NYAPRS Note: The following comes courtesy of NYSPI’s Center of Excellence for Cultural Competence, who writes “Congress recently passed the ABLE (Achieving a Better Life Experience) Act of 2014. The ABLE Act will allow eligible people with psychiatric disabilities (e.g., those receiving SSI or SSDI) to save (exempt from the 2,000 SSI and Medicaid resource limit) contributions from their own income, families or friends for eligible expenses, such as education, housing, transportation, employment training and support, assistive technology, personal support services, health care expenses, financial management and administrative services and others. Annual contributions can be of up to $14,000 and ABLE accounts will be able to have up to $100,000 before affecting SSI eligibility. This is great news for New Yorkers with psychiatric disabilities because ABLE may help many of them achieve their dream of going back to school, live more independently, work, and even retire with a decent income.
As you know, the New York State Psychiatric Institute Center of Excellence for Cultural Competence is collaborating with several organizations, including Baltic Street, AEH., the Mental Health Peer Connection of Western New York Independent Living, and NYAPRS, to assess the financial capability of New Yorkers with psychiatric conditions, and develop a peer-led empowerment intervention in order to improve access of individuals to asset building resources (e.g., mainstream financial services, tax credits, saving programs, work incentives, and other asset building instruments like the one being created by the ABLE legislation).”
This new legislation will open the doors of economic empowerment for many of people in our state, and we look forward to help make sure New Yorkers know about it as it becomes available.
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