Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

鈥業 Am Just Waiting to Die鈥: Social Security Clawbacks Drive Some Into Homelessness

More than a year after the federal government first cut off her disability benefits, Denise Woods drives nightly to strip malls, truck stops, and parking lots around Savannah, Georgia, looking for a safe place to sleep in her Chevy.

Woods, 51, said she had rented a three-bedroom house she shared with her adult son and grandson until March 2022, when the government terminated her disability payments without notice.

According to letters sent by the Social Security Administration, the agency determined it had been overpaying Woods and demanded she send back nearly $58,000.

Woods couldn鈥檛 come up with the money. So, until February 2026, the agency is withholding the $2,048 in disability she would have received each month.

鈥淚 still don鈥檛 know how it happened,鈥 said Woods, who has requested a waiver and is seeking a hearing. 鈥淣o one will give me answers. It takes weeks or months to get a caseworker on the phone. They have made my life unbearable.鈥

Kilolo Kijakazi, acting commissioner of the Social Security Administration, in October that her agency notifies recipients when they have received overpayments and works to 鈥渉elp those who want to establish repayment plans or who seek waiver of the debt.鈥

But relief from overpayments goes to only a relatively small number of people. And many others face dire consequences: Some become homeless, are evicted from rental housing, or see their mortgages fall into foreclosure.

The SSA has a of . Today the agency鈥檚 own its overpayments most often hit Black and Hispanic people, the poorest of the poor, those with the least education, and those whose medical conditions are unlikely to improve.

Woods is one of millions who have been targeted in the Social Security Administration鈥檚 attempt to claw back billions of dollars it says was wrongly sent to beneficiaries. Years can pass before the agency catches a mistake, and even the little bit extra it might send each month can add up.

In reclaiming it, the government is imposing debts that can reach tens of thousands of dollars against those least able to pay.

()

()

鈥榃reaking Havoc in People鈥檚 Lives鈥

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News and Cox Media Group reporters interviewed people who have received overpayment notices and nonprofit attorneys who advocate for them and reviewed SSA publications, policy papers, and congressional testimony.

A 64-year-old Florida man said he could no longer afford rent after his Social Security retirement payments were garnished last year because he allegedly had been overpaid $35,176 in disability benefits. He said he now lives in a tent in the woods. A 24-year-old Pennsylvania woman living with her mother and younger siblings in public housing lost the chance to buy her own home because of an alleged $6,063 overpayment that accrued when she was a child.

鈥淪ocial Security overpayments are wreaking havoc in people鈥檚 lives,鈥 said Jen Burdick, an attorney with , which represents clients who have received overpayment notices. 鈥淭hey are asking the poorest among us to account for every dollar they get. Under their rules, some people can save up money for a funeral burial but not enough to get housing.鈥

Woods has lupus and congestive heart failure and struggles to walk, but she started working part-time after her benefits were rescinded. She said she makes $14 an hour transporting railroad crew members in her 2015 Chevy Equinox between Savannah and Jacksonville, Florida, when she can get assignments and her health allows it.

The SUV costs $386 a month 鈥 a large portion of her income 鈥 but without it, Woods said, she would not have a job or a place to sleep.

鈥淢y life is just survival now,鈥 Woods said. 鈥淪ometimes I feel like I am just waiting to die.鈥

The Social Security Administration has said it is required by law to attempt to recover overpayments. Notices ask beneficiaries to repay the money directly. Authorities can also recoup money by reducing or halting monthly benefits and garnishing wages and federal tax refunds.

Agency officials describe in which they explain to beneficiaries the reason for the overpayment and offer the chance to appeal the decision and have the charges waived if they cannot afford it. One way to qualify for a waiver is if 鈥減aying us back would mean you could not pay your bills for food, clothing, housing, medical care or other necessary expenses,鈥 according to a letter sent to one recipient.

Those most impacted by Social Security鈥檚 decisions, including people with disabilities and widows receiving survivors鈥 benefits, paint a different picture. They talk about having their benefits terminated without explanation or warning, an appeals process that can drag on for years, and an inability to get answers from the SSA to even basic questions.

Nancy Altman, , a group that pushes for the protection and expansion of the program, recalled how stressful it was when a colleague鈥檚 mother received an overpayment notice.

鈥淎fter weeks of nonstop phone calls, he was able to get the matter resolved, but not before it put his mother in the hospital,鈥 Altman said. 鈥淥ne can just imagine how much worse it would be for someone for whom English is not their native language, who lacks a high school education, and who is unassisted by such a knowledgeable and caring advocate.鈥

Problems surrounding the Social Security Administration are aggravated by congressional actions, including funding shortages that by the end of fiscal year 2022. Even so, advocates for people with disabilities say the agency does far less than it could to help people who have been overpaid, often through no fault of their own.

They said challenges faced by beneficiaries underscore how overpayments disproportionately impact Black people and other minority groups even as and to fix racial inequity in government programs.

Most overpayments are linked to the program, which gives money to people with little or no income who are disabled, blind, or at least 65. The majority of SSI recipients are .

鈥淐ongress has turned a blind eye to this,鈥 said , a former associate commissioner for research, demonstration, and employment support at the SSA. Politicians 鈥渏ust want to save money. It is misplaced priorities. It is completely inexcusable.鈥

The Social Security Administration did not make its leaders available for an interview. Spokesperson Nicole Tiggemann declined to answer questions about the cases of Woods and other beneficiaries, citing privacy laws.

In a written statement, Tiggemann acknowledged that receiving an overpayment notice can be 鈥渦nsettling,鈥 but said the agency helps beneficiaries and informs them of their rights if they believe they were not at fault or cannot repay the debt.

鈥淓ven if they do not want to appeal or request a waiver, the notice says to contact us if the planned withholding would cause hardship,鈥 Tiggemann said. 鈥淲e have flexible repayment options 鈥 including repayment of as low as $10 per month. Each person鈥檚 situation is unique, and we handle overpayments on a case-by-case basis.鈥

Critics say fighting an overpayment notice is not that simple.

Beneficiaries 鈥 many challenged by physical, mental, or intellectual disabilities 鈥 often are overwhelmed by complex paperwork or unable to find financial documents that may be years old.

The Social Security Administration has the authority to waive overpayments if officials determine recovering them would or the disputed amount falls below certain thresholds. The agency鈥檚 guidance also says collecting an overpayment 鈥溾 when the 鈥渋ndividual needs substantially all of their current income to meet their current ordinary and necessary living expenses.鈥

Advocates for people with disabilities contend most overpayments arise from delays in processing paperwork and errors by the Social Security Administration or recipients making innocent mistakes. The agency can waive overpayments when the beneficiary is found not at fault.

But in fiscal year 2023, the Social Security Administration collected about $4.9 billion in overpayments with an additional $23 billion yet uncollected, according to . Just $267 million was waived, the report said.

David Camp, the of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants鈥 Representatives, which advocates for improvements in federal disability programs, said the Social Security Administration is a 鈥渂roken structure.鈥

The agency sometimes tries to claw back overpayments from people falsely accused of failing to provide required documents, Camp said.

鈥淒ropping off forms at their field offices is not a guarantee鈥 paperwork will be processed, he said. 鈥淢ail is slow, or it doesn鈥檛 get opened. We see it so many times you are left with the idea that has to do with the structure.鈥

()

()

Left Destitute

Advocacy groups and others said they don鈥檛 know how many people become homeless after their benefits are terminated, but they say anecdotal accounts are common.

A that more than 800,000 disability applicants from 2007 to 2017 experienced homelessness. Advocates say it only makes sense that overpayments could lead more people to become homeless, since nearly 40% of people experience food insecurity and cannot keep up with their rent and utility bills, according to research.

Ronald Harrell sleeps in the woods near Wildwood, Florida, about 50 miles northwest of Orlando. He said he shelters in a tent, cooks his meals on a small grill, and showers at a friend鈥檚 house.

Harrell, 64, said he rented a room in a house for $125 a week until last year, when the Social Security Administration cut off his retirement benefits.

A letter the SSA sent him, dated Feb. 6, 2023, says his benefits are being withheld because of overpayment of $35,176 that accrued when Harrell received disability payments. The letter acknowledges he has asked the agency to lower his payments.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how they are doing this to me,鈥 Harrell said. 鈥淚 did everything by the law.鈥

Harrell said he once worked as an HVAC technician, but nerve damage left him unable to work sometime around 2002.

He said he collected disability benefits until about 2009, when rehabilitation allowed him to return to the workforce, and he said he reported the information to the federal government. Harrell said he applied for early Social Security retirement benefits last year when his health again declined.

鈥淚 started working when I was 16,鈥 Harrell said. 鈥淚 never thought my life would be like this.鈥

Kijakazi, the acting Social Security commissioner, and others have said overpayments stem at least partly from low staffing and budget cuts.

From 2010 to 2023, the agency鈥檚 customer service budget dropped by 17%, after inflation, according to a , a think tank that conducts research on government programs.

At the same time, the report says, the number of Social Security beneficiaries grew by nearly 12 million people, or 22%.

Jonathan Stein, with Community Legal Services of Philadelphia who has participated in workgroups and meetings with federal officials about access to Social Security payments for vulnerable populations, said budget cuts cannot fully account for the agency鈥檚 penchant for denying applications and terminating benefits.

Officials suspended Supplemental Security Income benefits for in 2019 for 鈥渇ailure to furnish report,鈥 which means they did not meet deadlines or paperwork requirements, Stein said, despite knowing many of those people were unable to contact the agency because they are homeless or have been evicted and lost access to phones and computers.

That鈥檚 more than double the number in 2010, he said.

鈥淭hey have an implicit bias for denying benefits,鈥 Stein said. 鈥淚t is a very skewed view of integrity. It reinforces a culture of suspicion and prosecution of applicants.鈥

The 24-year-old Pennsylvania woman who received Supplemental Security Income as a child because of a learning disability described her ordeal on the condition that her name not be published. A letter from the Social Security Administration says she received an overpayment notice for more than $6,000.

鈥淚t was frustrating,鈥 the woman said. 鈥淵ou are dealing with nasty people on the phone. I couldn鈥檛 get any answers.鈥

In November 2022, she contacted a nonprofit law firm, which helped her file an appeal. One year later, she received another letter from Social Security saying the overpayment had been waived because it was not her fault. The letter also said officials would not seek repayment because she could not afford basic needs such as food and housing without the monthly benefits.

The woman had already paid a price.

She lived in public housing and the Philadelphia Housing Authority had offered her a chance to fulfill a long-held goal of owning a house. But when the overpayment appeared on her credit report, she said, she could not obtain a mortgage.

鈥淚 was excited about getting my own home,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what everybody wants. Losing it is not a good feeling.鈥

David Hilzenrath of 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, Jodie Fleischer of Cox Media Group, and Ben Becker of ActionNewsJax in Jacksonville, Florida, contributed to this report.

Do you have an experience with Social Security overpayments you鈥檇 like to share? to contact our reporting team.

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people we鈥檙e reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.