| 
		 | 
		
 106-13R December 3, 1999
 
 
			 Congress Passes the Ticket to Work
and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999
			
On November 18, 1999 the House of Representatives passed the conference report accompanying H.R. 1180, the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999, by a vote of 418-2.  The Senate passed the conference report, by a vote of 
95-1, on November 19, 1999.  The President has indicated that he will sign the legislation.  The bill contains the following provisions of interest to SSA:
 
			 Ticket to Work and Self-Sufficiency Program
			General 
			
				- Directs the Commissioner to establish a Ticket 
        to Work and Self-Sufficiency program (Program) which would provide SSDI 
        and SSI disability beneficiaries with a ticket they may use to obtain 
        vocational rehabilitation (VR) services, employment services, and other 
        support services from an employment network of their choice.
 
			 Responsibilities of the Commissioner of Social Security 
			
				- Selects and enters into agreements with one or more organizations in the public or private sector to serve as a program manager(s) to assist the Commissioner in administering the Program.
				
 - Terminates agreements with program manager(s) who fail to meet the performance standards specified in the agreements.
				
 - Precludes program managers from direct participation in the delivery of services to beneficiaries or from holding a financial interest in an employment network in the service area covered by the program manager's agreement.
				
 - Selects, and enters into agreements with, employment networks, including alternate participants who choose to act as an employment network, to provide    services under the Program.
				
 - Terminates agreements with employment networks whose performance is     inadequate.
				
 - Provides for periodic reviews of employment networks to ensure effective      quality assurance in the provision of services.
				
 - Provides for a process to resolve disputes 
        between beneficiaries and employment networks, between program managers 
        and employment networks, and between program managers and providers of 
        services.
 
			 Responsibilities of the Program Manager(s) 
			
				- Performs such tasks as assigned by the Commissioner.
				
 - Recruits and recommends, for selection by the Commissioner, employment      networks which can provide services under the Program.
				
 - Monitors employment networks under its jurisdiction to ensure that beneficiaries have adequate choices of services and reasonable access to services, e.g., case management, benefits counseling, supported employment, job training, placement, and follow-up services.
				
 - Ensures that employment networks comply with the terms of their agreements with the Commissioner and that payment by the Commissioner to an employment network is warranted.
				
 - Ensures beneficiaries are allowed changes in 
        employment networks without being deemed to have rejected services 
        under the Program. *      
                
          
 
			 Employment Network(s) 
			
				- Assumes responsibility for coordination and delivery of services under the Program to an individual assigning his/her ticket to work and self-sufficiency to  an employment network.
				
 - May consist of a one-stop delivery system established under the Workforce      Investment Act of 1998 or either a single provider of such services or a group of providers organized to combine their resources into a single entity.
				
 - Provides services either directly or by 
        entering into agreements with other providers which can furnish 
        appropriate services. 
                  
				  - Serves prescribed service areas and takes measures to ensure that services      provided under the Program meet the requirements of individual work plans.
				
 - Meets the financial reporting requirements prescribed by the Commissioner.       Prepares periodic reports, on at least an annual basis, itemizing specific     outcomes achieved with respect to services provided to beneficiaries.
				
 - Develops and implements an individual work plan 
        in partnership with each beneficiary that includes a statement of the: 
        (1) beneficiary's vocational goal, (2) services and supports necessary 
        to accomplish that goal, (3) terms and conditions related to the 
        provision of those services and supports, (4) rights and remedies 
        available to the beneficiary, and (5) beneficiary's right to modify 
        his/her work plan if needed. The individual work plan is effective upon 
        written approval by the beneficiary and a representative of the 
        employment network.
 
			 Employment Network Payment Systems 
			
				- Authorizes the Commissioner to pay an employment network under either an      outcome payment system or an outcome-milestone payment system.  Each employment network will elect the payment system under which it will be paid.
				 
					- Under the outcome payment system, an employment network is paid a percentage, not to exceed 40 percent, of the national average SSDI or SSI payment for each month that a beneficiary does not receive a benefit payment due to work activity for a period not to exceed 60 months.
					
 - The outcome-milestone payment system combines 
          outcome payments with payments for achieving one or more milestones 
          directed toward assisting the beneficiary in achieving permanent 
          employment. However, the total amount of outcome-milestone payments 
          must be less than the total amount of payments if the employment 
          network is paid under the outcome payment system.
 
				 
				 - Requires the Commissioner to review periodically the specifications of the      payment system (percentage and total payment) to ensure that the system provides an adequate incentive for employment networks to assist beneficiaries in entering the workforce.
				
 - Allows the Commissioner to alter the percentage or total permissible payments,  as well as the number and amount of milestone payments, to allow an adequate incentive for employment networks.
				
 - Requires the Commissioner to report within 36 
        months of enactment on the adequacy of the payment system as an 
        incentive for providing services to individuals with a need for ongoing 
        support or services, high cost accommodations, who earn a subminimum 
        wage, or who work and receive partial benefits.
 
			 State Agency Participation 
			
				- Permits a State VR agency to elect participation in the Program as an employment network with respect to each disabled beneficiary for whom it will   provide services.
				
 - State VR agencies participating in the Program will provide services under plans approved under title I of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
				
 - Requires a written agreement between the State VR agency and the employment  network before a State VR agency can accept any referral of a disabled beneficiary from an employment network assigned a ticket to work by the disabled beneficiary.
				 
					- Directs the Commissioner to prescribe 
          regulations specifying the terms of such agreements.  
          *     
                
 
				 
				 - Requires the Commissioner to establish in regulations a dispute resolution mechanism when the State VR agency and the employment network fail to reach an agreement on cross-referring beneficiaries.
				
 - Requires the Commissioner, if the amendments 
        have not been fully implemented in a State, to determine through 
        regulations the extent (1) to which the requirement concerning prompt 
        referral to the State VR agency applies, and (2) of the Commissioner's 
        authority to provide vocational rehabilitation services by agreement or 
        contract with other public or private agencies in the State.
 
			 
Continuing Disability Reviews 
			
				- Prohibits the Commissioner from initiating 
        continuing disability reviews during the period that a beneficiary is 
        using a ticket to work and self-sufficiency.
 
			 Financing 
			
				- Requires payments to employment networks to be 
        made from the Federal Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) 
        Trust Funds in the case of SSDI beneficiaries who return to work and 
        from appropriations made available for making SSI payments under title 
        XVI. The costs for administrative expenses would be authorized as 
        appropriate from amounts made available for the administration of title 
        II and title XVI of the Social Security Act (the Act).
 
			 Regulations 
			
				- Directs the Commissioner to prescribe 
        regulations necessary to implement the Ticket to Work and 
        Self-Sufficiency Program not later than 1 year after the date of 
        enactment.
 
			 Effective Date of the Program
			
				- Effective with the first month following 1 year 
        after enactment.
 
			 Scope of Program Implementation 
			
				- Directs the Commissioner to implement the amendments in graduated phases at sites selected by the Commissioner to ensure the refinement of the Program processes prior to full implementation.
				
 - Requires the Commissioner to fully implement 
        the Program as soon as practicable, but not later than 3 years after the 
        effective date.
 
			 Evaluation 
			
				- Requires the Commissioner (after consultation 
        with the Advisory Panel, beneficiaries using Tickets, the General 
        Accounting Office (GAO), other Federal agencies, and others with 
        appropriate expertise) to design and conduct a series of evaluations to 
        assess the cost-effectiveness of the Program and the work outcomes for 
        beneficiaries receiving a ticket to work and self sufficiency under the 
        Program. Also, requires the Commissioner to provide for independent 
        evaluations to assess the activities carried out under the Program.
 
			 Reports
			
				- Requires the Commissioner to report following 
        the close of the third and fifth fiscal years and prior to the close of 
        the seventh fiscal year ending after the effective date. Reports should 
        be submitted to the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate 
        Committee on Finance on the Commissioner's evaluation of the progress of 
        activities, as well as the success of the Program and the Commissioner's 
        conclusions on whether or how the Program should be modified.
 
			 Work Incentives Advisory Panel
			
				- Establishes a Work Incentives Advisory Panel 
        within the Social Security Administration. The Panel will be composed of 
        12 members--4 appointed by the President; 2 each by the Speaker and the 
        Minority Leader of the House; and 2 each by the Majority and Minority 
        Leaders of the Senate. At least one-half of the members shall be 
        individuals with disabilities or representatives of individuals with a 
        disability, with consideration given to current and former Social 
        Security and Supplemental Security Income disability beneficiaries. 
        Requires that members be appointed not later than 90 days after 
        enactment. *                                                                                                              
				
 - Requires that all 12 members represent the interests of recipients of service, providers of service, employers, and employees (two each).
				
 - Duties include:
				
					- Advising the President, Congress, and the Commissioner of Social          Security on issues related to work incentive programs, planning, and assistance for individuals with disabilities, including work incentive provisions under titles II, XI, XVI, XVIII, and XIX of the Act.
					
 - Advising the Commissioner with respect to the Ticket to Work and Self-Sufficiency Program on the following:
					
						- phase-in sites for implementation of the 
            Program; 
      
						  - access of disabled beneficiaries to employment networks, payment  systems, and management information systems to ensure the success of the Program;
						
 - the most effective designs for research and demonstration projects   associated with the Program or conducted with respect to the reduction in disability insurance benefits based on earnings; and
						
 - development of performance measures for the employment            networks.
  
						 - Furnishing progress reports on the Program 
            to the Commissioner and Congress.
 
				 
				 - Requires the Panel to submit interim reports at least annually and transmit a final report which includes a detailed statement of the findings and conclusions of the Panel and its recommendations for legislation and administrative actions, to the President and the Congress not later than 8 years after the date of enactment.
				
 - Terminates the Panel 30 days after the date it submits its final report.
				
 - The costs for the Panel shall be made from 
        amounts available for the administration of title II and title XVI, and 
        shall be allocated from those amounts as appropriate.
 
			 
			 Elimination of Work Disincentives
			Work Activity Standard as a Basis for Review 
			
				- Prohibits the use of work activity as a basis for review for individuals who are entitled to disability insurance benefits under section 223 of the Act or monthly insurance benefits under section 202 of the Act based on disability and have received such benefits for at least 24 months.
				
 - Allows for continuing disability reviews on a regularly scheduled basis that are  not triggered by work activity, and termination of benefits if the individual has  earnings that exceed the level of earning established by the Commissioner to  represent substantial gainful activity (SGA).
				
 - Effective January 1, 2002.
 
			 Expedited Reinstatement of Benefits
			
				- Provides that individuals, whose prior entitlement to disability and health care     benefits had been terminated as a result of earnings from work activity, may request reinstatement of benefits without filing a new application.
				
 - Requires that such individuals (1) are unable to continue working on account of their medical condition and (2) file a reinstatement request during the 60-month period following the month of termination.
				
 - Provides that, while SSA is making a determination (by applying the medical      improvement review standard) on the reinstatement request, individuals are      eligible for the payment of provisional benefits for a period of not more than 
6 months.
				
 - Requires that, if SSA makes a favorable determination, both the individual's prior entitlement to benefits and the prior benefits of his dependents who continue to meet the entitlement criteria would be reinstated.
				
 - Effective on the first day of the 13th month beginning after the date of enactment.
 
			 
			Work Incentives Planning, Assistance, and Outreach
			Work Incentives Outreach Program 
			
				- Directs the Commissioner, in consultation with the Work Incentives Advisory     Panel, to establish a community-based work incentives planning and assistance   program for the purpose of providing accurate information related to work      incentives to disabled beneficiaries.
				
 - Under the Program, the Commissioner is directed 
        to: 
        
                 
				
					- establish a competitive program of grants, cooperative agreements, or      contracts to provide benefits planning and assistance, including information on the availability of protection and advocacy services, to disabled beneficiaries;
					
 - conduct directly, or through grants, cooperative agreements, or contracts, ongoing outreach efforts; and
					
 - establish a corps of work incentive 
          specialists within the Social Security Administration who specialize 
          in title II and title XVI work incentives for the purpose of providing 
          accurate information. *      
                  
                       
           
 
				 
				 - Directs the Commissioner to award a grant, cooperative agreement, or contract   to an entity based on a percentage of the population of disabled beneficiaries in the State where the entity is located.  No entity will receive a grant, cooperative  agreement, or contract for a fiscal year that is less than $50,000 or more than $300,000.  The total amount of all grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts awarded for a fiscal year may not exceed $23 million.
				
 - Provides that the costs be paid from amounts made available for the administration for title II and title XVI, and that allocations be made from those amounts as appropriate.
				
 - Authorizes $23 million to be allocated for each of fiscal years 2000 through 2004.
				
 - Effective upon enactment.
 
			 Protection and Advocacy
			
				- Authorizes the Commissioner to make payments to protection and advocacy systems established in each state.  Each system that receives payment is required to submit an annual report to the Commissioner and the Work Incentives Advisory Panel.
				
 - Provides that protection and advocacy systems be paid the greater of $100,000 or 1/3 of 1 percent of the amount available for payments for a fiscal year.
				
 - Provides that payments are made from amounts available for the administration    for title II and title XVI, and would be allocated from those amounts as appropriate.  Any amounts allotted for payments to a protection and advocacy system would remain available until the end of the succeeding fiscal year.
				
 - Authorizes $7 million to be appropriated for each of fiscal years 2000 through 2004.
				
 - Effective upon enactment.
 
			 
			Expanded Availability of Health Care Services 
			State Options under Medicaid 
			
				- Expands, for individuals who are at least 16, but less than 65, years of age, the States' options and funding for the Medicaid buy-in for workers with disabilities by permitting States to:  (1) liberalize limits on resources and income, and (2) provide the opportunity for employed individuals with medically determinable impairments, as determined by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), to buy into Medicaid even though they are no longer eligible for SSDI or SSI disability benefits due to medical improvement.  For purposes of the Medicaid buy-in, the States are authorized to require individuals to pay premiums, or other cost-sharing charges, set on a sliding scale based on income.
				
 - Applicable with respect to medical assistance for items and services furnished on or after October 1, 2000.
				
 - Requires GAO to report on these options not later than 3 years after enactment.
 
			 Continuation of Medicare Coverage 
			Responsibilities of the Secretary of Health and Human Services 
			
				- Directs the Secretary of HHS to:
				 
					- provide grants to establish State 
          infrastructures to support working individuals with disabilities; and 
          *     
                 
					  - create a demonstration of a Medicaid buy-in 
          for people whose disabilities have not yet gotten severe enough to 
          cause them to stop work and file for 
          benefits. *
  
					 - Effective October 1, 2000.
 
			 Election by Disabled Beneficiaries to Suspend Medigap Insurance
			
				- Allows workers with disabilities who have 
        Medicare coverage and a Medigap policy to suspend the premiums and 
        benefits of the Medigap policy if they have employer-sponsored coverage. 
        Applicable with respect to requests made after the date of enactment.
 
			 
			Demonstration Projects and Studies
			Disability Insurance Program Demonstration Project Authority 
			
				- Authorizes section 505 of the Social Security Disability Amendments of 1980 (Authority for Demonstration Projects) for a 5-year period.  Directs the Commissioner to conduct demonstrations related to sliding scale benefit offsets using variations in the amounts of the offset as a proportion of earned income.  Permits presumptively eligible applicants to participate in demonstration projects.
				
 - Directs the Commissioner to submit:  (1) interim reports on or before June 9 of each year on the progress of the demonstration projects, and (2) a final report not later than 90 days after the termination of any experiment or demonstration project carried out under this provision.
				
 - Requires GAO to study and recommend as to whether the authority should be permanent.
				
 - Effective upon enactment.
 
			 Reduction in Disability Benefits Based on Earnings
			
				- Directs the Commissioner to conduct demonstration projects to evaluate the effects of a $1 for $2 withholding of SSDI payments for earnings over a level specified by the Commissioner.
				
 - Provides that the demonstration projects should determine:
				 
					- the effects, if any, of induced entry and reduced exit;
					
 - the extent, if any, to which the project being tested is affected by whether it is being conducted in a locality within an area under the administration of the Ticket Program; and,
					
 - the savings to the Trust Funds and other Federal programs as a result of the project.
 
				 
				 - Requires the Commissioner to determine the annual cost, the reasons for the return to work of beneficiaries who participate in the project, and the employment outcomes of beneficiaries who return to work as a result of participation in the project.
				
 - Permits the Commissioner to evaluate the merits of the trial work period and the period of extended eligibility as part of the projects.
				
 - Authorizes the Commissioner to waive compliance with the title II benefit provisions and the Secretary of HHS to waive compliance with the benefit requirements of title XVIII, insofar as is necessary for a thorough evaluation of the alternative methods under consideration.
				
 - Requires the Commissioner to submit a written 
        report to the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee 
        on Finance 90 days prior to the start of a project. Also, requires the 
        Commissioner to submit periodic reports not later than 2 years after the 
        date of enactment, and annually thereafter, on the progress of the 
        project(s) and a final report on all demonstration projects to the 
        Congressional committees not later than 1 year after their completion.
 
			 Funding 
			
				- Provides that expenditures for the 
        demonstration projects be made from the Federal Disability Insurance 
        Trust Fund and the Federal Old-Age and Survivor's Insurance Trust Fund 
        as determined appropriate by the Commissioner of Social Security, and 
        from the Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund and the Federal 
        Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund as determined by the 
        Secretary of Health and Human Services, to the extent provided in 
        advance in appropriation Acts. Effective upon enactment.
 
			 Reports and Studies 
			
				- Requires GAO to study: 
     
				
					- the extent to which existing tax credits and other employer incentives under current law encourage employers to hire and retain individuals with disabilities.  A report is due to the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Finance of the Senate not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of this Act;
					
 - the coordination of SSDI and SSI programs as they relate to individuals who are eligible for benefits under both programs, or whose eligibility changes from one program to the other.  The study should focus on the effectiveness of work incentives and medical coverage for these  individuals.  A report is due to the congressional committees not later than 3 years after the date of enactment; and
					 
						- the SGA levels applicable to disabled 
            beneficiaries; whether the levels serve as a disincentive for those 
            returning to work, the merits of increasing SGA levels, and the 
            rationale for not indexing the levels to inflation. A report is due 
            to the congressional committees not later than 2 years after the 
            date of enactment of this Act. 
      
                      
                       
                        
                       
                   
					  
				 
				 - Directs the Commissioner to report to the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, not later than 90 days after enactment, on all income disregards applicable to beneficiaries under SSDI and SSI programs.   The report should specify the most recent statutory or regulatory change in each disregard; estimate the current value of any disregard if the disregard had been indexed for inflation; and recommend any further changes.
				
 - Effective upon enactment.
 
			 
			Technical Amendments
			Drug Addicts and Alcoholics (DA&A)
			
Treatment of Prisoners
			
				- Extends the incentive payment provisions now in effect for SSI prisoners to OASDI, and would authorize the Commissioner to provide, on a reimbursable basis, this reported information to any agency administering a Federal or federally assisted cash, food, or medical assistance program for purpose of determining program eligibility.
Applicable to individuals whose period of confinement in an institution begins on or after the first day of the fourth month beginning after the month of enactment.
 
				 - Eliminates the OASDI requirement that confinement stem from a crime punishable by imprisonment for more than 1 year.  Benefits would be suspended for any month during which the person was confined because of a crime or finding of not guilty by reason of insanity except that no monthly benefit would be suspended for any month falling within a period of confinement that lasts for less than 30 days.
Applicable to individuals whose period of confinement in an institution begins on or after the first day of the fourth month beginning after the month of enactment.
 
				 - Provides that an institution does not get two incentive payments when the reported prisoner is a concurrent OASDI/SSI beneficiary--the programs would split the cost of the payment.
Effective as if included in enactment of the Personal Responsibility and Work   Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193).
 
				 - Prohibits the payment of monthly benefits to any title II beneficiary who upon completion of a prison term remains confined by court order to a public institution based on a finding that the individual is a sexually dangerous person or a sexual predator.
Effective with respect to benefits for months 
        ending after the date of enactment.  
			 Revocation by Members of the Clergy of Exemption from Social Security Coverage 
			
Cooperative Research or Demonstration Projects Under Title II and Title XVI
			
Authorization for State to Permit Annual Wage Reports 
			
Assessment on Attorneys who Receive their Fees Via the Social Security Administration
			Extension of Authority of State Medicaid Fraud Control Units
			
				- Extends the authority of State Medicaid fraud 
        control units to investigate and prosecute fraud in other Federal health 
        care programs.
  Effective upon enactment. 
			 Schedule for SSI Supplementation Payments
      
				- Effective for months after September 2009, requires a State that has entered into an agreement with the Commissioner for Federal administration of State supplementary payments to remit the payments and fees required of them no later than the business day preceding the SSI payment date.  (With respect to State supplementary payments paid for the month which is the last month of the State's fiscal year, the fifth business day following the SSI payment date.)
				
 - Authorizes the Commissioner to charge a penalty equal to 5 percent of the payment and fees if the remittance is received after the required date.
				
 - Also provides that under extraordinary 
        circumstances affecting the State's ability to make payment, the 
        Commissioner may make the State supplementary payments on a reimbursable 
        basis.
  
      
        
      
      * Denotes that the section has been revised. 
		 | 
		
		 |