Which notices are “like that received by Mr. Gonzalez?”
The notice received by Mr. Gonzalez stated:
If you do not request reconsideration of your case within the prescribed 
time period, you still have the right to file another application at any 
time.
In 1984, an additional sentence was added to the standard language to this 
effect:
A new application is not the same as an appeal of this 
determination.
A notice as described above, but with the 1984 language change will still 
be considered to be a notice “like that received by Mr. 
Gonzalez” because it does not meet the court's requirement that the 
notice “clearly indicate that if no request for reconsideration is 
made, the determination is final.”
As indicated in the AR, SSA revised the denial notice language 
“in 1989 to explain more clearly the difference between appealing a 
determination, which prevents the determination from becoming final, and 
filing a new application. SSA completed implementation of the 1989 notice 
language change in February 1990.”
The language implemented by the end of February 1990 reads as 
follows:
You have the right to file a new application at any time, but filing a new 
application is not the same as appealing this decision. You might lose 
some benefits if you file a new application instead of filing an appeal. 
Therefore, if you think this decision is wrong, you should ask for an 
appeal within 60 days.
The February 1990 notice language is not 
considered to be a notice “like that received by Mr. 
Gonzalez.” Because the use of the revised language was phased in 
over a period of time, decision makers must review the content of the 
notice itself, rather than rely on the date of the notice, to determine 
whether the Gonzalez AR applies.
Before February 1990, the standardized notices in Supplemental Security 
Income (SSI) disability claims differed from the title II disability 
notice language. Most notices used in SSI claims before February 1990 
contained the following language:
If at any time in the future you think you qualify for payment, please 
contact us right away about filing a new application. This is important to 
you because we cannot pay you for any day before the day in which you file 
an application or the day you meet all the requirements, whichever is 
later.
The SSI language quoted above is considered 
not to be a “notice like that 
received by Mr. Gonzalez.” Therefore, the AR does not apply to 
title XVI claimants who received notices with the above-quoted 
language.
In concurrent title II and XVI claims, if a claimant received the 
above-quoted notice language on his or her title XVI claim and received a 
title II notice like the notice Mr. Gonzalez received, the 
Gonzalez AR will apply to the title II portion of 
the concurrent claim, but not the title XVI portion.
Regarding notice language in title II non-disability claims, i.e., 
retirement or survivors insurance claims, SSA does not and has not used 
language “like that received by Mr. Gonzalez.”