Author Topic: Big Mo has daughter with disability  (Read 2795 times)

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Offline franksolich

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Big Mo has daughter with disability
« on: February 24, 2015, 06:38:01 PM »
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1141518

Okay now, before the lurking primitives get all agog and excited at the prospect of decent and civilized people "making fun" of Big Mo's predicament, forget about it.

<<<merely posting this as a Big Mo Update, not for malicious reasons.

<<<always likes to know what's up with Big Mo.

And kudos to Big Mo's daughter, for wanting to pay her own way.

<<<knows some primitives who don't.

Quote
mopinko (43,234 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 11:22 AM

ada question- my daughter has epilepsy

and is still getting her meds adjusted. she is on ssi, but it is not much.

she has had a job for 6 months, in a bakery. she loves her job. they love her.

the management has been aware of her condition, but apparently word had not made it to the owner.

the other day, when she was changing med doses, she asked a coworker to keep an eye on her, as it made the chances of a seizure greater.

well, with this word made it to the top.

she received an email last night telling her that she could not work until she got clearance from her doctor.

if she cannot clear this up today, she will likely end up missing 4 days of work.

she cant afford that.

so, question is- is this legit?

i am afraid that even if she gets it straightened out, she will end up losing the job.

up to this point they love her. but she has had to leave work early a couple times due to related issues, tho not connected to seizures.

she asked for an exemption from the attendance policies. in her six months she has missed a couple days to a bad cold, but has gone home early twice and been late once.

she has gotten glowing reviews, and has developed a regular clientele. she gets mentioned by name in online reviews repeatedly. and she just asked for a raise, and they were very receptive.

i feel so bad for her. she really WANTS to work.

worst of all, she got the email during a break in a drawing class that she and i are taking together. she was so excited about the class, and i am pissed that this has overlapped onto that.

advice?

:clap: to my good pal Manny for getting to the crux of the problem:

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MannyGoldstein (30,721 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 11:50 AM

1. Very, very sorry to hear about this situation.

It's not difficult enough to have a disability, there's all of this kind of stuff to deal with! It's totally unfair.

I'm not a lawyer and not up to speed on ADA, but my wife and I do have volunteer work to help families of kids with disabilities to deal with school districts which mainly falls under different laws and regulations (IDEA). So I'm almost totally not qualified to give advice.

That all being said... I think the employer is concerned that she might get hurt. I don't know what goes on behind the scenes at bakery, but I'd imagine the bakery believes that there's the potential for your daughter to get hurt if she has a seizure, so I suspect there's no quick legal remedy. I'd check the law, but the law for this kind of thing is generally a safety net that covers what happens when "people stuff" breaks down. I'd focus on making the employer comfortable that your daughter will be OK on the job, and get that clearance ASAP.

It sucks, but I suspect there's no instant fix.

And hopefully you can get some advice from someone who actually knows what they're talking about!

Good luck to you and your family!

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SheilaT (17,144 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 11:51 AM

2. Call her doctor and get the note.

Companies have the right to require their employees be healthy enough to work, although that's often overlooked when employees show up with a cold or the flu.

Asking for an exemption from attendance policies can come back to bite her. Fellow employees can become very resentful, which isn't good. Do other employees also leave work early on occasion? If so, that's essentially a non-issue. Good for her for not going in when she had a bad cold. And only being late once is just about exemplary.

She needs to have a good talk with the management, especially since they seem quite comfortable with having her there.

My knowledge of how SSI works is quite limited, but does her working impact that?

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mopinko (43,234 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 12:39 PM

6. she has to report her earnings.

the problem i have with it is her medical privacy. this is not the flu, this is an ongoing and serious illness.

the other employees really like her, and have sworn they would stand up for her if there was any blowback to her absences.

she really is good at her job, which is the front counter/sales. she is hands down their top seller. she gets a commission, but it is pennies.

unfortunately she has also recently blocked out 2 days of the week that she cant work. shouldnt be a big problem, as she mostly works weekends, and the days, t-th are slow days. thursdays is our class day. tuesdays is so she can get back into therapy, which she really needs. she doesnt want to tell them why. i cant blame her.

not sure what she told them about it, just know it is not the whole story.

Quote
pinto (106,115 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 12:38 PM

5. (Though I have some experience, this is a layman's point of view.) Agree with Manny.

Safety / liability concerns likely come into play here. For all concerned. A visit with the neurologist that works with her on managing her seizures seems appropriate. She can present the situation, outline the details of her duties on the job and request a medical clearance for work.

(aside) I have a seizure disorder. After my 3rd seizure, iirc, my MD had to report the events to the Department of Motor vehicles. CA State law. Safety / liability concerns were a big part of my situation. For all concerned. My license was revoked, a decision I understood and actually supported. Seizure while driving - mmm, that's a pretty clear call. But that's far from your daughter's situation, I assume.

Your daughter's situation seems another ball of wax. Sounds like a great employee doing a job she loves. And it sounds like she has supportive co-workers. So perhaps the medical clearance is actually a good thing to have on file. For all concerned.

Hang in there mopinko! All the best to you both.

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mopinko (43,234 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 12:53 PM

7. thanks. the sad thing is

this whole thing has unwound slowly. turns out she has been having seizures all her life. her brother accidentally broke her skull when she was 4. talk about dont tell mom. i never knew. but it took all this time to put the whole thing together. (she is 21)

she had a lot of psyche-type symptoms that turned out to be seizures.

she and i are both so happy for her to finally be getting better. it seemed like the light at the end of the tunnel.

sigh.

driving is a thing. the only bad part about the job is that it is an hour and a half of public trans each way. for a 4 hour shift. she is really hoping to get under control enough to drive. it is about a 20 minute drive.

in the meantime, they are talking about opening another location that is much easier and she had her fingers crossed for a management job, or at least a big raise to move.

poor kid. seems like every time she dares to hope her body bites her in the ass.

i remember your seizures. it is hard to lose driving privileges. it drove my mom over the edge into infirmity when she has a bad hip replacement that took away control of her right foot. at least it was clear cut, and not something that we had to fight her about. but it really took away so much.

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happyslug (13,180 posts)   Mon Feb 23, 2015, 05:48 PM

10. Employers can NOT discriminate against disable people UNLESS it affects the ability to work

And that is the heart of this dispute. Can your daughter do the job? and that includes AVOIDING getting hurt on the job. The burden is on the EMPLOYER to show that she is in danger, but the employer can cite your daughter's statement that she was in danger (i.e. if your daughter gets a letter from her doctor that she can do this type of work, the burden will be on the employer that she can not, a burden that would be hard for them to prove without medical evidence).

Thus the employer has the RIGHT to ask for medical documentation that your daughter can do the work (and that includes knowing about any seizures that would cause problems around machinery).

You did not say if your daughter had grand mal or petit mal seizures. I am assuming petit mal (Which have been described as a computer that locks up and needs to be shut down and rebooted). I make this assumption for she is working in a bakery and that means working around machinery and in cases of Petit Mal that can be done, but NOT in cases with Grand Mal Seizures. Also everyone sees when someone goes into a Grand Mal Seizures, but you have to look to see if someone is in a Petit Mal for in a Petit Mal you end up staring into space for your brain has locked up).

Now, excess absenteeism is grounds for termination. That includes excess absenteeism even if the excess absenteeism is do to sickness or other good cause. Excess absenteeism can show an inability to do that type of work. Now excess absenteeism is missing more then one day a month on a CONSTANT BASIS. Missing one day a month on the average is NOT grounds for termination in most cases. Missing a bunch of days do to a medical condition is also NOT excess absenteeism (i.e. if you miss work for a month do to surgery or other illness that is NOT excess absenteeism even if you average it out on a year basis it is more then one day a month). The key is CONSTANT basis and from what you are telling me that is NOT the case with your daughter.

Now, you say your daughter is on SSI. She should be getting $741 plus any state supplement your state adds to the $741. The $741 is REDUCED by any income she gets doing the month. If the income is from Employment the GROSS employment income is reduced by $30 then 1/3 of the remainder is subtracted from the gross, then what is left is use to reduce her SSI dollar for dollar. i.e if your daughter's GROSS income is $630 a month, you subtract $30, to come to $600, then you divide that by 1/3 which is $200 and then reduce the $600 by that $200, That leaves $400, which is used to reduce the $741 to $341.

GROSS: $630
Less.......-30
............$600.. 1/3 of $600 is $200
Less......$200
............$400

SSI amount $741
less............$400
She gets....$341

Please note, your daughter's income for February will be used to reduce her SSI for May, the reduction is done two months after the income is earned.

Also, your daughter's SSI can be reduced by "in kind assistance" i.e. when parents do NOT charge her rent. That is considered "In kind" Assistance and is used to reduce her SSI amount. Thus if you do NOT charge her rent, Social Security can say that is the same as $150 in money given to her, so her SSI will be reduced by that $150. The way around this is always tell SSA that you are charging your daughter rent if she lives at home with you. $150 is generally enough to avoid that you are providing your daughter room and board as "in Kind" assistance to your daughter. You do NOT have to collect it, but you have to till SSA that you are charging her that much money.

One last comment. Make sure your daughter does NOT earn more then $1000 a month. At about $1100 a month, Social Security starts to say that is Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) and as such she is NOT disabled and thus NOT entitled to SSI. This is a DIFFERENT Test then the above reduction of her SSI based on her income. The reduction of SSI, is Congress's plan to minimize spending on SSI but making sure a person only gets the bare minimum income to take care of themselves. The SGA test goes to the issue is she disabled? If she can do SGA, Substantial Gainful Activity*, then she is NOT disabled and is NOT eligible for SSI.

One last comment, many people confuse SSI (Supplemental Security Income) with Social Security Disability. Both use the same test for disability (if you are disabled for SSI, you are disabled for Social Security Disability and this includes the SGA test) BUT Social Security Disability is NOT reduced by any other income your daughter gets, no matter how much income she gets and no matter what is the source of that income. i.e. my comments about the reduction of her SSI do to her other income does NOT apply to cases of someone on Social Security Disability but does apply to someone in SSI. People get SSI and Social Security Disability mixed up all the time, but they are different programs, through both are run by the Social Security Administration.

*the fat lazy Odin2005 primitive can do that.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline DumbAss Tanker

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2015, 06:45:52 PM »
Manny's right on that one.
Go and tell the Spartans, O traveler passing by
That here, obedient to their law, we lie.

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Online CC27

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #2 on: February 24, 2015, 06:49:58 PM »
Quote
Quote
happyslug (13,180 posts)   Mon Feb 23, 2015, 05:48 PM

10. Employers can NOT discriminate against disable people UNLESS it affects the ability to work

And that is the heart of this dispute. Can your daughter do the job? and that includes AVOIDING getting hurt on the job. The burden is on the EMPLOYER to show that she is in danger, but the employer can cite your daughter's statement that she was in danger (i.e. if your daughter gets a letter from her doctor that she can do this type of work, the burden will be on the employer that she can not, a burden that would be hard for them to prove without medical evidence).

Thus the employer has the RIGHT to ask for medical documentation that your daughter can do the work (and that includes knowing about any seizures that would cause problems around machinery).

You did not say if your daughter had grand mal or petit mal seizures. I am assuming petit mal (Which have been described as a computer that locks up and needs to be shut down and rebooted). I make this assumption for she is working in a bakery and that means working around machinery and in cases of Petit Mal that can be done, but NOT in cases with Grand Mal Seizures. Also everyone sees when someone goes into a Grand Mal Seizures, but you have to look to see if someone is in a Petit Mal for in a Petit Mal you end up staring into space for your brain has locked up).

Now, excess absenteeism is grounds for termination. That includes excess absenteeism even if the excess absenteeism is do to sickness or other good cause. Excess absenteeism can show an inability to do that type of work. Now excess absenteeism is missing more then one day a month on a CONSTANT BASIS. Missing one day a month on the average is NOT grounds for termination in most cases. Missing a bunch of days do to a medical condition is also NOT excess absenteeism (i.e. if you miss work for a month do to surgery or other illness that is NOT excess absenteeism even if you average it out on a year basis it is more then one day a month). The key is CONSTANT basis and from what you are telling me that is NOT the case with your daughter.

Now, you say your daughter is on SSI. She should be getting $741 plus any state supplement your state adds to the $741. The $741 is REDUCED by any income she gets doing the month. If the income is from Employment the GROSS employment income is reduced by $30 then 1/3 of the remainder is subtracted from the gross, then what is left is use to reduce her SSI dollar for dollar. i.e if your daughter's GROSS income is $630 a month, you subtract $30, to come to $600, then you divide that by 1/3 which is $200 and then reduce the $600 by that $200, That leaves $400, which is used to reduce the $741 to $341.

GROSS: $630
Less.......-30
............$600.. 1/3 of $600 is $200
Less......$200
............$400

SSI amount $741
less............$400
She gets....$341

Please note, your daughter's income for February will be used to reduce her SSI for May, the reduction is done two months after the income is earned.

Also, your daughter's SSI can be reduced by "in kind assistance" i.e. when parents do NOT charge her rent. That is considered "In kind" Assistance and is used to reduce her SSI amount. Thus if you do NOT charge her rent, Social Security can say that is the same as $150 in money given to her, so her SSI will be reduced by that $150. The way around this is always tell SSA that you are charging your daughter rent if she lives at home with you. $150 is generally enough to avoid that you are providing your daughter room and board as "in Kind" assistance to your daughter. You do NOT have to collect it, but you have to till SSA that you are charging her that much money.

One last comment. Make sure your daughter does NOT earn more then $1000 a month. At about $1100 a month, Social Security starts to say that is Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) and as such she is NOT disabled and thus NOT entitled to SSI. This is a DIFFERENT Test then the above reduction of her SSI based on her income. The reduction of SSI, is Congress's plan to minimize spending on SSI but making sure a person only gets the bare minimum income to take care of themselves. The SGA test goes to the issue is she disabled? If she can do SGA, Substantial Gainful Activity*, then she is NOT disabled and is NOT eligible for SSI.

One last comment, many people confuse SSI (Supplemental Security Income) with Social Security Disability. Both use the same test for disability (if you are disabled for SSI, you are disabled for Social Security Disability and this includes the SGA test) BUT Social Security Disability is NOT reduced by any other income your daughter gets, no matter how much income she gets and no matter what is the source of that income. i.e. my comments about the reduction of her SSI do to her other income does NOT apply to cases of someone on Social Security Disability but does apply to someone in SSI. People get SSI and Social Security Disability mixed up all the time, but they are different programs, through both are run by the Social Security Administration.


How in the hell do they know all this? Is there a DUmmie guide to getting on the dole?

Offline franksolich

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #3 on: February 24, 2015, 06:52:17 PM »
How in the hell do they know all this? Is there a DUmmie guide to getting on the dole?

There used to be, back on the old DU.

I'm sure that social security disability attorneys used to consult the "disability" forum over there for information and insight.

But with the current DU, the same forum's pretty bland.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline franksolich

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #4 on: February 24, 2015, 06:57:30 PM »
Manny's right on that one.

What's scary is this.

I wouldn't have epilepsy even if I got a million bucks a month out of it.

But there's some primitives who don't have epilepsy, who'd be willing to have it, if it got them $1000 a month and food stamps, so they didn't have to work.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline obumazombie

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #5 on: February 24, 2015, 07:26:37 PM »
Cannot afford 4 days off from work ?
That's first class irresponsible financial planning.
There were only two options for gender. At last count there are at least 12, according to libs. By that standard, I'm a male lesbian.

Offline thundley4

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #6 on: February 24, 2015, 07:32:27 PM »
Quote
SheilaT (17,144 posts)   Fri Feb 20, 2015, 11:51 AM

My knowledge of how SSI works is quite limited, but does her working impact that?

A typical DUmmie, more concerned about losing the "free shit" than about losing the job .


Offline Big Dog

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #7 on: February 24, 2015, 08:06:08 PM »
Franksolich, your friend Mopinko would benefit from some advice: ignore every word her fellow DUmmies wrote, especially the joyful mollusk primitive.

I wouldn't piss on the Crazy Chicken Witch if she was on fire, but she is your friend.
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CAVE FVROREM PATIENTIS.

Offline franksolich

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #8 on: February 24, 2015, 08:23:09 PM »
franksolich, your friend Mopinko would benefit from some advice: ignore every word her fellow DUmmies wrote, especially the joyful mollusk primitive.

I wouldn't piss on the Crazy Chicken Witch if she was on fire, but she is your friend.

Well now, epilepsy's a terrible thing.  I'm deaf, and I'd just as soon stay deaf, than have epilepsy.  I rather appreciate having control over my brain.

But as I told Tanker, what's scary is that there are primitives who'd take epilepsy in a millisecond, if it got them on the disability gravy train.

I'm reminded of a thread on Skins's island a couple of years ago, when a primitive actually said he wished he had AIDS, given all the freebies victims of that were given, at least in New York City.

The primitive was utterly serious, not jocular or ironic at all.

Then "one-issue" Wills, the William769 primitive, jumped in, saying the other primitive had no idea what the Hell he was wishing for.

Wills of course is afflicted with AIDS, given him by his now-late "loving" husband, who cuckholded him, "cheated" on him.

This was one of those as-rare-as-a-downpour-in-the-Sahara moments, a primitive knowing what he was talking about, and making sense.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline dane

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #9 on: February 24, 2015, 08:35:21 PM »
This has all the earmarks of fraud
Quote
The way around this is always tell SSA that you are charging your daughter rent if she lives at home with you. $150 is generally enough to avoid that you are providing your daughter room and board as "in Kind" assistance to your daughter. You do NOT have to collect it, but...

Suggesting a lie to the SSA, which would need to be followed up by lying to the IRS regarding rental income.  If they tell the SSA they are charging rent, doesn't that need to be reported to the IRS?
This too shall pass.

Offline Big Dog

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #10 on: February 24, 2015, 08:51:50 PM »
This has all the earmarks of fraud 
Suggesting a lie to the SSA, which would need to be followed up by lying to the IRS regarding rental income.  If they tell the SSA they are charging rent, doesn't that need to be reported to the IRS?

Oh, yes.
Government is the negation of liberty.
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CAVE FVROREM PATIENTIS.

Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #11 on: February 24, 2015, 09:17:27 PM »
Of course you realize this is all a lie.

Big Mo has detailed over and over, most recently after her "Christmas from Hell", that her children hate her and will not speak to her.

In that, they exhibit good judgment.

Also, she has never mentioned a daughter with epilepsy.

As much as Big Mo enjoys discussing the gory details of every malady, including her own bout with prostate trouble, there is zero chance she could have an epileptic daughter without sharing it ad nauseam with the DUmp.

Disability fraud or any other dishonesty would be right down her alley though.

She just finished a spirited defense of the cheating Little League team full of Chicago ringers

Offline Gina

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #12 on: February 24, 2015, 10:37:12 PM »
HeY moms! Don't you think you would notice a broken skull on a 4 yr old? Wouldn't there be so pretty significant swelling??






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Offline Gina

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #13 on: February 24, 2015, 10:42:26 PM »
Quote
One last comment. Make sure your daughter does NOT earn more then $1000 a month.

Ans they wonder why they are broke.  :argh:






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Offline Chris_

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #14 on: February 24, 2015, 10:53:31 PM »
How in the hell do they know all this? Is there a DUmmie guide to getting on the dole?
With a user name of "happyslug", why bother asking. :thatsright:
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Offline Mr Mannn

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Re: Big Mo has daughter with disability
« Reply #15 on: February 24, 2015, 11:20:42 PM »
Hey Mo!
When you go to jail for your illegal urban farm rat breeding facility, maybe you can let your daughter live in your house for a few months.
who knows? She might even clean it up a bit.