Depending on state of incarceration, you can file to have benefits while in prison, or you may be out of luck and have to pay while incarcerated and if necessary, will receive only needed treatments.
It depends on what you're incarcerated for in Effingham. They should continue, unless you are in for fraud or any other related crime.
No. A person who lives for more than 30 days in a tax-supported facility, like jail, prison or a nursing home, cannot receive Social Security benefits. If the person is later released, he or she can begin receiving payments again, but will not be paid back benefits for the time spent incarcerated.
No unemployment payments will be made on State and banking holidays.
It typically takes about three to five weeks after you apply for Social Security benefits to start receiving payments.
Some examples of transfer payments include social security benefits, unemployment benefits, welfare payments, and subsidies for farmers. These payments are typically made by the government to individuals, families, or businesses without the expectation of receiving goods or services in return.
There will be no effect.
No. Your benefits are calculated individually and do not change when your spouse begins receiving his or her benefits.
If you are receiving benefits from Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), child support can be taken from your SSDI payments. However, if you are receving Supplemental Security Income, that cannot be seized for child support.
No, an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is not a bill. It is a document sent by a health insurance company to explain the costs and payments related to a medical service or treatment.
Collecting it would be illegal, as you can not comply with the conditions for receiving it. Return what you received and ask for it to be temporarily(?) discontinued. When you get out, there may be time left in your benefit period (normally 52 weeks to collect a normal 26 weeks of payments) to receive some of the benefits.
A felon may receive SSDI benefits if he or she is not incarcerated for more than 30 days and has no outstanding warrants. Social Security will not pay cash benefits to anyone living in a prison, jail, nursing home or other tax-supported facility; however, if the person remains eligible for disability under SSA guidelines, payments resume after release. Payees are not entitled to back benefits for the time spent incarcerated.
If the father was paying you directly, the payments will, of course, cease. If this is the case you must contact the state for assistance. If you were receiving the support payment from the state, then nothing will change and his payments to reimburse the state will become an obligation/lien against him for which he will eventually have to pay the state back.