1999 03:33:46 -0000 >Received: from unknown (HELO imo25.mx.aol.com) (198.81.17.69) by >pop.onelist.com with SMTP; 30 Jul 1999 03:33:46 -0000 >Received: from Roselle50@... by imo25.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v22.4.) id >hGAJa16296 (4221) for < onelist>; Thu, 29 Jul 1999 >23:32:49 -0400 (EDT) >Message-ID: <71c32d87.24d276e1@...> >X-Mailer: AOL 4.0 for Windows 95 sub 21 >Mailing-List: list onelist; contact > -owneronelist >Delivered-mailing list onelist >Precedence: bulk >List-Unsubscribe: <mailto: -unsubscribeONElist> > >From: Roselle50@... > >Kathy: > >I know when you leave work where I am at there offer you 18 months of >coverage but at a price of $450. a month. My husband has good insurance >it >is $200.00 deductable and 90% up to I think $2500. then 100% after that. >Also I would not have to shell out $80 to $90 dollars a month for medicine >because they have it that they will send you your supply every month. I >will >go to the doctor tomorrow and talk to him about it and see what he things. >It is getting that I get so tried at work and I am starting to make stupid >mistakes. > >Sue AIH >Wisconsin > >--------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 1999 Report Share Posted July 30, 1999 Sue, My brother is an attorney and we had lunch discussing SS last week. He said you can apply while you're working, but your chances of getting it approved are significantly better if you're not. Roxanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 1999 Report Share Posted July 30, 1999 Kathy: I know when you leave work where I am at there offer you 18 months of coverage but at a price of $450. a month. My husband has good insurance it is $200.00 deductable and 90% up to I think $2500. then 100% after that. Also I would not have to shell out $80 to $90 dollars a month for medicine because they have it that they will send you your supply every month. I will go to the doctor tomorrow and talk to him about it and see what he things. It is getting that I get so tried at work and I am starting to make stupid mistakes. Sue AIH Wisconsin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 1999 Report Share Posted July 30, 1999 Sue, Federal law says that you must be covered under " COBRA " insurance for 18 months after termination of employment. The advantage to COBRA is that the insurance company that you've had through your employer can't turn you down because of your medical condition. Also, group coverage is usually far superior to coverage you could buy on your own or get through Medicare. I think that the employer must carry a percentage of the cost. My understanding used to be that when you go on COBRA coverage, the employer must continue paying the insurance company what they'd been paying for you and your family all along and the employee pays the difference between the reduced rate and the " full " rate. I could be all wrong about that. Under any circumstances, COBRA used to be fairly cheap but now is often quite expensive and it seems to depend on who your employer is or was. I believe that under COBRA, there can also be an extension to the 18 month rule but I don't know who is eligible for that. We've had COBRA coverage twice and our premiums were very low once and considerably higher the second time, yet the coverages were similar. We paid our premiums directly to the ex-employers. By law, an employer must notify you when your insurance will terminate and offer you the option to continue under COBRA. You pay the monthly premiums directly to the ex-employer and some of 'em will try to weasel out of it, so it's important to pay on time. Something else to consider: you might have extended coverage (coverage for life) under your company's retirement or ERISA plan. My husband's Dad does. Bob had only worked 9 months for his present employer when he became permanently disabled because of his back. We don't know why, but they have continued to cover us (medical, dental and even life) ever since and they haven't charged us for a single premium. We're afraid to ask why this is happening for fear they'll stop. On the other hand, it could be that there is something written into their ERISA plan that we don't know about that requires this. His employer is headquartered in Texas and has to comply with Texas insurance laws though they have offices all over the U.S. Something else interesting. He has both short-term and long-term disability insurance. There was a waiting period for both, but though they're through the same company, when his short-term coverage ran out, the long-term coverage considered the waiting period already satisfied. Thus, he gets a full two years of long-term (and tax free) coverage because of his age - the older you are, the shorter the coverage. An additional benefit is that the long-term coverage also pays the disability insurance premiums as part of their benefits. Something else that anyone who is already collecting Social Security should know. If you were already collecting it (because of age) when you became disabled, the disability insurer can't consider SS as co-insurance. If you apply for SS AFTER you start getting disability pay, they will only pay the difference between your SS and their coverage. So, if you're 62 and think you might become eligible for long-term disability, be sure to start collecting early SS before you start the disability coverage. My husband's disability insurer tried to tell us that they would adjust their payments because of his SS. I gave them the page and paragraph of their own manual to show them they were wrong and they obviously weren't used to being challenged. They might have even forgotten that this was one of their own rules. They are one of the two biggest disability insurance companies in the U.S. Hope this clarifies things a little. Take care, Geri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 1999 Report Share Posted July 30, 1999 J: I haven't decided if I want to quit work yet but I have a doctor appointment today and will discuss it with him. I have pros and cons on if I should stay or retire. I know that I can't keep going like I am much longer. I'm so tired all the time and I don't seem to get anything done in the house. I try to keep up with my daughter, and after that not enough energy for the house work etc. I will let everyone know what the doctor says. Sue AIH Wisconsin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 1999 Report Share Posted July 30, 1999 Hi Sue, Social Security considered the date of my termination to be the starting date of my eligibility even though they acknowledged that my illness started 3 years before that and my income had declined dramatically during that time. Their reasoning was that my working was evidence that I could work. Hmmmmm..... Don Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 (At sometime in the past we had a discussion on obtaining Long Term Disability Insurance and if it would be beneficial to us. This article from the Los Angeles Times, April 30, 2003 might be of interest to some). ~ Gretchen IN BRIEF/ INSURANCE UnumProvident to Defend Disability Suit UnumProvident Corp., the largest U.S. disability insurer, must defend itself against a suit accusing the company of systematically denying claims for long-term disability insurance by people too sick or injured to work, a U.S. district judge in New York said. The Chattanooga, Tenn.-based company is accused in the class-action suit of violating its duty under federal insurance laws by paying bonuses to its workers based on the number of claims they deny. UnumProvident did not comment. The suit seeks an order forcing UnumProvident to review claims it denied and to change its practices. It doesn't seek damages. The case was filed on behalf of people whose policies were underwritten by UnumProvident units or whose disability plans are administered by the company. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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