S-3648-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Mike Lee (R-UT)
What it does
This bill would allow Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) recipients diagnosed with certain terminal illnesses to begin receiving benefits one month after disability onset, rather than waiting the standard five months. To receive early payments, individuals would accept a permanent 7% reduction in their monthly benefit amount. The SSA would be required to maintain a qualifying conditions list — updated every five years with congressional approval — limited to incurable conditions with a life expectancy of five years or less. Separately, the bill would prohibit individuals from collecting both unemployment benefits and SSDI at the same time, and would allow the SSA to recover overpayments by collecting as little as 10% of a beneficiary's monthly benefit (rather than requiring full repayment).
Who benefits
Terminally ill SSDI-eligible individuals who need income sooner than the current five-month waiting period allows, particularly those with rapidly progressing conditions. Family members and caregivers of terminally ill patients who may benefit from earlier household income. Taxpayers and the SSDI trust fund, which would receive a long-term cost offset through the 7% benefit reduction and the dual-benefit prohibition. SSDI beneficiaries who have been overpaid and currently face aggressive full-repayment demands, who would benefit from the more flexible 10% minimum recovery rule.
Who is hurt
Terminally ill individuals who elect early payments but live longer than expected, as the 7% monthly reduction would be permanent and could compound into a significant lifetime loss. Individuals who currently receive both unemployment and SSDI simultaneously — a practice that would be prohibited — who would lose one income stream. Workers' advocacy groups that argue the dual-benefit prohibition removes a financial cushion during the gap between job loss and SSDI approval. The SSDI trust fund could face modest short-term cash flow pressure from accelerated early payments, potentially affecting all current and future beneficiaries if the fund's solvency is affected.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that forcing terminally ill patients to wait five months for income they are already entitled to causes measurable financial and emotional harm at the most vulnerable point in their lives — a period when medical costs are often highest. They contend the voluntary 7% reduction is a fair trade that gives patients agency over their own finances while keeping the program fiscally neutral over time. They also argue that simultaneously collecting unemployment (which requires being able and available to work) and SSDI (which requires being unable to work) is a logical contradiction that represents improper use of both programs, and that closing this gap protects program integrity.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the permanent 7% benefit reduction disproportionately harms patients who survive longer than their prognosis suggests — a not-uncommon outcome — locking them into reduced income for years or decades based on a decision made under extreme duress. They contend that the dual-benefit prohibition could cut off income for individuals who applied for SSDI while still technically job-seeking, penalizing people navigating an already slow and uncertain approval process. They further argue that requiring congressional approval for every new condition added to the qualifying list introduces political delay into what should be a medical determination, potentially leaving patients with newly recognized terminal conditions without access to expedited benefits for years.