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Personal Injury: What you need from expert counsel.
We take every case seriously, listening to what the client has to say, and helping them throughout the case - not just with their legal problems, but with how they are dealing with things on a personal level. When you or a loved one has been injured, there is usually more to worry about than a lawsuit. We will help you with going back to work issues, and with finding compensation while you are out of work. >> Learn more Landlord-Tenant Law: Many Issues Need Immediate Solutions.
Landlord/tenant laws are among the most complex and detailed in the nation. All landlords, both large and small, and many tenants need expert legal guidance to help them operate in this complicated environment. Stephen Guillette has honed his expertise delivering satisfying results to landlords and tenants for almost fifteen years. >> Learn more Social Security Disability Law: The Law Provides Protections For You.
If you've applied for Social Security disability benefits, odds are that your claim has been denied. Please don't give up. People with legitimate illnesses and disabilities often get turned down twice and then must go before a judge to obtain benefits. Whether your case involves getting you the Social Security Disability Benefits that you deserve or working with you to prepare a Special Needs Trust, Will, Living Will, Health Care Power of Attorney, or Financial Power of Attorney; Stephen Guillette can help. >> Learn more |
Social Security Disability Law. What is Social Security Disability? If you work long enough at a job, which is covered under the provisions of the Social Security Act, and become disabled, you are probably eligible for Social Security Disability benefits. According to the Social Security Administration, a "disability" can be physical, or emotional, or some combination of both. In order to win benefits, you must have a disability severe enough to keep you from working in any regular paying job for at least 12 consecutive months. The test for eligibility for Social Security Disability benefits is not whether you can go back to a job you have lost. It is not whether you have been able to find a job recently. The test is whether you are physically and emotionally CAPABLE of doing a job that is generally available in the national economy. Furthermore, to obtain Social Security Disability benefits, you must have a doctor state that you are disabled. Your doctor's opinion should be supported by clinical findings and/or laboratory findings. Unfortunately, many genuinely disabling conditions are difficult to diagnose by objective testing. In cases like that, it is up to us to present your doctor's reports properly, and to convince the government that you deserve your Social Security Disability benefits. Filing a Social Security Disability Claim By law, anyone may file for his or her own Social Security Disability benefits, but statistics clearly show that claimants who are represented by a lawyer wins their Social Security Disability benefits much more often than those who apply on their own. The government makes the process very difficult. Waiting lines are long. Forms are complicated. Social Security Disability Benefits are often denied to people who have legitimate Disability claims. As a result, many people who apply for Social Security Disability Benefits on their own become discouraged and intimidated, so they simply back off, give up, and go away even when they are genuinely entitled to their Social Security Disability benefits. At Guillette and Associates, P.C., we do not let the government understaffing disrupt our clients. We are always active, aggressive advocates for our clients. It is a tough job, but we have been doing it for a successfully for years. Disability An injured person may be eligible for Social Security Disability Benefits if they are unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity because of a medically determinable physical or mental condition which has lasted, or expected to last, for a continuous period of not less than 12 months, or result in death. To meet this condition, an individual must have physical impairments of such severity that they are not only unable to engage in their previous work, but cannot, considering their age, education, and prior work experience, engage in any other type of substantial work which exists in significant numbers in the national economy. Eligibility To be eligible for Title II Disability Benefits, you must have worked five out of the 10 years before becoming disabled. For individuals under age 31, the requirements for determining eligibility are a little different because they have not had enough time to work to meet the quarterly requirements.
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