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20:20:2.0.1.1.7.1.250.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS A Subpart A—Introduction, General Provision and Definitions   § 408.101 What is this part about? SSA     [68 FR 16418, Apr. 4, 2003, as amended at 69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004] The regulations in this part 408 (Regulation No. 8 of the Social Security Administration) relate to the provisions of title VIII of the Social Security Act as added by Pub. L. 106-169 enacted December 14, 1999. Title VIII (Special Benefits for Certain World War II Veterans) established a program for the payment of benefits to certain World War II veterans. The regulations in this part are divided into the following subparts according to subject content. (a) Subpart A contains this introductory section, a statement of the general purpose underlying the payment of special benefits to World War II veterans, general provisions applicable to the program and its administration, and defines certain terms that we use throughout part 408. (b) Subpart B contains the requirements for qualification and entitlement to monthly title VIII benefits. (c) Subpart C contains the provisions relating to the filing and withdrawal of applications. (d) Subpart D contains the provisions relating to the evidence required for establishing qualification for and entitlement to monthly title VIII benefits. (e) Subpart E contains the provisions about the amount and payment of monthly benefits. (f) Subpart F is reserved for future use. (g) Subpart G contains the provisions on your requirement to report certain events to us. (h) Subpart H contains the provisions on suspension and termination of title VIII entitlement. (i) Subpart I contains the provisions on underpayments and overpayments. (j) Subpart J contains the provisions on determinations and the administrative review process. (k) Subpart K contains the provisions on claimant representation. (l) Subpart L contains the provisions on Federal administration of State recognition payments.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.1.250.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS A Subpart A—Introduction, General Provision and Definitions   § 408.105 Purpose and administration of the program. SSA       The purpose of the title VIII program is to assure a basic income level for certain veterans who are entitled to supplemental security income (SSI) and who want to leave the United States to live abroad. The title VIII program is administered by the Social Security Administration.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.1.250.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS A Subpart A—Introduction, General Provision and Definitions   § 408.110 General definitions and use of terms. SSA     [68 FR 16418, Apr. 4, 2003, as amended at 85 FR 73158, Nov. 16, 2020] (a) Terms relating to the Act and regulations. (1) The Act means the Social Security Act as amended (42 U.S.C. Chap.7). (2) Title means the title of the Act. (3) Section or § means a section of the regulations in part 408 of this chapter unless the context indicates otherwise. (b) Commissioner; Appeals Council; Administrative Law Judge defined —(1) Commissioner means the Commissioner of Social Security. (2) Appeals Council means the Appeals Council of the Office of Analytics, Review, and Oversight in the Social Security Administration or such member or members thereof as may be designated by the Chair of the Appeals Council. (3) Administrative Law Judge means an Administrative Law Judge in the Office of Hearings Operations in the Social Security Administration. (c) Miscellaneous —(1) A calendar month. The period including all of 24 hours of each day of January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, or December. (2) Federal benefit rate (FBR). The amount of the cash benefit payable under title XVI for the month to an eligible individual who has no income. The FBR does not include any State supplementary payment that is paid by the Commissioner pursuant to an agreement with a State under section 1616(a) of the Act or section 212(b) of Public Law 93-66. (3) Qualified individual. An individual who meets all the requirements for qualification for SVB in § 408.202 and does not meet any of the conditions that prevent qualification in § 408.204. (4) Special veterans benefits (SVB). The benefits payable to certain veterans of World War II under title VIII of the Act. (5) State. Unless otherwise indicated, this means: (i) A State of the United States (ii) The District of Columbia; or (iii) The Northern Mariana Islands. (6) Supplemental Security Income (SSI). SSI is the national program for providing a minimum level of income to aged, blind, and disabled individuals under title XVI of the Act. (7) United States. When used in the geographi…
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.1.250.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS A Subpart A—Introduction, General Provision and Definitions   § 408.120 Periods of limitations ending on Federal nonworkdays. SSA       Title VIII of the Act and the regulations in this part require you to take certain actions within specified time periods or you may lose your right to a portion or all of your benefits. If any such period ends on a Saturday, Sunday, Federal legal holiday, or any other day all or part of which is declared to be a nonworkday for Federal employees by statute or Executive Order, you will have until the next Federal workday to take the prescribed action.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1000 What is this subpart about? SSA       (a) Explanation of the administrative review process. This subpart explains the procedures we follow in determining your appeal rights under title VIII of the Social Security Act. The regulations describe the process of administrative review and explain your right to judicial review after you have taken all the necessary administrative steps. The administrative review process consists of several steps, which usually must be requested within certain time periods and in the following order: (1) Initial determination. This is a determination we make about whether you qualify for and can become entitled to SVB or whether your SVB entitlement can continue. It can also be about any other matter, as discussed in § 408.1003, that gives you a right to further review. (2) Reconsideration. If you are dissatisfied with an initial determination, you may ask us to reconsider it. (3) Hearing before an administrative law judge. If you are dissatisfied with the reconsideration determination, you may request a hearing before an administrative law judge. (4) Appeals Council review. If you are dissatisfied with the decision of the administrative law judge, you may request that the Appeals Council review the decision. (5) Federal court review. When you have completed the steps of the administrative review process listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this section, we will have made our final decision. If you are dissatisfied with our final decision, you may request judicial review by filing an action in a Federal district court. (6) Expedited appeals process. At some time after your initial determination has been reviewed, if you have no dispute with our findings of fact and our application and interpretation of the controlling laws, but you believe that a part of the law is unconstitutional, you may use the expedited appeals process. This process permits you to go directly to a Federal district court so that the constitutional issue may be resolved. (b) Nature of the administrative review process. In m…
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1001 Definitions. SSA     [69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004, as amended at 73 FR 76944, Dec. 18, 2008] As used in this subpart: Date you receive notice means 5 days after the date on the notice, unless you show us that you did not receive it within the 5-day period. Decision means the decision made by an administrative law judge or the Appeals Council. Determination means the initial determination or the reconsidered determination. Mass change means a State-initiated change in the level(s) of federally administered State recognition payments applicable to all recipients of such payments due, for example, to State legislative or executive action. Preponderance of the evidence means such relevant evidence that as a whole shows that the existence of the fact to be proven is more likely than not. Remand means to return a case for further review. SVB , for purposes of this subpart, includes qualification for SVB, entitlement to SVB and payments of SVB. Vacate means to set aside a previous action. Waive means to give up a right knowingly and voluntarily. We, us, or our refers to the Social Security Administration. You or your refers to any person claiming or receiving SVB.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1002 What is an initial determination? SSA     [69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004, as amended at 73 FR 76944, Dec. 18, 2008] Initial determinations are the determinations we make that are subject to administrative and judicial review. The initial determination will state the important facts and give the reasons for our conclusions. We will base our initial determination on the preponderance of the evidence.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1003 Which administrative actions are initial determinations? SSA     [69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004; 69 FR 45586, July 30, 2004] Initial determinations regarding SVB include, but are not limited to, determinations about— (a) Whether you qualify for SVB; (b) Whether you are entitled to receive SVB payments on the basis of your residence outside the United States; (c) The amount of your SVB payments; (d) Suspension or reduction of your SVB payments; (e) Termination of your SVB entitlement; (f) Whether an overpayment of benefits must be repaid to us; (g) Whether payments will be made, on your behalf, to a representative payee, unless you are legally incompetent; (h) Who will act as your payee if we determine that representative payment will be made; (i) A claim for benefits under § 408.351 based on alleged misinformation; and (j) Our calculation of the amount of change in your federally administered State recognition payment amount ( i.e., a reduction, suspension, or termination) which results from a mass change as defined in § 408.1001.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.5 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1004 Which administrative actions are not initial determinations? SSA       Administrative actions that are not initial determinations may be reviewed by us, but they are not subject to the administrative review process provided by this subpart and they are not subject to judicial review. These actions include, but are not limited to, an action about— (a) Denial of a request to be made your representative payee; (b) Denial of your request to use the expedited appeals process; (c) Denial of your request to reopen a determination or a decision; (d) Disqualifying or suspending a person from acting as your representative in a proceeding before us; (e) Denial of your request to extend the time period for requesting review of a determination or a decision; (f) Denial of your request to readjudicate your claim and apply an Acquiescence Ruling; (g) Declining under § 408.351(f) to make a determination on a claim for benefits based on alleged misinformation because one or more of the conditions specified in § 408.351(f) are not met; (h) Findings on whether we can collect an overpayment by using the Federal income tax refund offset procedure. (See § 408.943). (i) The determination to reduce, suspend, or terminate your federally administered State recognition payments due to a State-initiated mass change, as defined in § 408.1001, in the levels of such payments, except as provided in § 408.1003(h).
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.6 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1005 Will we mail you a notice of the initial determination? SSA       (a) We will mail a written notice of the initial determination to you at your last known address. Generally, we will not send a notice if your benefits are stopped because of your death, or if the initial determination is a redetermination that your eligibility for benefits and the amount of your benefits have not changed. (b) The notice that we send will tell you— (1) What our initial determination is; (2) The reasons for our determination; and (3) What rights you have to a reconsideration of the determination. (c) If our initial determination is that we must suspend, reduce your SVB payments or terminate your SVB entitlement, the notice will also tell you that you have a right to a reconsideration before the determination takes effect (see § 408.820).
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.275.7 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1006 What is the effect of an initial determination? SSA       An initial determination is binding unless you request a reconsideration within the stated time period, or we revise the initial determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.10 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1011 How do we determine whether you had good cause for missing the deadline to request review? SSA       (a) In determining whether you have shown that you have good cause for missing a deadline to request review we consider— (1) What circumstances kept you from making the request on time; (2) Whether our action misled you; (3) Whether you did not understand the requirements of the Act resulting from amendments to the Act, other legislation, or court decisions; and (4) Whether you had any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) which prevented you from filing a timely request or from understanding or knowing about the need to file a timely request for review. (b) Examples of circumstances where good cause may exist include, but are not limited to, the following situations: (1) You were seriously ill and were prevented from contacting us in person, in writing, or through a friend, relative, or other person. (2) There was a death or serious illness in your immediate family. (3) Important records were destroyed or damaged by fire or other accidental cause. (4) You were trying very hard to find necessary information to support your claim but did not find the information within the stated time periods. (5) You asked us for additional information explaining our action within the time limit, and within 60 days of receiving the explanation you requested reconsideration or a hearing, or within 30 days of receiving the explanation you requested Appeals Council review or filed a civil suit. (6) We gave you incorrect or incomplete information about when and how to request administrative review or to file a civil suit. (7) You did not receive notice of the initial determination or decision. (8) You sent the request to another Government agency in good faith within the time limit and the request did not reach us until after the time period had expired. (9) Unusual or unavoidable circumstances exist, including the circumstances described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section, which show that you could not have known of the need to file timely, …
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.11 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1013 What are the methods for reconsideration? SSA       If you request reconsideration, we will give you a chance to present your case. How you can present your case depends upon the issue involved and whether you are asking us to reconsider an initial determination on an application or an initial determination on an SVB suspension, reduction or termination action. The methods of reconsideration include the following: (a) Case review. We will give you an opportunity to review the evidence in our files and then to present oral and written evidence to us. We will then make a decision based on all of this evidence. The official who reviews the case will make the reconsidered determination. (b) Informal conference. In addition to following the procedures of a case review, an informal conference allows you an opportunity to present witnesses. A summary record of this proceeding will become part of the case record. The official who conducts the informal conference will make the reconsidered determination. (c) Formal conference. In addition to following the procedures of an informal conference, a formal conference allows you an opportunity to request us to subpoena adverse witnesses and relevant documents and to cross-examine adverse witnesses. A summary record of this proceeding will become a part of the case record. The official who conducts the formal conference will make the reconsidered determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.12 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1014 What procedures apply if you request reconsideration of an initial determination on your application for SVB? SSA       When you appeal an initial determination on your application for benefits, we will offer you a case review, and will make our determination on the basis of that review.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.13 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1015 What procedures apply if you request reconsideration of an initial determination that results in suspension, reduction, or termination of your SVB? SSA       If you have been entitled to SVB and we notify you that we are going to suspend, reduce or terminate your benefit payments, you can appeal our determination within 60 days of the date you receive our notice. The 60-day period may be extended if you have good cause for an extension of time under the conditions stated in § 408.1011(b). If you appeal, you have the choice of a case review, informal conference or formal conference.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.14 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1016 What happens if you request a conference? SSA       (a) As soon as we receive a request for a formal or informal conference, we will set the time, date and place for the conference. Formal and informal conferences are held only in the United States. (b) We will send you a written notice about the conference (either by mailing it to your last known address or by personally serving you with it) at least 10 days before the conference. However, we may hold the conference sooner if we all agree. We will not send written notice of the time, date, and place of the conference if you waive your right to receive it. (c) We will schedule the conference within 15 days after you request it, but, at our discretion or at your request, we will delay the conference if we think the delay will ensure that the conference is conducted efficiently and properly. (d) We will hold the conference at one of our offices in the United States, by telephone or in person, whichever you prefer. However, if you are outside the United States, we will hold the conference by telephone only if you request that we do so and time and language differences permit. We will hold the conference in person elsewhere in the United States if you show circumstances that make this arrangement reasonably necessary.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.15 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1020 How do we make our reconsidered determination? SSA     [69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004, as amended at 73 FR 76944, Dec. 18, 2008] After you request a reconsideration, we will review the evidence considered in making the initial determination and any other evidence we receive. We will make our determination based on the preponderance of the evidence in the record. The person who makes the reconsidered determination will have had no prior involvement with the initial determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.16 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1021 How does the reconsidered determination affect you? SSA       The reconsidered determination is binding unless— (a) You request a hearing before an administrative law judge within the stated time period and a decision is made; (b) The expedited appeals process is used; or (c) The reconsidered determination is revised.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.17 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1022 How will we notify you of our reconsidered determination? SSA       We will mail a written notice of the reconsidered determination to you at your last known address. We will state the specific reasons for the determination and tell you about your right to a hearing. If it is appropriate, we will also tell you how to use the expedited appeals process.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.8 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1007 What is reconsideration? SSA       Reconsideration is the first step in the administrative review process that we provide if you are dissatisfied with the initial determination. If you are dissatisfied with our reconsideration determination, you may request a hearing before an administrative law judge.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.276.9 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1009 How do you request reconsideration? SSA       (a) When you must file your request. We will reconsider an initial determination if you file a written request within 60 days after the date you receive notice of the initial determination (or within the extended time period if we extend the time as provided in paragraph (c) of this section). (b) Where to file your request. You can file your request for reconsideration at: (1) Any of our offices; (2) The Veterans Affairs Regional Office in the Philippines; (3) An office of the Railroad Retirement Board if you have 10 or more years of service in the railroad industry; or (4) A competent authority or agency of a country with which the United States has a totalization agreement (see § 404.1927 of this chapter). (c) When we will extend the time period to request a reconsideration. If you want a reconsideration of the initial determination but do not request one within 60 days after the date you receive notice of the initial determination, you may ask us for more time to request a reconsideration. You must make your request in writing and explain why it was not filed within the stated time period. If you show us that you had good cause for missing the deadline, we will extend the time period. To determine whether good cause exists, we use the standards explained in § 408.1011.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.277.18 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1030 When can you use the expedited appeals process? SSA       (a) General rules. Under the expedited appeals process (EAP), you may go directly to a Federal District Court without first completing the administrative review process. For purposes of this part, we use the same EAP rules we use in the title XVI program (see §§ 416.1423-416.1428 of this chapter) except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. In § 416.1425, the words “one of our offices” in paragraph (b) are deemed to read “any of the offices listed in § 408.1009(b)” and the reference in the last sentence of paragraph (c) to “§ 416.1411” is deemed to read “§ 408.1011.”
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.278.19 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1040 When can you request a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ)? SSA       (a) General rules. For purposes of this part, we use the same rules on hearings before an administrative law judge (ALJ) that we use in the title XVI program ( see §§ 416.1429-1416.1440 of this chapter), except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. In § 416.1433, the words “one of our offices” in paragraph (b) are deemed to read “any of the offices listed in § 408.1009(b)” and the reference in the last sentence of § 416.1433(c) to “§ 416.1411” is deemed to read “§ 408.1011.”
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.279.20 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1045 What procedures apply if you request an ALJ hearing? SSA       (a) General rules. For purposes of this part, we use the same rules on ALJ hearing procedures that we use in the title XVI program (see §§ 416.1444-416.1461 of this chapter), except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. (1) In § 416.1446(b)(1), the last sentence does not apply under this part. (2) In § 416.1452(a)(1)(i), the words “supplemental security income” are deemed to read “SVB.” (3) In § 416.1457, the provisions of paragraph (c)(4) do not apply under this part.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.280.21 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1050 When can you request Appeals Council review of an ALJ hearing decision or dismissal of a hearing request? SSA       (a) General rules. For purposes of this part, we use the same rules on Appeals Council review that we use in the title XVI program (see §§ 416.1467-416.1482 of this chapter), except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. (1) In § 416.1468(b), the words “one of our offices” in the third sentence are deemed to read “any of the offices listed in § 408.1009(b).” (2) In § 416.1469(d), the last sentence does not apply under this part. (3) In § 416.1471, paragraph (b) does not apply under this part. (4) In § 416.1482, the reference to “§ 416.1411” in the last sentence is deemed to read “§ 408.1011.”
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.281.22 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1060 What happens if a Federal Court remands your case to the Commissioner? SSA       For purposes of this part, we use the same rules on court remand cases that we use in the title XVI program (see §§ 416.1483-416.1485 of this chapter).
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.10.282.23 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS J Subpart J—Determinations and the Administrative Review Process   § 408.1070 When will we reopen a final determination? SSA     [69 FR 25955, May 10, 2004, as amended at 75 FR 44138, July 28, 2010] (a) General rules. For purposes of this part, we use the same rules on reopening and revising determinations and decisions that we use in the title XVI program (see §§ 416.1487-416.1494 of this chapter), except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. (1) In addition to the rule stated in § 416.1488, a determination, revised determination, or revised decision may be reopened at any time if it was fully or partially unfavorable to you, but only to correct— (i) A clerical error; or (ii) An error that appears on the face of the evidence that we considered when we made the determination or decision. (2) In § 416.1492(b), the parenthetical clause is deemed to read “(see § 408.820),” and paragraph (d) does not apply to this part. (3) In § 416.1494, the words “one of our offices” in the first sentence are deemed to read “any of the offices listed in § 408.1009(b).”
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.11.283.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS K Subpart K—Representation of Parties   § 408.1101 Can you appoint someone to represent you? SSA       (a) General rules. You may appoint someone to represent you in any of your dealings with us. For purposes of this part, the rules on representation of parties in §§ 416.1500-416.1505, 416.1507-416.1515 and 416.1540-416.1599 of this chapter apply except as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Exceptions. For purposes of this part: (1) In § 416.1500, paragraph (c) does not apply. (2) The last sentence of § 416.1503 is deemed to read: “You refers to any person claiming or receiving SVB.” (3) In § 416.1507(c), the words “one of our offices” are deemed to read “any of the offices listed in § 408.1009(b).” (4) In § 416.1510(b), the reference to “title XVI of the Act” is deemed to read “title VIII of the Act,” and the reference to “§ 416.315” is deemed to read “§ 408.315.” (5) In § 416.1540, the parenthetical clause in paragraph (b), the second sentences in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2), and paragraph (c)(2) do not apply, and the references to “§ 416.1411(b)” in paragraphs (c)(4) and (c)(7)(i) are deemed to read “§ 408.1011(b).” (6) In § 416.1545, paragraph (c) does not apply. (7) In § 416.1599, paragraph (d) is deemed to read: “The Appeals Council will not grant the request unless it is reasonably satisfied that the person will in the future act according to the provisions of our regulations.”
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1201 What are State recognition payments? SSA       (a) State recognition payments; defined. State recognition payments are any payments made by a State or one of its political subdivisions to an individual who is entitled to SVB, if the payments are made: (1) As a supplement to monthly SVB payments; and (2) Regularly, on a periodic recurring, or routine basis of at least once a quarter; and (3) In cash, which may be actual currency, or any negotiable instrument convertible into cash upon demand. (b) State; defined. For purposes of this subpart, State means a State of the United States or the District of Columbia.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1205 How can a State have SSA administer its State recognition payment program? SSA       A State (or political subdivision) may enter into a written agreement with SSA, under which SSA will make recognition payments on behalf of the State (or political subdivision). The regulations in effect for the SVB program also apply in the Federal administration of State recognition payments except as necessary for the effective and efficient administration of both the SVB program and the State's recognition payment program.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1210 What are the essential elements of an administration agreement? SSA       (a) Payments. The agreement must provide that recognition payments can only be made to individuals who are receiving SVB payments. (b) Administrative costs —(1) General rule. SSA will assess each State that elects Federal administration of its recognition payments an administration fee for administering those payments. (2) Determining the administration fee. The administration fee is assessed and paid monthly and is derived by multiplying the number of State recognition payments we make on behalf of a State for any month in a fiscal year by the applicable dollar rate for the fiscal year. The number of recognition payments we make in a month is the total number of checks we issue, and direct deposits we make, to recipients in that month, that are composed in whole or in part of State recognition funds. The dollar amounts are as follows: (i) For fiscal year 2001, $8.10; (ii) For fiscal year 2002, $8.50; and (iii) For fiscal year 2003 and each succeeding fiscal year— (A) The applicable rate in the preceding fiscal year, increased by the percentage, if any, by which the Consumer Price Index for the month of June of the calendar year of the increase exceeds the Consumer Price Index for the month of June of the calendar year preceding the calendar year of the increase, and rounded to the nearest whole cent; or (B) A different rate if the Commissioner determines the different rate is appropriate for the State considering the complexity of administering the State's recognition payment program. (c) Agreement period. The agreement period for a State that has elected Federal administration of its recognition payments extends for one year from the date the agreement was signed unless otherwise designated in the agreement. The agreement will be automatically renewed for a period of one year unless either the State or SSA gives written notice not to renew, at least 90 days before the beginning of the new period. For a State to elect Federal administration of its recognition payment program, it must notify SSA …
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1215 How do you establish eligibility for Federally administered State recognition payments? SSA       (a) Applications. When you file an application for SVB under subpart C of this part, you are deemed to have filed an application for any Federally administered State recognition payments for which you may be eligible unless you waive your right to such payments as provided for in § 408.1230. However, you will be required to give us a supplemental statement if additional information is necessary to establish your eligibility or to determine the correct amount of your State recognition payment. (b) Evidence requirements. The evidence requirements and developmental procedures of this part also apply with respect to Federally administered State recognition payments. (c) Determination. Where not inconsistent with the provisions of this subpart, we determine your eligibility for and the amount of your State recognition payment using the rules in subparts A through K of this part.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.5 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1220 How do we pay Federally administered State recognition payments? SSA       (a) Payment procedures. We make Federally administered State recognition payments on a monthly basis and we include them in the same check as your SVB payment. The State recognition payment is for the same month as your SVB payment. (b) Maximum amount. Except as specified in paragraph (c) of this section, there is no restriction on the amount of a State recognition payment that SSA will administer on behalf of a State. (c) Minimum amount. SSA will not administer State recognition payments in amounts less than $1 per month. Hence, recognition payment amounts of less than $1 will be raised to a dollar.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.6 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1225 What happens if you receive an overpayment? SSA       If we determine that you received an overpayment, we will adjust future Federally administered State recognition payments you are entitled to. Our rules and requirements (see §§ 408.910 through 408.941) that apply to recovery (or waiver) of SVB overpayments also apply to the recovery (or waiver) of Federally administered State recognition overpayments. If your entitlement to State recognition payments ends before you have repaid the overpayment, we will annotate your record (specifying the amount of the overpayment) to permit us to recoup the overpaid amount if you become reentitled to recognition payments from the same State.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.7 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1226 What happens if you are underpaid? SSA       If we determine that you are due an underpayment of State recognition payments, we will pay the amount you were underpaid directly to you, or to your representative.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.8 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1230 Can you waive State recognition payments? SSA       (a) Waiver request in writing. You may waive your right to receive State recognition payments if you make a written request. If you make your request before you become entitled to SVB, you will not be entitled to State recognition payments. If you make your request after you become entitled to SVB, your request will be effective with the month we receive your request, or with an earlier month if you refund to us the amount of any recognition payment(s) we made to you for the earlier period. (b) Cancelling your waiver. You may cancel your waiver of State recognition payments at any time by making a written request with us. The cancellation will be effective the month in which it is filed. The date your request is received in a Social Security office or the postmarked date, if the written request was mailed, will be the filing date, whichever is earlier.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.12.283.9 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS L Subpart L—Federal Administration of State Recognition Payments   § 408.1235 How does the State transfer funds to SSA to administer its recognition payment program? SSA       (a) Payment transfer and adjustment. (1) Any State that has entered into an agreement with SSA which provides for Federal administration of such State's recognition payments will transfer to SSA: (i) An amount of funds equal to SSA's estimate of State recognition payments for any month which will be made by SSA on behalf of such State; and (ii) An amount of funds equal to SSA's estimate of administration fees for any such month determined in the manner described in § 408.1210(b). (3) In order for SSA to make State recognition payments on behalf of a State for any month as provided by the agreement, the estimated amount of State funds referred to in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section together with the estimated amount of administration fees referred to in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section, for that month, must be on deposit with SSA on the State recognition payment transfer date, which is: (i) the business day preceding the date that the Commissioner pays such monthly recognition payments; or (ii) with respect to such monthly payments paid for the month that is the last month of the State's fiscal year, the fifth business day following such date. (b) Accounting of State funds. (1) As soon as feasible after the end of each calendar month, SSA will provide the State with a statement showing, cumulatively, the total amounts paid by SSA on behalf of the State during the current Federal fiscal year; the fees charged by SSA to administer such recognition payments; the State's total liability; and the end-of-month balance of the State's cash on deposit with SSA. (2) SSA will provide the State with an accounting of State funds received as State recognition payments and administration fees within three calendar months following the termination of an agreement under § 408.1210(d). (3) Adjustments will be made because of State funds due and payable or amounts of State funds recovered for calendar months for which the agreement was in effect. Interest will be incurred by SSA and the States with respect to the …
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.201 What is this subpart about? SSA       You are qualified for SVB if you meet the requirements listed in § 408.202 and if none of the conditions listed in § 408.204 exist. However, you cannot be entitled to receive benefits for any month before the first month in which you reside outside the United States on the first day of the month and meet all the qualification requirements. You must give us any information we request and evidence to prove that you meet these requirements. You continue to be qualified for SVB unless we determine that you no longer meet the requirements for qualification in § 408.202 or we determine that you are not qualified because one of the conditions listed in § 404.204 of this chapter exists. You continue to be entitled to receive benefits unless we determine you are no longer residing outside the United States.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.202 How do you qualify for SVB? SSA       You qualify for SVB if you meet all of the following requirements. (a) Age. You were age 65 or older on December 14, 1999 (the date on which Pub. L. 106-169 was enacted into law). (b) World War II veteran. You are a World War II veteran as explained in § 408.216. (c) SSI eligible. You were eligible for SSI, as explained in § 408.218, for both December 1999 (the month in which Pub. L. 106-169 was enacted into law) and for the month in which you file your application for SVB. (d) Application. You file an application for SVB as explained in subpart C of this part. (e) Other benefit income. You do not have other benefit income, as explained in § 408.220, which is equal to, or more than, 75 percent of the current FBR.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.204 What conditions will prevent you from qualifying for SVB or being entitled to receive SVB payments? SSA       (a) General rule. Even if you meet all the qualification requirements in § 408.202, you will not be qualified for SVB for or entitled to receive SVB payments for any of the following months. (1) Removal from the United States. Any month that begins after the month in which we are advised by the Attorney General that you have been removed (including deported) from the United States pursuant to section 237(a) or 212(a)(6)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and before the month in which you are subsequently lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence. (2) Fleeing felon. Any month during any part of which you are fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after conviction, under the laws of the United States or the jurisdiction in the United States from which you fled, for a crime or an attempt to commit a crime that is a felony under the laws of the place from which you fled, or in the case of the State of New Jersey, is a high misdemeanor. (3) Parole violation. Any month during any part of which you violate a condition of probation or parole imposed under Federal or State law. (4) Residence in certain countries. Any month during which you are not a citizen or national of the United States and reside in a country to which payments to residents of that country are withheld by the Treasury Department under section 3329 of title 31, United States Code. (b) Condition occurs before we determine that you are qualified. If one of the conditions in paragraph (a) of this section occurs before we determine that you are qualified, we will deny your claim for SVB. (c) Condition occurs after we determine that you are qualified. If one of the conditions in paragraph (a) of this section occurs after we determine that you are qualified for SVB, you cannot receive SVB payments for any month in which the condition exists.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.206 What happens when you apply for SVB? SSA       (a) General rule. When you apply for SVB, we will ask you for documents and other information that we need to determine if you meet all the requirements for qualification. You must give us complete information ( see subpart D of this part for our rules on evidence). If you do not meet all of the requirements for qualification listed in § 408.202, or if one of the conditions listed in § 408.204 exists, we will deny your claim. (b) If you are a qualified individual residing in the United States. If you meet all the requirements for qualification listed in § 408.202 and if none of the conditions listed in § 408.204 exist, we will send you a letter telling you the following: (1) You are qualified for SVB; (2) In order to become entitled to SVB, you will have to begin residing outside the United States by the end of the fourth calendar month after the month in which your notice of qualification is dated. For example, if our letter is dated May 15, you must establish residence outside the United States before October 1 of that year; and (3) What documents and information you must give us to establish that you are residing outside the United States.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.5 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.208 What happens if you establish residence outside the United States within 4 calendar months? SSA       If you begin residing outside the United States within 4 calendar months after the month in which your SVB qualification notice is dated, we will send you a letter telling you that you are entitled to SVB and the first month for which SVB payments can be made to you. The letter will also tell you the amount of your monthly benefit payments, whether your payments are reduced because of your other benefit income, and what rights you have to a reconsideration of our determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.6 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.210 What happens if you do not establish residence outside the United States within 4 calendar months? SSA       If you do not establish residence outside the United States within 4 calendar months after the month in which your SVB qualification notice is dated, we will deny your SVB claim. We will send you a notice explaining what rights you have to a reconsideration of our determination. You will have to file a new application and meet all the requirements for qualification and entitlement based on the new application to become entitled to SVB.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.7 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.212 What happens if you are a qualified individual already residing outside the United States? SSA       If you meet all the requirements for qualification listed in § 408.202 and if none of the conditions listed in § 408.204 exist, we will ask you for documents and information to establish your residence outside the United States. If you establish that you are residing outside the United States, we will send you a letter telling you that you are entitled to SVB and the first month for which SVB payments can be made to you. The letter will also tell you the amount of your monthly benefit payments, whether your payments are reduced because of your other benefit income, and what rights you have to a reconsideration of our determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.250.8 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.214 Are you age 65? SSA       You become age 65 on the first moment of the day before the anniversary of your birth corresponding to age 65. Thus, you must have been born on or before December 15, 1934 to be at least age 65 on December 14, 1999 and to qualify for SVB.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.251.9 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.216 Are you a World War II veteran? SSA       (a) Service requirements. For SVB purposes, you are a World War II veteran if you: (1) Served in the active military, naval or air service of the United States during World War II at any time during the period beginning on September 16, 1940 and ending on July 24, 1947; or (2) Served in the organized military forces of the Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, while the forces were in the service of the U.S. Armed Forces pursuant to the military order of the President dated July 26, 1941, including among the military forces organized guerrilla forces under commanders appointed, designated, or subsequently recognized by the Commander in Chief, Southwest Pacific Area, or other competent authority in the U.S. Army. This service must have been rendered at any time during the period beginning July 26, 1941 and ending on December 30, 1946. (b) Discharge requirements. You must have been discharged or released from this service under conditions other than dishonorable after service of 90 days or more or, if your service was less than 90 days, because of a disability or injury incurred or aggravated in the line of active duty.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.252.10 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.218 Do you meet the SSI eligibility requirements? SSA       For SVB purposes, you are eligible for SSI for a given month if all of the following are met: (a) You have been determined to be eligible for SSI (except as noted in paragraph (c) of this section); you do not have to actually receive a payment for that month; (b) Your SSI eligibility has not been terminated for that month; and (c) Your SSI benefits are not subject to a penalty under § 416.1340 of this chapter. This includes months in which a penalty has been imposed, as well as months in which a penalty cannot be imposed because you are in SSI nonpay status for some other reason.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.253.11 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.220 Do you have other benefit income? SSA       (a) Description of other benefit income. Other benefit income is any regular periodic payment (such as an annuity, pension, retirement or disability benefit) that you receive. For other benefit income to affect your SVB eligibility, you must have been receiving the other benefit income in any part of the 12-month period before the month in which you filed your application for SVB. Payments received after you become entitled to SVB can be included as other benefit income only if you received a similar payment from the same or a related source during any part of the 12-month period before the month in which you filed your application for SVB. (b) When other benefit payments are considered to be similar payments from the same or a related source. Payments are similar payments from the same or a related source if they are received from sources substantially related to the sources of income received before you became entitled to SVB. For example, if you received U.S. Social Security spouse's benefits in the 12-month period before you filed your application for SVB and these were changed to widower's benefits after you became entitled to SVB, we would consider this to be from the same or a related source. (c) Examples of other benefit income. Other benefit income can come from a source inside or outside the United States. It includes, but is not limited to, any of the following: (1) Veterans' compensation or pension, (2) Workers' compensation, (3) U.S. or foreign Social Security benefits (not including SSI payments from the U.S.), (4) Railroad retirement annuity or pension, (5) Retirement or disability pension, (6) Individual Retirement Account (IRA) payments, and (7) Unemployment insurance benefit. (d) If you receive a lump-sum payment. Regular periodic payments can also include lump-sum payments made at your request or as an administrative convenience or practice in place of more frequent payments. See § 408.224(e) for an explanation of how we determine the monthly amount of your benefit income if y…
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.253.12 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.222 How does your other benefit income affect your SVB? SSA       (a) Income began before you qualify for SVB. If, at the time you file your application for SVB, your other benefit income is equal to, or more than, the maximum SVB payment possible (see § 408.505), we will deny your SVB claim. If it is less, we will reduce any monthly SVB payments you become entitled to by the amount of your other benefit income (see § 408.510 for a description of how we make the reduction). (b) Income begins after you qualify for SVB. If you have been determined to be qualified for SVB, we will reduce any monthly SVB payments you become entitled to by the amount of your other benefit income (see § 408.510 for a description of how we make the reduction).
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.253.13 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.224 How do we determine the monthly amount of your other benefit income? SSA       If your other benefit income is paid in other than monthly amounts, we will compute the equivalent monthly amount as follows: (a) Weekly payments. We multiply the amount of the weekly payment by 52 and divide by 12 to determine the equivalent monthly payment amount. (b) Bi-weekly payments. We multiply the amount of the bi-weekly payment by 26 and divide by 12 to determine the equivalent monthly payment amount. (c) Quarterly payments. We multiply the amount of the quarterly payment by 4 and divide by 12 to determine the equivalent monthly payment amount. (d) Semi-annual payments. We multiply the amount of the semi-annual payment by 2 and divide by 12 to determine the equivalent monthly payment amount. (e) Lump sum payment. If the paying agency will not prorate the lump sum to determine the monthly amount, we will compute the amount as follows: (1) If the payment is for a specific period. We divide the lump sum by the number of months in the period for which the payment was made to determine the equivalent monthly payment amount. (2) If the payment is for a lifetime or for an unspecified period. We divide the lump sum amount by your life expectancy in months at the time the lump sum is paid.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.253.14 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.226 What happens if you begin receiving other benefit income after you become entitled to SVB? SSA       If you begin receiving other benefit income after you become entitled to SVB, we will reduce your SVB by the amount of those payments only if you were receiving similar benefits from the same or a related source during the 12-month period before you filed for SVB. (See § 408.220(b) for a description of when we consider other benefit income to be from the same or a related source.)
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.254.15 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.228 When do we consider you to be residing outside the United States? SSA       (a) Effect of residency on SVB eligibility. You can be paid SVB only for those months in which you are residing outside the United States but you can not be paid for a month that is earlier than the month in which you filed your application for SVB. You are residing outside the United States in a month only if you reside outside the United States on the first day of that month. For SVB purposes, you can be a resident of only one country at a time. You cannot, for example, maintain a residence in the United States and a residence outside the United States at the same time. (b) Definition of residing outside the United States. We consider you to be residing outside the United States if you: (1) Have established an actual dwelling place outside the United States; and (2) Intend to continue to live outside the United States. (c) When we will assume you intend to continue living outside the United States. If you tell us, or the evidence shows, that you intend to reside outside the United States for at least 6 months, we will assume you meet the intent requirement in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Otherwise we will assume, absent convincing evidence to the contrary, that your stay is temporary and that you are not residing outside the United States.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.254.16 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.230 When must you begin residing outside the United States? SSA       (a) 4-month rule. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, you must begin residing outside the United States by the end of the fourth calendar month after the month in which the notice explaining that you are qualified for SVB is dated, as explained in § 408.206. If you do not establish residence outside the United States within this 4-month period, we will deny your claim for SVB. You will have to file a new application and meet all the requirements for qualification and entitlement based on the new application to become entitled to SVB. (b) When we will extend the 4-month period. We will extend the 4-month period for establishing residence outside the United States if you are in the United States and are appealing either: (1) A determination that we made on your SVB claim, or (2) A determination that we made on a title II and/or a title XVI claim but only if the determination affects your SVB qualification. (c) How we extend the 4-month period. If the requirements in paragraph (b) of this section are met, the 4-month period begins with the month after the month in which your notice of our decision on your appeal is dated or the month in which your appeal rights have expired.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.254.17 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.232 When do you lose your foreign resident status? SSA       (a) General rule. We consider you to have lost or abandoned your residence outside the United States if you: (1) Enter the United States and stay for more than 1 full calendar month (see § 408.234 for exceptions to this rule); (2) Tell us that you no longer consider yourself to be residing outside the United States; or (3) Become eligible (as defined by title XVI) for SSI benefits. (b) Resumption of SVB following a period of U.S. residence. Once you lose or abandon your residence outside the United States, you cannot receive SVB again until you meet all the requirements for SVB qualification and reestablish your residence outside the United States.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.2.254.18 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS B Subpart B—SVB Qualification and Entitlement   § 408.234 Can you continue to receive SVB payments if you stay in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month? SSA       (a) When we will consider your foreign residence to continue. We will continue to consider you to be a foreign resident and will continue to pay you SVB payments even if you have been in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month if you— (1) Made a good faith effort to return to your home abroad within that 1-month period but were prevented from doing so by circumstances beyond your control (e.g., sickness, a death in the family, a transportation strike, etc.); or (2) Are exercising your option to be personally present in the United States to present testimony and other evidence in the appeal of an SSA decision on a claim filed under any SSA-administered program. This extension applies only as long as you are participating in activities where you are providing testimony and other evidence in connection with a determination or decision at a specific level of the appeals process (e.g., a hearing before an administrative law judge). (b) When you must return to your home abroad. When the circumstance/event that was the basis for the continuation of your SVB payments ceases to exist, you must return to your home abroad within 1 full calendar month. If you do not return to your home abroad within this 1-calendar-month period, we will consider you to have lost or abandoned your foreign resident status for SVB purposes and we will stop your SVB payments with the first day of the month following the first full calendar month you remain in the United States.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.301 What is this subpart about? SSA       This subpart contains our rules about filing applications for SVB. It explains what an application is, who may sign it, where and when it must be signed and filed, the period of time it is in effect, and how it may be withdrawn. This subpart also explains when a written statement or an oral inquiry may be considered to establish your application filing date.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.305 Why do you need to file an application to receive benefits? SSA       In addition to meeting other requirements, you must file an application to become entitled to SVB. If you believe you may be entitled to SVB, you should file an application. Filing an application will— (a) Permit us to make a formal decision on whether you qualify for SVB; (b) Assure that you receive SVB for any months you are entitled to receive payments; and (c) Give you the right to appeal if you are dissatisfied with our determination.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.310 What makes an application a claim for SVB? SSA       To be considered a claim for SVB, an application must generally meet all of the following conditions: (a) It must be on the prescribed SVB application form (SSA-2000-F6, Application for Special Benefits for World War II Veterans). (b) It must be completed and filed with SSA as described in § 408.325. (c) It must be signed by you or by someone who may sign an application for you as described in § 408.315. (d) You must be alive at the time it is filed.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.315 Who may sign your application? SSA       (a) When you must sign. If you are mentally competent, and physically able to do so, you must sign your own application. (b) When someone else may sign for you. (1) If you are mentally incompetent, or physically unable to sign, your application may be signed by a court-appointed representative or a person who is responsible for your care, including a relative. If you are in the care of an institution, the manager or principal officer of the institution may sign your application. (2) If it is necessary to protect you from losing benefits and there is good cause why you could not sign the application, we may accept an application signed by someone other than you or a person described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.5 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.320 What evidence shows that a person has authority to sign an application for you? SSA       (a) A person who signs an application for you will be required to give us evidence of his or her authority to sign the application for you under the following rules: (1) If the person who signs is a court-appointed representative, he or she must give us a certificate issued by the court showing authority to act for you. (2) If the person who signs is not a court-appointed representative, he or she must give us a statement describing his or her relationship to you. The statement must also describe the extent to which the person is responsible for your care. (3) If the person who signs is the manager or principal officer of an institution which is responsible for your care, he or she must give us a statement indicating the person's position of responsibility at the institution. (b) We may, at any time, require additional evidence to establish the authority of a person to sign an application for you.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.6 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.325 When is your application considered filed? SSA       (a) General rule. We consider an application for SVB filed on the day it is received by an SSA employee at one of our offices, by an SSA employee who is authorized to receive it at a place other than one of our offices, or by any office of the U.S. Foreign Service or by the Veterans Affairs Regional Office in the Philippines. (b) Exceptions. (1) When we receive an application that is mailed, we will use the date shown by the United States postmark as the filing date if using the date we receive it would result in your entitlement to additional benefits. If the postmark is unreadable, or there is no United States postmark, we will use the date the application is signed (if dated) or 5 days before the day we receive the signed application, whichever date is later. (2) We consider an application to be filed on the date of the filing of a written statement or the making of an oral inquiry under the conditions in §§ 408.340 and 408.345. (3) We will establish a deemed filing date of an application in a case of misinformation under the conditions described in § 408.351. The filing date of the application will be a date determined under § 408.351(b).
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.255.7 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.330 How long will your application remain in effect? SSA       Your application for SVB will remain in effect from the date it is filed until we make a final determination on it, unless there is a hearing decision on your application. If there is a hearing decision, your application will remain in effect until the hearing decision is issued.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.256.8 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.340 When will we use a written statement as your filing date? SSA       If you file with us under the rules stated in § 408.325 a written statement, such as a letter, indicating your intent to claim SVB, we will use the filing date of the written statement as the filing date of your application. If the written statement is mailed, we will use the date the statement was mailed to us as shown by the United States postmark. If the postmark is unreadable or there is no United States postmark, we will use the date the statement is signed (if dated) or 5 days before the day we receive the written statement, whichever date is later, as the filing date. In order for us to use your written statement to protect your filing date, the following requirements must be met: (a) The statement indicates your intent to file for benefits. (b) The statement is signed by you, your spouse, or a person described in § 408.315. (c) You file an application with us on an application form as described in § 408.310(a), or one is filed for you by a person described in § 408.315, within 60 days after the date of a notice we will send advising of the need to file an application. The notice will say that we will make an initial determination of your qualification if an application form is filed within 60 days after the date of the notice. We will send the notice to you. However, if it is clear from the information we receive that you are mentally incompetent, we will send the notice to the person who submitted the written statement. (d) You are alive when the application is filed.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.256.9 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.345 When will we use the date of an oral inquiry as your application filing date? SSA       We will use the date of an oral inquiry about SVB as the filing date of your application for SVB if the following requirements are met: (a) The inquiry asks about your entitlement to SVB. (b) The inquiry is made by you, your spouse, or a person who may sign an application on your behalf as described in § 408.315. (c) The inquiry, whether in person or by telephone, is directed to an office or an official described in § 408.325(a). (d) You, or a person on your behalf as described in § 408.315, file an application on a prescribed form within 60 days after the date of the notice we will send telling of the need to file an application. The notice will say that we will make an initial determination on whether you qualify for SVB if an application form is filed within 60 days after the date of the notice. However, if it is clear from the information we receive that you are mentally incompetent, we will send the notice to the person who made the inquiry. (e) You are alive when the prescribed application is filed.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.257.10 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.351 What happens if we give you misinformation about filing an application? SSA       (a) General rule. You may have considered applying for SVB, for yourself or another person and you may have contacted us in writing, by telephone or in person to inquire about filing an application for SVB. It is possible that in responding to your inquiry, we may have given you misinformation about qualification for such benefits that caused you not to file an application at that time. If this happened and use of that date will result in entitlement to additional benefits, and you later file an application for SVB with us, we may establish an earlier filing date as explained in paragraphs (b) through (f) of this section. (b) Deemed filing date of an application based on misinformation. Subject to the requirements and conditions in paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section, we may establish a deemed filing date of an application for SVB under the following provisions. (1) If we determine that you failed to apply for SVB because we gave you misinformation about qualification for or entitlement to such benefits, we will deem an application for such benefits to have been filed with us on the later of— (i) The date on which we gave you the misinformation; or (ii) The date on which all of the requirements for qualification to SVB were met, other than the requirement of filing an application. (2) Before we may establish a deemed filing date of an application for SVB under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, you or a person described in § 408.315 must file an application for such benefits. (c) Requirements concerning the misinformation. We apply the following requirements for purposes of paragraph (b) of this section. (1) The misinformation must have been provided to you by one of our employees while he or she was acting in his or her official capacity as our employee. For purposes of this section, an employee includes an officer of SSA, an employee of a U.S. Foreign Service office, and an employee of the SSA Division of the Veterans Affairs Regional Office in the Philippines who is authorized to take and de…
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.258.11 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.355 Can you withdraw your application? SSA       (a) Request for withdrawal filed before a determination is made. You may withdraw your application for SVB before we make a determination on it if— (1) You, or a person who may sign an application for you under § 408.315, file a written request for withdrawal at a place described in § 408.325; and (2) You are alive at the time the request is filed. (b) Request for withdrawal filed after a determination is made. An application may be withdrawn after we make a determination on it if you repay all benefits already paid based on the application being withdrawn or we are satisfied that the benefits will be repaid. (c) Effect of withdrawal. If we approve your request to withdraw your application, we consider that the application was never filed. If we disapprove your request for withdrawal, we treat your application as though you did not file a request for withdrawal.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.3.258.12 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS C Subpart C—Filing Applications   § 408.360 Can you cancel your request to withdraw your application? SSA       You may request to cancel your request to withdraw your application and have your application reinstated if all of the following requirements are met: (a) You, or someone who may sign an application for you under § 408.315, file a written request for cancellation at a place described in § 408.325; (b) You are alive at the time you file your request for cancellation; and (c) A cancellation request received after we have approved your withdrawal must be filed no later than 60 days after the date of the notice of approval.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.401 What is this subpart about? SSA       We cannot determine your entitlement to SVB based solely on your statements about your qualification for benefits or other facts concerning payments to you. We will ask you for specific evidence or additional information. We may verify the evidence you give us with other sources to ensure that it is correct. This subpart contains our rules about the evidence you need to give us when you claim SVB.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.402 When do you need to give us evidence? SSA       When you apply for SVB, we will ask you for any evidence we need to make sure that you meet the SVB qualification and entitlement requirements. After you begin receiving SVB, we may ask you for evidence showing whether your SVB payments should be reduced or stopped. We will help you get any documents you need but do not have. If your evidence is a foreign-language record or document, we can have it translated for you. The evidence you give us will be kept confidential and not disclosed to anyone but you except under the rules set out in part 401 of this chapter. You should also be aware that section 811 of the Act provides criminal penalties for misrepresenting the facts or for making false statements to obtain SVB payments for yourself or someone else, or to continue entitlement to benefits.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.403 Where should you give us your evidence? SSA       You should give your evidence to the people at a Social Security Administration office. In the Philippines, you should give your evidence to the people at the Veterans Affairs Regional Office. Elsewhere outside the United States, you should give your evidence to the people at the nearest U.S. Social Security office or a United States Foreign Service Office.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.404 What happens if you fail to give us the evidence we ask for? SSA       (a) You have not yet qualified for SVB. Generally, we will ask you to give us specific evidence or information by a certain date to prove that you qualify for SVB or to prove your foreign residence. If we do not receive the evidence or information by that date, we may decide that you do not qualify for SVB or may not receive SVB and deny your claim. (b) You have qualified for or become entitled to SVB. If you have already qualified for or become entitled to SVB, we may ask you to give us information by a specific date to decide whether you should receive benefits or, if you are already receiving benefits, whether your benefits should be stopped or reduced. If you do not give us the requested evidence or information by the date given, we may decide that you are no longer entitled to benefits or that your benefits should be stopped or reduced. (c) If you need more time. You should let us know if you are unable to give us the evidence or information within the specified time and explain why there will be a delay. If this delay is due to illness, failure to receive timely evidence you have asked for from another source, or a similar circumstance, we will give you additional time to give us the evidence.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.5 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.405 When do we require original records or copies as evidence? SSA       (a) General rule. To prove your qualification for or continuing entitlement to SVB, you may be asked to show us an original document or record. These original documents or records will be returned to you after we have photocopied them. We will also accept copies of original records that are properly certified and some uncertified birth certifications. These types of records are described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section. (b) Certified copies of original records. You may give us copies of original records or extracts from records if they are certified as true and exact copies by: (1) The official custodian of the record; (2) A Social Security Administration employee authorized to certify copies; (3) A Veterans Affairs employee if the evidence was given to that agency to obtain veteran's benefits; (4) An employee of the Veterans Affairs Regional Office, Manila, Philippines who is authorized to certify copies; or (5) A U.S. Consular Officer or employee of the Department of State authorized to certify evidence received outside the United States. (c) Uncertified copies of original birth records. You may give us an uncertified photocopy of a birth registration notification as evidence of age where it is the practice of the local birth registrar to issue them in this way.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.259.6 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.406 How do we evaluate the evidence you give us? SSA       When you give us evidence, we examine it to see if it is convincing evidence. This means that unless we have information in our records that raises a doubt about the evidence, other evidence of the same fact will not be needed. If the evidence you give us is not convincing by itself, we may ask you for additional evidence. In evaluating whether the evidence you give us is convincing, we consider such things as whether: (a) The information contained in the evidence was given by a person in a position to know the facts; (b) There was any reason to give false information when the evidence was created; (c) The information in the evidence was given under oath, or with witnesses present, or with the knowledge that there was a penalty for giving false information; (d) The evidence was created at the time the event took place or shortly thereafter; (e) The evidence has been altered or has any erasures on it; and (f) The information contained in the evidence agrees with other available evidence including our records.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.260.7 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.410 When do you need to give us evidence of your age? SSA       To qualify for SVB you must establish that you were age 65 or older on December 14, 1999, the date on which Public Law 106-169 was enacted into law. If we have already established your age or date of birth in connection with your claim for other benefit programs that we administer, you will not have to give us evidence of your age for your SVB claim. If we have not established your age or date of birth, you must give us evidence of your age or date of birth. In the absence of information to the contrary, we generally will not ask for additional evidence of your age or date of birth if you state that you are at least age 68, and you submit documentary evidence that is at least 3 years old when the application is filed and supports your statement.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.260.8 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.412 What kinds of evidence of age do you need to give us? SSA       For a description of the kinds of evidence of age you may need to give us, see § 416.802 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.260.9 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.413 How do we evaluate the evidence of age you give us? SSA       In evaluating the evidence of age you give us, we use the rules in § 416.803 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.261.10 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.420 What evidence of World War II military service do you need to give us? SSA       (a) Kinds of evidence you can give us. To show that you are a World War II veteran as defined in § 408.216, you can give us any of the documents listed in § 404.1370(b)(1) through (5) of this chapter that were issued by a U.S. Government agency. However, depending on the type of document you give us and what the document shows, we may verify your military service, or the dates of your service, with the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) in St. Louis, Missouri. If we do, we will use the information in NPRC's records to determine whether you meet the military service requirements for SVB. (b) What the evidence must show. When you file an application for SVB, you must give us evidence of your World War II military service. The evidence you give us must show: (1) Your name; (2) The branch of service in which you served; (3) The dates of your military service; (4) Your military service serial number; (5) The character of your discharge; and (6) If your service was in the organized military forces of the Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines (including the organized guerrilla forces), the period of your service that was under the control of U.S. Armed Forces.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.262.11 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.425 How do we establish your eligibility for SSI? SSA       To qualify for SVB, you must have been eligible for SSI for the month of December 1999, the month in which Public Law 106-169 was enacted, and for the month in which you filed your application for SVB. You do not have to submit evidence of this. We will use our SSI record of your eligibility to determine if you meet these requirements.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.263.12 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.430 When do you need to give us evidence of your other benefit income? SSA       If you tell us or if we have information indicating that you are receiving other benefit income that could affect your qualification for or the amount of your SVB payments, we will ask you to give us evidence of that income as explained in § 408.432.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.263.13 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.432 What kind of evidence of your other benefit income do you need to give us? SSA       As evidence of your other benefit income, we may require a document such as an award notice or other letter from the paying agency or written notification from the former employer, insurance company, etc. The evidence should show the benefit payable, the current amount of the payment, and the date the payment began.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.264.14 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.435 How do you prove that you are residing outside the United States? SSA       (a) General rule. To establish that you are residing outside the United States for SVB purposes, you must give us all of the following: (1) Evidence of the date on which you arrived in the country in which you are residing; (2) A statement signed by you showing the address at which you are living and that you intend to continue living there; and (3) Evidence that you are actually living at the address given in your signed statement. (b) Evidence of the date you entered the foreign country. To establish the date you arrived in the country in which you are residing, you can give us evidence such as: (1) A visa or passport showing the date you entered that country; (2) Your plane ticket showing the date you arrived in that country; or (3) An entry permit showing the date you entered that country. (c) Evidence of your actual place of residence. To establish your actual place of residence, you can give us evidence such as: (1) A lease agreement showing where you live; (2) Rental or mortgage receipts; (3) Utility or other bills addressed to you at the address where you live; (4) A signed statement from a local official showing that he or she knows where you live, when you began living there and how he or she knows this information; or (5) A Standard Form 1199A, Direct Deposit Sign-Up Form, showing your address abroad and signed by an official of the financial institution after the date you arrived in the country in which you will be residing.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.4.264.15 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS D Subpart D—Evidence Requirements   § 408.437 How do you prove that you had good cause for staying in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month? SSA       (a) General rule. If you believe that you meet the requirements in § 408.234 and that you should continue to receive SVB payments even though you have been in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month, you must give us evidence that you had good cause for staying in the United States. (b) Circumstances prevent you from returning to your home abroad. To prove that you had good cause for staying in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month, you must give us evidence of your good faith effort to return to your home abroad before the 1-month period had elapsed and of the circumstances/event which prevented your return to your home abroad. (1) Evidence of your good faith effort to return to your home abroad. Evidence of your plans to return to your home abroad can include, but is not limited to: (i) A plane ticket showing that you intended to return to your home abroad before the expiration of 1 full calendar month; or (ii) Notice from a travel agency or airline confirming the cancellation of your reservation to return to your home abroad on a date within 1 full calendar month. (2) Evidence of the circumstances preventing your return to your home abroad. The evidence we will accept from you to support the circumstance or event that prevented you from returning to your home abroad will depend on the reason you are staying in the United States. It can include, but is not limited to, a: (i) Newspaper article or other publication describing the event or natural disaster which prevented your return; or (ii) Doctor's statement, etc. showing that you are unable to travel; or (iii) Death certificate or notice if you are staying in the United States to attend the funeral of a member of your family. (c) You are appealing a decision we made. To establish that you had good cause to stay in the United States for more than 1 full calendar month because you want to appear in person at the appeal of a decision on a claim filed under a program administered by the Social Security Administratio…
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.5.265.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS E Subpart E—Amount and Payment of Benefits   § 408.501 What is this subpart about? SSA       This subpart explains how we compute the amount of your monthly SVB payment, including how we reduce your payments if you receive other benefit income. It also explains how we pay benefits under the SVB program.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.5.265.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS E Subpart E—Amount and Payment of Benefits   § 408.505 How do we determine the amount of your SVB payment? SSA       (a) Maximum SVB payment. The maximum monthly SVB payment is equal to 75% of the FBR for an individual under title XVI of the Act. See § 416.410 of this chapter. (b) Cost-of-living adjustments in the FBR. The maximum SVB amount will increase whenever there is a cost-of-living increase in the SSI FBR under the provisions of § 416.405 of this chapter. The basic SVB amount following such an increase is equal to 75 percent of the increased FBR. (c) When we will reduce the amount of your basic benefit. We will reduce your basic benefit by the amount of the other benefit income you receive in that month, as explained in § 408.510.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.5.265.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS E Subpart E—Amount and Payment of Benefits   § 408.510 How do we reduce your SVB when you receive other benefit income? SSA       (a) Amount of the reduction. If you receive other benefit income as defined in § 408.220, we will reduce your SVB payment by the amount of the other benefit income you receive in that month. The reduction is on a dollar-for-dollar and cents-for-cents basis. We do not round SVB payment amounts except as described in paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Minimum benefit amount. If the reduction described in paragraph (a) of this section results in a benefit amount that is greater than zero but less than $1.00, we will pay you a benefit of $1.00 for that month.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.5.265.4 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS E Subpart E—Amount and Payment of Benefits   § 408.515 When do we make SVB payments? SSA       SVB payments are made on the first day of each month and represent payment for that month. If the first day of the month falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal legal holiday, payment will be made on the first day preceding such day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal legal holiday.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.1 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.601 What is this subpart about? SSA       (a) Explanation of representative payment. This subpart explains the policies and procedures we follow to determine whether to pay your benefits to a representative payee and to select a representative payee for you. It also explains the responsibilities your representative payee has for using the funds he or she receives on your behalf. A representative payee may be either an individual or an organization. We will select a representative payee to receive your benefits if we believe your interests will be better served by paying a representative payee than by paying you directly. Generally, we appoint a representative payee if we determine you are unable to manage or direct the management of your own benefit payments. Because the representative payment policies and procedures we use for the title VIII program closely parallel our title II policies and procedures, we provide cross-references to the appropriate material in our title II representative payment rules in subpart U of part 404 of this chapter. (b) Policy we use to determine whether to make representative payment. For an explanation of the policy we use to determine whether to pay your SVB to a representative payee, see § 404.2001(b) of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.10 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.625 What information must a representative payee report to us? SSA       Your representative payee must report to us information as described in § 404.2025 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.11 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.626 How do we investigate an appointed representative payee? SSA     [84 FR 4325, Feb. 15, 2019, as amended at 84 FR 57319, Oct. 25, 2019] After we select an individual as your representative payee, we investigate him or her following the rules in § 404.2026 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.12 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.630 How will we notify you when we decide you need a representative payee? SSA       (a) We notify you in writing of our determination to make representative payment. If you are legally incompetent, our written notice is sent to your legal guardian or legal representative. The notice explains that we have determined that representative payment is in your interest, and it provides the name of the representative payee we have selected. The notice: (1) Contains language that is easily understandable to the reader. (2) Identifies the person designated as your representative payee. (3) Explains that you, your legal guardian, or your legal representative can appeal our determination that you need a representative payee. (4) Explains that you, your legal guardian, or your legal representative can appeal our designation of a particular person to serve as representative payee. (b) If you, your legal guardian, or your legal representative objects to representative payment or to the designated payee, you can file a formal appeal.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.13 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.635 What are the responsibilities of your representative payee? SSA       For a list of your representative payee's responsibilities, see § 404.2035 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.14 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.640 How must your representative payee use your benefits? SSA       Your representative payee must use your benefits in accordance with the rules in § 404.2040 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.15 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.641 Who is liable if your representative payee misuses your benefits? SSA       For the rules we follow to determine who is liable for repayment of misused benefits, see § 404.2041 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.16 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.645 What must your representative payee do with unused benefits? SSA       If your representative payee has accumulated benefits for you, he or she must conserve or invest them as provided in § 404.2045 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.17 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.650 When will we select a new representative payee for you? SSA       We follow the rules in § 404.2050 of this chapter to determine when we will select a new representative payee for you.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.18 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.655 When will we stop making your payments to a representative payee? SSA       To determine when we will stop representative payment for you, we follow the rules in § 404.2055 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.19 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.660 What happens to your accumulated funds when your representative payee changes? SSA       For a description of what happens to your accumulated funds (including the interest earned on the funds) when we change your representative payee or when you begin receiving benefits directly, see § 404.2060 of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.2 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.610 When will we send your SVB payments to a representative payee? SSA       In determining when we will pay your benefits to a representative payee, we follow the rules in § 404.2010(a) of this chapter.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.20 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.665 How does your representative payee account for the use of your SVB payments? SSA     [87 FR 35653, June 13, 2022] (a) Your representative payee must account for the use of your benefits. We require written reports from your representative payee at least once a year. (b) Your representative payee is exempt from the accounting requirement when your representative payee is the spouse of an individual eligible for SVB payments. (c) We may verify how your representative payee used your benefits. Your representative payee should keep records of how benefits were used in order to provide accounting reports and must make those records available upon our request. If your representative payee fails to provide an annual accounting of benefits or other required report, we may require your payee to appear in person at the local Social Security field office or a United States Government facility that we designate serving the area in which you reside. The decision to have your representative payee receive your benefits in person may be based on a variety of reasons. Some of these reasons may include the payee's history of past performance or our past difficulty in contacting the payee. We may ask your representative payee to give us the following information: (1) Where you lived during the accounting period; (2) Who made the decisions on how your benefits were spent or saved; (3) How your benefit payments were used; and (4) How much of your benefit payments were saved and how the savings were invested.
20:20:2.0.1.1.7.6.265.3 20 Employees' Benefits III   408 PART 408—SPECIAL BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN WORLD WAR II VETERANS F Subpart F—Representative Payment   § 408.611 What happens to your monthly benefits while we are finding a suitable representative payee for you? SSA       For an explanation of the policy we use to determine what happens to your monthly benefits while we are finding a suitable representative payee for you, see § 404.2011 of this chapter.

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