*b/c of an archaic SSI rule called “in-kind support and maintenance” that automatically slashes already-sub-poverty SSI benefits by 1/3rd for beneficiaries who can’t afford their own place.
This 👆 is just one example of the long-overdue SSI fixes Dems in the House & Senate are fighting to try to get into the #BuildBackBetter reconciliation bill that the House is drafting as we speak.
HUGE NEWS: President Biden’s SSI proposals would bring 3.3 million people out of poverty, and cut poverty among SSI beneficiaries *IN HALF*, according to the @UrbanInstitute.
These jaw-dropping numbers are a stark reminder of what @mattbc and I mean by #DemolishDisabledPoverty—as well as the historic opportunity Democrats have right now to improve millions of lives, as they debate whether to include long-overdue SSI improvements in #BuildBackBetter.
As I told @citizencohn: “The only thing more shameful than how long SSI beneficiaries have already been forgotten would be to leave them behind again now in #BuildBackBetter, on the heels of a pandemic that’s hit disabled people and seniors harder than nearly anyone…”
“Congress has failed to uphold its responsibility to SSI recipients by allowing the SSI program to become so outdated that people w/disabilities and seniors are struggling to meet their most basic needs.”
* making the EITC expansion for "childless" workers permanent
* permanent full refundability of the Child Tax Credit
* historic expansions of school meals, and more.
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THREAD: As news rolls out about the next round of economic recovery measures—here’s a plea for the Biden team not to forget a critical program for low-income seniors & disabled people that’s been left to wither on the vine for decades:
Supplemental Security Income, aka SSI.
Nearly 8 million low-income seniors and people with disabilities rely on SSI for subsistence income.
The income support SSI provides is critical—but benefits are so meager, they consign people to abject poverty.
The max SSI benefit for 2021 is $794/mo, about $26 a day.
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Putting SSI's sub-poverty benefit levels in context:
They’re not enough to afford rent in any state in the U.S.—even spending 100% of your monthly benefit on rent.
Average rent for a 1-bedroom apartment: $1,063/mo—128% of an SSI recipient’s monthly income.
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