From Kansas Commission on Disability Concerns <[email protected]>
Subject KCDC Disability News Message
Date June 28, 2024 3:51 PM
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Here is today's Kansas Commission on Disability Concerns (KCDC) Disability News message.? I hope you have a wonderful day and weekend.?

Martha

*Martha K. Gabehart* | "Executive Director
"Kansas Commission on Disability Concerns (KCDC)
*Kansas Governor Laura Kelly
*900 SW Jackson, Suite 100 | Topeka, Kansas 66612
(785) 296-6525 (direct) | (785) 260-4027 (cell)

[email protected] | www.kcdcinfo.ks.gov [ [link removed] ]

*****

Job Vacancy Announcements

Blue Cross/Blue Shield has posted new job vacancies on their website [ [link removed] ].??

Frito-Lay posted some new positions in Topeka. Please search their website [ [link removed]*1xt38jp*_gcl_au*MTg5NzUxMTc2NC4xNzE4NjMzNzY3 ] for new positions.

The Topeka Job Fair will be July 9th from 12:30 pm to 3:00 pm at the Crestview Community Center, 4801 SW Shunga Drive. For more information and to sign up for emails and watch videos to gain stills and confidence go to the Step Up Job Fairs website [ [link removed] ].

The Kansas Department of Commerce has two new positions open.? Please see the websites listed below.?

Kansas Youth Transition Initiative Program Manager [ [link removed] ]

Youth Benefit Specialist [ [link removed] ]

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This information was shared by the Kansas Commission for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (KCDHH).?

Kansas State School for the Deaf (KSD) is requesting for your participation in community survey. Please do share with your friends and the community. If you receive multiple emails about completing the survey, please only complete one survey.

See the letter below.?

Click here [ [link removed] ] for alternative link to the letter

Click here [ [link removed] ] for ASL Translation of the letter

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This information is from the Social Security Administration (SSA).? Wednesday, June 26, 2024 For Immediate Release ? Mark Hinkle, Press Officer [email protected] ? News Release SOCIAL SECURITY ? Agency to Reduce Work History Period to Five Years When people become disabled under the statutory definition the Social Security Administration must follow, the agency helps them meet their basic needs and sustain a higher quality of life.? Social Security administers disability benefits through two programs: the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) program and the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. Under both programs, the agency follows a five-step process to determine if an adult has a qualifying disability.?? In response to President Biden?s Executive Order on Transforming Federal Customer Experience and Service Delivery to Rebuild Trust in Government [ [link removed] ], the agency is proud to announce changes that will reduce administrative burdens for applicants and help more people with disabilities receive government benefits and services if they are eligible.? On April 18, 2024, Social Security published a final rule, ?Intermediate Improvement to the Disability Adjudication Process: Including How We Consider Past Work.? The final rule announces updates that will improve the application process for disability benefits and reduce the time applicants wait for a decision.? The new rule simplifies step four of the process, which assesses whether a person applying for disability benefits can perform any of their ?past relevant work.?? ?This new rule will lessen the burden and time our applicants face when filling out information about their work history and will make it easier for them to focus on the most current and relevant details about their past work,? said Martin O?Malley, Commissioner of Social Security.? ?It also improves the quality of the information our frontline workers receive to make decisions, improving customer service, and reducing case processing time and overall wait times.?? Under the final rule, beginning June 22, 2024, when determining past relevant work, the agency will review only five years of past work.? The previous policy required people to provide detailed information about 15 years of work history, which was difficult for individuals to remember and often led to incomplete or inaccurate reporting.? Also, the agency will no longer consider past work that started and stopped in fewer than 30 calendar days.? The new rule makes it easier for people applying for benefits by focusing on their most recent relevant work activity while still providing enough information to continue making accurate determinations.?? This final rule is one of several regulation updates Social Security is publishing to improve its disability program.? The agency recently announced it will reduce barriers to access the SSI program by updating the definition of a public assistance household (See Social Security to Expand Access to SSI Program by Updating Definition of a Public Assistance Household [ [link removed] ]).? The agency also announced it will exclude the value of food from SSI benefit calculations (See Social Security to Remove Barriers to Accessing SSI Payments [ [link removed] ]).? Additionally, the agency announced it will expand its rental subsidy exception, currently only in place for SSI applicants and recipients residing in seven States, as a nationwide policy (See Social Security to Expand SSI Rental Subsidy Policy [ [link removed] ]). The agency continuously examines programmatic policy and makes regulatory and sub-regulatory changes as appropriate.? For more information on the SSDI and SSI programs ? including who is eligible, how to apply, and how Social Security makes a disability determination ? visit Disability | SSA [ [link removed] ] and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) | SSA [ [link removed] ]. To read the final rule, ?Intermediate Improvement to the Disability Adjudication Process: Including How We Consider Past Work,? visit Federal Register :: Intermediate Improvement to the Disability Adjudication Process, Including How We Consider Past Work [ [link removed] ]. ? *****

The information below is from the Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) Business Sense newsletter.

June 2024
Supporting Entrepreneurs with Disabilities

This month marks the 25th anniversary of the Supreme Court?s landmark decision in Olmstead v. L.C. that people with disabilities must be afforded the freedom to live and receive services in their communities. The Olmstead ruling helped transform disability-related policy and practice in many arenas, affirming that disabled people have the right to forge their own paths in life?including through work.

For some disabled people, this path may involve entrepreneurship, small business ownership or self-employment?options that sometimes offer more opportunity and flexibility than traditional employment. In fact, after being released from institutionalization, one of the two plaintiffs in the Olmstead case?the late Lois Curtis?was able to pursue her passion for painting and establish her own art business.

Entrepreneurship and self-employment offer many benefits?the chance to fulfill one?s passion, as in Lois?s case, implement an innovative idea, or experience greater professional freedom and flexibility than in a traditional job. But for disabled people, entrepreneurship may hold important added advantages, such as work and tax incentives [ [link removed] ] that can be used to provide business capital and help reduce disability- and work-related costs. U.S. Census Bureau labor-force data bear out the fact that people with disabilities are significantly more likely than nondisabled people to be self-employed. In 2011, for example, according to the Census Bureau?s Current Population Survey, disabled people (11.8%) were nearly twice as likely as nondisabled people (6.6%) to be ?self-employed unincorporated? workers (e.g., freelancers). That gap has persisted but steadily narrowed over the years. In 2023, it remained significant, with disabled people still being more likely to be self-employed than their nondisabled peers [ [link removed] ] (8.4% vs. 5.9%, respectively).

Whatever the reason for pursuing entrepreneurship, all people who choose this path can access ODEP?s Job Accommodation Network (JAN) for entrepreneurship resources [ [link removed] ] that will help them get started and grow their business over the long term. JAN provides free individualized consultations for self-employment and small business development on topics including business planning, financing strategies, marketing research, disability-specific programs, income supports and benefits planning, e-commerce, independent contracting, home-based business options and small business initiatives for disabled veterans. JAN also offers a number of resources that can help small businesses [ [link removed] ], whether disability-owned or not, foster a disability-inclusive work culture.

Whether working independently or creating companies that generate jobs for others, disabled entrepreneurs play an important role in their communities and in America?s economy. They also embody the spirit of self-determination at the heart of Olmstead?and ODEP is committed to supporting their success, every month.

U.S. Department of Labor
Office of Disability Employment Policy
DRIVING CHANGE ? CREATING OPPORTUNITY

View the Business Sense newsletter on our website [ [link removed] ].
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* KSD Community Survey Invite.docx.pdf [ [link removed] ]

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