The Social Security Administration announced the reinstatement of the reconsideration, the first step in the disability appeal process, in Missouri beginning on Jan.1, 2020. In 2019, eight states--Alabama, California, Colorado, Louisiana, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, and Pennsylvania--reinstated the reconsideration.
A level of Social Security’s national disability appeal process since 1959, the reconsideration step was eliminated in ten states as part of a prototype to explore ways to reengineer the disability process. Reinstating reconsideration restores a national, unified disability process and consistent due process for disability claimants across the country. It also leads to earlier allowance decisions for some at a lower administrative cost to taxpayers than if the first appeal of an initial claim goes directly to the hearing level to be heard by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). People still have the right to appeal their reconsideration decisions at a hearing before an ALJ.
“Reinstating the reconsideration appeal in Missouri will help improve the disability process,” said Linda Kerr-Davis, Regional Commissioner. “Some people appealing an initial disability claim decision will receive an allowance decision earlier in the process than they would if their appeal went directly to a judge at the hearings level.”
Missouri is one of ten states that have not had the reconsideration appeal since 1999.
The remaining state, Alaska, will bring back reconsideration later this year.