If the disabled person is receiving disability benefits from an individual Disability insurance policy then yes. Most individual and group Disability policies do have a provision that pays 3-months worth of disability benefit, if the insured dies.
However, this usually is assigned to a specific beneficiary and not necessarily the disabled person's child.
A child can receive Social SEcurity disability benefits if s/he is "permanently and totally disabled" as defined by SSA regulations.
If the disabled person is capable of taking care of the child and seeing to its needs then their disability should be no hinderance to being able to adopt a child.
The benefit payments are to help pay for the extra care needed by these children. The parents of a disabled child may not be able to work a regular full time job due to caring for the disabled child.
Yes, if the child or a parent is disabled.
yes
yes
No, a representative pay will not be able to get a loan for a child's social security disability check.
The payee for disability payments to a disabled child can include the following:The child's parent(s)Any foster parentsAny facility taking care of the child
Yes
yes
Developmentally delayed is not a disability, but is a result of a disability. For example an autistic child can be intelectually developmentally disabled or a child with spina bifida can be physically developmentally delayed
This can be the case yes depending on the disability, insurances etc.