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Special Benefits For World War II VeteransSSA Publication No. 05-10158, September 2006, ICN 468300 [View .pdf] |
Contacting Social SecurityOur website is a valuable resource for information about all of Social Security’s programs. There are a number of things you can do online. In addition to using our website, you can call us toll-free at 1-800-772-1213. We can answer specific questions from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Friday. We can provide information by automated phone service 24 hours a day. (You can use our automated response system to tell us a new address or request a replacement Medicare card.) If you are deaf or hard of hearing, you may call our TTY number, 1-800-325-0778. We treat all calls confidentially. We also want to make sure you receive accurate and courteous service. That is why we have a second Social Security representative monitor some telephone calls. If you are outside the United States, see the list of offices where you can get more information.
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IntroductionIn most cases, you are reading this booklet because you have just started getting special veterans benefits from Social Security. Public Law 106-169, enacted on December 14, 1999, provides special benefits to certain World War II veterans. This booklet explains what changes you must report so that we can make sure you receive all the payments you are entitled to receive. The information in Changes that must be reported and How to report changes tells you what changes you need to report and how to report those changes. Please read this booklet carefully and keep it in a safe place for future use. The information in this booklet is not intended to cover all the provisions of the law relating to special veterans benefits. How to contact us if you have questionsIf you are outside the United States and have questions about Social Security, you may contact one of the offices shown below. You also may contact any U.S. Social Security office.
If you live in any other country, contact the nearest U.S. Embassy or consulate. Visit www.socialsecurity.gov/foreign for a complete list of these offices.
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Changes that must be reportedAn explanation of each change that you must report to us is shown below. It is your responsibility to report all changes promptly. If you fail to report a change, you may not receive a payment that you may be entitled to, or you may receive too much money and have to pay it back. Change of addressIt is important that you tell us if your address changes so that your special veterans benefits will not be lost or delayed. Also, we need your current address so we can send you important information about your special veterans benefit payments or contact you if we have a question about your benefits. You must report any changes in your home address, even if your payments are being sent to a bank. When you report a change of address to the Social Security Administration, the Veterans Affairs Regional Office in Manila or the nearest U.S. Embassy or consulate, please type or print all of the following information very carefully and clearly:
Visit to or return to the United StatesYou must tell us if you go to the United States for a visit or to live. For special veterans benefits purposes, you are in the United States if you are in one of the 50 states, the District of Columbia or the Northern Mariana Islands. Visit to the United States If you visit the United States and stay for more than a full calendar month, you will not be considered to be residing outside the United States for any month after the full calendar month you are in the United States. You will not be entitled to any special veterans benefit payments until you leave the United States and re-establish your residence outside the United States. A full calendar month means every minute of every day of the month. For example: You arrive in the United States on May 25 and stay throughout the entire month of June. On July 2, you leave to return to your home outside the United States. We consider you to have been in the United States for the full calendar month of June. Therefore, you will not be entitled to a special veterans benefit payment for July. There are some special circumstances under which we may consider you to be residing outside the United States, even though you have been in the United States for more than one full calendar month. For example:
You may be paid your special veterans benefits for any month in which these special circumstances occur. If you believe this applies to you, contact your local Social Security office for further information. Return to the United States to live If you visit the United States and then later decide to live there and not to return to your home abroad, you will no longer be considered to be residing outside the United States. You will not be entitled to a special veterans benefit payment beginning with the earlier of the following:
If you return to the United States to live, you will not be entitled to a special veterans benefit payment for any month after the month in which you leave your home outside the United States. You must report to your local Social Security office whether you return to the United States to live or for a visit. You also must tell us if you previously reported a visit and then decided to live in the United States. Your local Social Security office also can help you if you want to apply for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments. DeathIt is important that your family or friends notify us immediately if you die so that incorrect payments will not be issued. If your payments were being deposited directly into an account in a bank, the bank also should be notified of your death so that it can return any payments received after your death. Special veterans benefits are payable for the month of your death. For example, if you die any time in the month of June, the payment dated June 1 is payable. However, any payments received after your death or any uncashed benefit checks must be returned to the sender, because they are not payable to your family or estate. Inability to manage fundsSome people who receive special veterans benefits cannot manage their own funds. If this happens to you, someone should let us know immediately. We can arrange to send your benefits to a “representative payee.” A representative payee is a relative, friend or other interested individual or institution who agrees to manage and use your benefits for your well-being. That person will be required to:
Benefit income changesYour special veterans benefits may be reduced if you receive other income. Other income may include Social Security retirement, survivors or disability benefits, workers’ compensation benefits, veterans’ compensation payments, annuities and pensions, Philippine Veterans Affairs Office (PVAO) pensions and foreign pensions. It also may include any income you designate another individual to receive for you. You must report any recurring periodic payments you receive, regardless of what country issues the payments. You also must report if the amounts of these payments change. Removal (deportation) from the United StatesYou must tell us if you are removed (deported) from the United States. If you are removed (deported) from the United States for certain reasons, you cannot receive special veterans benefits. Outstanding arrest warrant from the United StatesYou must tell us if there is an outstanding warrant for your arrest:
You cannot receive special veterans benefits for any month in which you have an outstanding warrant for your arrest from the United States for certain types of crimes. Probation or parole violationYou must tell us if you are in violation of a condition of probation or parole imposed under federal or state law of the United States. You cannot receive special veterans benefits for any month in which you violate a condition of probation or parole. |
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How to report changesYou can contact us in person, by mail or by telephone in order to report the important changes that may affect your payments. Please contact one of the offices shown in How to contact us if you have questions if you are outside the United States. You also may contact any U.S. Social Security office. When you contact us, be sure to include all the following information:
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Countries to which we cannot send paymentsU.S. Treasury Department regulations do not allow us to send payments to you, or to a bank or an individual for you, if you are in Cuba or North Korea. You can be paid any benefits that were withheld because you were in one of these countries if:
However, if you are not a citizen or national of the United States, you cannot be paid those benefits that were withheld because you were in Cuba or North Korea, even when you leave that country. Generally, because of Social Security restrictions, we cannot send payments to you, or to a bank or an individual for you, if you are in Cambodia, Vietnam or areas (other than Armenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Russia) that were in the former Soviet Union. However, we have established a special payment procedure that permits the payment of benefits to certain eligible beneficiaries in these countries. For more information about this procedure, you should contact one of the offices shown in How to contact us if you have questions if you are outside the United States. If you cannot be paid under this special procedure, you can be paid any benefits for which you were qualified and which were withheld because you were in one of these countries if:
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If your check is lost or stolenIt usually takes longer to deliver checks outside the United States because of the longer distances and extra handling time. Delivery time varies from country to country, and your check may not arrive the same day each month, so we ask you to be patient. If you do not receive your check after a reasonable waiting period, or if the check is lost or stolen, contact one of the offices shown in How to contact us if you have questions if you are outside the United States. You also may contact any U.S. Social Security office. We will replace your check as soon as possible, but please be aware that it will take some time. |
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Direct depositYou may wish to have your special veterans benefits deposited directly into an account at a bank or other financial institution in the country where you live or in the United States. Direct deposit has several advantages. You never have to worry about your check being delayed in the mail, lost or stolen. With direct deposit, you receive your payment much faster than if you are paid by check (usually one to three weeks faster than check deliveries). When direct deposit payments are sent to a financial institution, you also may avoid check cashing and currency conversion fees. Also, some foreign banks have branches in the United States that offer direct deposit options. Even if you use the direct deposit service, you must keep us informed of any change in your current residence address. Some countries where direct deposit payments are available include:
In addition, direct deposit is available in the Philippines through local banks that have correspondent banks in the United States. The Social Security Administration has no control over fees that they may charge for this service. To determine if direct deposit (or other form of electronic payment) is available in the country where you live—or to sign up for direct deposit—contact the nearest U.S. Embassy or consulate or U.S. Social Security office. If you live in the Philippines, please call the SSA Division of the Veterans Affairs Regional Office at 528-6300, extensions 6302 or 2621, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday or write to or visit the SSA Division, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, 1131 Roxas Boulevard, Ermita 0930 Manila. You also may E-mail the Veterans Affairs Regional Office at ssad.varo.manila@ssa.gov.
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