DOMA Decision: Equal Protection For All In Social Security

The recent Supreme Court decision invalidating the Defense of Marriage Act raises some intrigung questions about eligibility for Social Security disability.  This writer, a Harvard Kennedy School graduate and congressional staffer presents some situations to consider:

A recent Wall Street Journal article noted the Social Security Administration’s struggle to cope with last week’s Supreme Court ruling regarding gay marriage. In its ruling, the Court said federal agencies managing federal benefits programs — e.g., Social Security widow/widower’s benefits — need to look at the marriage laws of the claimant’s state of residence, not where the person was married. Some have noted that this situation presents an issue of equal protection. That may be true, but the truth is that “equal protection” is currently a very flexible notion at the SSA.

Let’s go back to the Social Security widow/widower’s benefits and gay spouses issue for a moment. Edie and Ida get married in Massachusetts, which recognizes gay marriage, and they later move to Texas, which doesn’t. Edie dies in Texas; Ida applies for widow’s benefits at a Social Security office in Texas. Per the SCOTUS ruling, Ida’s application is rejected because Texas did not recognize Edie and Ida’s marriage.  If Ida had moved back to Massachusetts, or any other state that recognizes gay marriage, and filed for benefits there, her application would have been accepted.  The “equal protection” argument says that, where national federal benefits are involved, Ida should be treated the same way in every state.

But how different, really, is this situation from one in which success in applying for Social Security disability benefits hinges on the state where you file?

Let’s say Sam is in his 50s, has multiple sclerosis, and applies for Social Security disability benefits. He has a home in New Jersey and spends the winter in a Florida condo. Where should he file his application? The answer is New Jersey, because its initial approval rate — 40.6 percent — is significantly higher than Florida’s, 29.2 percent.

Why do these state-by-state variations exist? Because the significantly higher law authorizes states to make initial determinations on social security disability cases; although these employees are paid with federal funds from social security, they are not federal employees — they are state workers, with a chain of command that ends with the governor.  See more here: http://www.ibtimes.com/fighting-words/doma-decision-equal-protection-all-social-security-1331479