HR-8884-119
Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 1398 Reported to House. Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 8800, H.R. 8595, H.R. 8884 and H. Res. 1383. The resolution provides for consideration of H.R. 8800 and H.R. 8595 under a structured rule, and H.R. 8884 and H. Res. 1383 under a closed rule. The resolution provides for one hour of general debate on each measure and one motion to recommit on H.R. 8800, H.R. 8595, and H.R. 8884.
Sponsored by Austin Scott (R-GA)
What it does
This bill would modify federal rules that currently limit how much disabled Americans can earn or save while receiving disability-related benefits. Based on its title, it would reduce or eliminate financial penalties — such as benefit reductions or eligibility cutoffs — that discourage disabled individuals from entering or remaining in the workforce. The specific mechanical provisions are not available in the bill text provided.
Who benefits
Disabled Americans who are currently working or want to work but face benefit cliffs or asset limits that make employment financially risky. Employers who hire disabled workers may see a larger available labor pool. Social Security Administration and other federal agencies may see reduced long-term caseloads if more disabled individuals become self-sufficient. Disability advocacy organizations that have long sought these changes.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers if the bill increases net program costs by expanding eligibility or reducing offsets. Disabled individuals who rely solely on benefits and do not work could face indirect effects if program funding is restructured. Workers without disabilities who compete for the same jobs may face increased competition. State Medicaid programs, which are often linked to disability benefit eligibility, could face administrative or fiscal adjustments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that current federal rules — including Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) earnings limits and asset caps — create a well-documented "benefits cliff" that traps disabled Americans in poverty by penalizing work. They contend that removing these barriers would increase workforce participation among the roughly 33 million working-age Americans with disabilities, reduce long-term dependency on federal programs, and affirm the dignity and economic autonomy of disabled individuals.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that loosening work and asset rules for disability programs could increase program costs and expand eligibility in ways that strain already-pressured federal budgets, potentially threatening the long-term solvency of SSDI and SSI. They contend that without carefully designed guardrails, changes could be exploited to extend benefits to individuals who no longer meet the disability threshold, and that the bill's title alone provides insufficient detail to assess whether its specific mechanisms are fiscally sustainable or well-targeted.