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Ticket to Work

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 172.81.80.3 (talk) at 16:52, 8 October 2019 (Updated information per the Social Security Administration to include current description and breakdown of the Ticket to Work program's structure and operations. This includes information about Social Security policy regarding participating in the program and service provider services and supports available to eligible beneficiaries.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The United States Social Security Administration's Ticket to Work and Self-Sufficiency Program is the centerpiece of the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999.

This free and voluntary program supports career development for people who receive Social Security disability benefits. The Ticket program helps move eligible beneficiaries toward financial independence by connecting them with service providers to receive employment-related services and supports to succeed in the workforce.

Anyone who is age 18 through 64 and receives Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act and/or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments under Title XVI of the Social Security Act is eligible for the Ticket program. Beneficiaries may assign their Ticket to an Employment Network (EN) or receive services from the public Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) agency in the state in which they reside.[1]

The service provider with whom the individual chooses to work verifies their eligibility. Eligibility status can also be determined by calling the Ticket to Work Help Line at 1-866-968-7842 / 1-866-833-2967 (TTY), Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ET. Trained Help Line representatives answer questions about available work supports, including Social Security Work Incentives, and general questions about how earned income affects Social Security disability benefits. Help Line representatives may also provide a list of authorized service providers to callers.

The types of services offered to beneficiaries depend on the service provider they select to work with and their individual needs. Available services often include career counseling, job search and placement assistance, and ongoing employment support services. Other services, such as benefits counseling, transportation, and workplace accommodation assistance may also be available from the selected provider or through referrals to other organizations or agencies. Participants are free to choose a different service provider at any time.

History

The First Six Years of the Ticket Program: 2002 To 2008[2]

The Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999 (the Act) provides eligible Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiaries with a range of employment-related services to support their movement to financial independence through work. The Act also includes expedited reinstatement provisions and improvements to the extended Medicare and Medicaid buy-in provisions.

The Act directed the Commissioner of Social Security to establish a Ticket to Work and Self-Sufficiency program (Ticket to Work program or Ticket program). The Ticket program expands both the number and types of service providers available to people who receive SSDI and/or SSI. Through the Ticket program, approved employment providers earn cash payments based on the work-related achievements of the beneficiaries who sign up for their services. Additionally, the Act requires Social Security to evaluate the Ticket program. Based on program feedback, including a 2004 Mathematica Policy Research study, Social Security revised the Ticket regulations in 2008 to improve the program for both providers and beneficiaries.

The 2008 Amendments to the Ticket Regulations [2]

The Ticket to Work program underwent a major overhaul in 2008 with the publication of new regulations in the Federal Register on May 20, 2008. These regulations, which became effective on July 21, 2008, amended regulations originally issued on December 28, 2001. The new regulations dramatically revised the payment structure available to ENs, providing more money when beneficiaries make progress in their employment plans but before they reach the level of earnings that would terminate their benefits. Social Security, in its introductory summary to the final regulations, explained its approach to these amendments:

"We are revising our prior rules to improve the overall effectiveness of the program to maximize the economic self-sufficiency of beneficiaries through work opportunities. We have based these revisions on our projections of the future direction of the Ticket to Work program, our experience using the prior rules, and the recommendations made by commenters on the program." [3]

Social Security, in substantially revising its Ticket program regulations, maintained the overall principles that are the foundation of this program, that private providers will participate and serve beneficiaries in the Ticket program, even if 100 percent of funding for the program is outcome-based. Beneficiaries will be more likely to participate in the program if:

  • The newly enrolled ENs offer services that both complement and supplement what has been available through the traditional VR system.
  • The moratorium on medical Continuing Disability Reviews (CDRs) is based on timely progress requirements that realistically track beneficiaries' progress toward achieving employment on their way to financial self-sufficiency.
  • Safety nets, in the form of work incentives, are available to protect beneficiaries' health insurance when a work attempt succeeds and to protect continued eligibility for cash benefits if a work attempt fails or is interrupted.

Social Security has notified more than 17 million beneficiaries concerning their eligibility for participation in the Ticket program. As of December 2011, approximately 12.3 million beneficiaries are eligible to participate in the Ticket program, and on average, 89,000 new beneficiaries become Ticket eligible each month.[4]

Ticket to Work: How It Works

The Ticket to Work (Ticket) program connects Social Security beneficiaries with disabilities ages 18 through 64 with free employment services. These services help disabled beneficiaries make informed decisions about working, prepare for work, find a job or maintain success at work. Program participants may receive career counseling, vocational rehabilitation, and/or job placement and training from an authorized Ticket service provider. Beneficiaries may contact several service providers before assigning their Ticket to a service provider. Both the beneficiary and their selected service provider must agree to work together.

Ticket to Work Service Providers

Ticket to Work service providers agree to help Social Security disability beneficiaries access employment supports and services. Service providers may offer career planning, benefits counseling, job placement, training or legal advocacy. The five types of service providers are:

  1. State Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) agencies: VR agencies offer state services, such as intensive training, education, rehabilitation and other job supports for people with disabilities who want to work.
  2. Employment Networks (ENs): ENs are public or private groups that sign an agreement with Social Security to provide free job support services to beneficiaries. ENs may offer career planning, job leads and job placement, and ongoing employment support.
  3. Workforce ENs: Workforce ENs are part of a state’s Public Workforce System. Workforce ENs may provide access to additional employment support services, including training programs and special programs for youth in transition and veterans.
  4. Work Incentives Planning and Assistance (WIPA): WIPA projects offer free benefits counseling to Social Security disability beneficiaries to help them make informed choices about work. WIPA projects serve beneficiaries who: Are working
    • Have a job offer pending
    • Are actively interviewing for jobs
    • Had an interview in the past 30 days
    • Have a job interview scheduled in the next 2 weeks
    • Are veterans
    • Are ages 14-25, not necessarily actively pursuing work
  5. Protection and Advocacy for Beneficiaries of Social Security (PABSS): PABSS organizations provide legal support, advocacy, and information to help beneficiaries resolve disability employment-related concerns. Services include:
    • Navigating organizations and services to support beneficiaries’ efforts to work and protect their rights, such as appealing decisions of a State VR agency or EN
    • Requesting reasonable accommodations in the workplace, college classes, training courses, and licensing programs
    • Assisting with other disability-based legal issues that are barriers to employment, such as transportation

Work Plans

Once the beneficiary and the service provider decide to work together, they will collaboratively develop a work plan to help the beneficiary reach their work goals and, eventually, a financially independent future.

The work plan, also referred to as an Individual Work Plan, Individual Employment Plan, or Individual Plan for Employment, outlines both the beneficiary’s specific employment goal and the free services and supports from their Ticket program service provider. The beneficiary and service provider work together until the beneficiary reaches the goal in their work plan.

Many Employment Networks (EN) also offer ongoing support services after the beneficiary gets a job. Ongoing services often help the beneficiary keep their job, advance in the position, or get a more desirable job.

Making Timely Progress after Ticket Assignment

Timely progress is taking the agreed-upon steps toward employment within Social Security’s timeframes. Examples of action steps are:

  • Receiving the education and training necessary to succeed at work
  • Becoming and staying employed
  • Reducing dependence on Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments
  • Achieving earnings high enough to cause benefit payments to cease

Continuing Disabiity Review

A Continuing Disability Review (CDR) is a routine process Social Security uses to make sure a beneficiary’s disability still meets Social Security disability benefits rules. Medical CDRs check the beneficiary’s medical condition to see whether they still have a disability and confirm that they are still eligible for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) due to a disability.

If a beneficiary participating in the Ticket program assigned their Ticket to an approved EN or State VR agency and is meeting the Timely Progress Review (TPR) requirements before Social Security scheduled a medical CDR, Social Security will not initiate scheduling a medical CDR.

There is one exception: If the beneficiary has ever failed their TPR and has not made enough progress to re-enter into protections from CDRs, Social Security will schedule a CDR even if they are participating in the Ticket program.

Additionally, if a beneficiary receives a notice that Social Security has scheduled a medical CDR before assigning their Ticket to a service provider, Social Security will continue with their scheduled medical review.

Social Security Work Incentives and Health Care

Social Security Work Incentives encourage beneficiaries to attempt work. Work Incentives help beneficiaries stay in control of their finances and healthcare benefits while they re-enter the workforce or go to work for the first time.[5] Some Work Incentives help beneficiaries keep their health care coverage while working and others may also allow their cash payments to continue. Available Work Incentives vary for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiaries. Social Security’s Red Book provides more information on the Work Incentives and keeping Medicare and Medicaid. Ticket to Work service providers also provide help with understanding available Work Incentives.

Work Incentives Seminar Event (WISE)

The Ticket program hosts monthly Work Incentives Seminar Event (WISE) webinars[6] to provide Social Security disability beneficiaries with information to help them make decisions about working. Various Ticket program service providers discuss their services and supports on the webinars, as well as the benefits of working and factors to consider when contemplating employment. Some of the webinars address a range of disabilities, while others target specific disability types or age groups. The webinars offer beneficiaries employment resources and access to information 24 hours a day via an online archive.

Program Structure

Social Security contracts with a Ticket Program Manager (TPM) to assist with Ticket program administration. The TPM is responsible for:

  • Outreach to beneficiaries, including the Ticket to Work Help Line
  • Marketing the Ticket to Work program
  • Communication with beneficiaries about the Ticket program
  • Facilitating beneficiary access to Ticket program service providers, including Employment Networks (EN), State Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) agencies, Work Incentives Planning and Assistance (WIPA) projects, and Protection and Advocacy for Beneficiaries of Social Security (PABSS) organizations
  • Recruiting experienced and highly-qualified providers to participate as ENs
  • Assisting Social Security in monitoring EN participation in the Ticket program
  • Supporting Ticket assignments and EN and VR payments for services once a beneficiary is earning income at a level that justifies a payment, according to the Ticket program’s predetermined standards
  • Assisting Social Security in ensuring the quality and integrity of EN Ticket program services

As of September 2015, the Ticket Program Manager (TPM) is MAXIMUS Federal Services, Inc.

References

  1. ^ "Social Security's Choose Work website for beneficiaries". Choose Work.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b "CWIC Training Manual". Virginia Commonwealth University.
  3. ^ Final Regulations, Federal Register. 21 July 2008
  4. ^ "Employment Network Payment Report-- The Work Site -- Social Security Online". Social Security Administration.
  5. ^ ORDP.OPDR. "Social Security Online - The Red Book - A Guide to Work Incentives". www.ssa.gov. Retrieved 2019-10-08.
  6. ^ Work, Ticket to. "Webinars & Tutorials - Ticket to Work - Social Security". BS4-Webinars-Tutorials. Retrieved 2019-10-08.
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