Example 1:
Reaver received disability benefits from age 23 until age 26. Reaver filed for retirement
benefits at age 67. When completing the application, the technician noticed an overpayment
on Reaver’s record. Reaver told the technician they did not know what the overpayment
was for and didn’t remember receiving a notice. The technician processed Reaver’s
retirement application. After Reaver started to receive their retirement benefits,
they received a letter stating they were overpaid $3,400. Reaver completed a waiver
request and brought it to their local field office.
The technician looked through Reaver’s record to determine the cause of the overpayment
and when the overpayment occurred. The technician reviewed Reaver’s MBR and ROAR which
showed Reaver was overpaid $3,400 due to work at age 26. The technician was unable
to locate a notice. The technician was unable to locate an SSA-821, paystubs, or any
documentation showing how much Reaver earned during that time, if there were any IRWEs
and the months of the overpayment. We must approve the waiver because Reaver is not
at fault and recovery is against equity and good conscience.
Example 2:
During a redetermination, the office input an excess resource decision because Jadis
failed to report a resource which caused a large overpayment. Jadis requested a waiver
for the overpayment. Upon reviewing the record, we found the resource pages in CCE
contained limited details regarding the type of resource that caused Jadis’s overpayment.
Additionally, we found no notice in the file with an official determination giving
the period, reason, and amount of the overpayment. We cannot determine if the overpayment
is valid or correct since the record does not have any details to substantiate the
resource that caused the overpayment. We must approve the waiver because Jadis is
not at fault and recovery is against equity and good conscience.