A fair hearing is your chance to tell your story. The City Welfare center also gets a chance to tell its side of the story. A lawyer from the New York State Fair Hearing Office will judge who is right. You will get a written decision in the mail. If you need to schedule an emergency fair hearing call (212) 417-3614 Monday thru Friday from 8AM to 5PM.
There are four ways to apply for a fair hearing:
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If you have an emergency, ask for an emergency fair hearing. An emergency is when:
An emergency fair hearing can be held in a few days and is decided faster than other hearings. Call (212) 417-3614 from Monday to Friday between 8:00 AM and 5:00 PM to ask for an emergency fair hearing.
It is important that you apply for a fair hearing when there is a change in your benefits made by your Welfare center or when your Welfare center does not give you new benefits. You should also apply for a fair hearing if:
Remember you must apply to your welfare center for new benefits before you ask for a fair hearing. Ask for a fair hearing if you do not get an answer right away or if you are denied. Benefits include cash assistance, food stamps, Medicaid, and childcare paid for by welfare.
Right away! You should ask for a fair hearing the moment you have a problem with your benefits. If you are already getting benefits, note that your Welfare center must send you a written letter called Notice of Intent or Notice of Decision before it can change your benefits.
Remember that you have 60 days to ask for a fair hearing for welfare or Medicaid. And you have 90 days to ask for a fair hearing for food stamps. If you didn't get any Notice, there is no deadline.
The Notice must be sent to you at least 10 days before your benefits can be changed. The Notice of Intent or Notice of Decision must explain: How, Why and When your welfare center is going to change your benefits.
You should ask for a fair hearing and ask for aid continuing before the date where your Notice says your benefits will change. Aid continuing means that you keep the same amount of benefits unless you lose your fair hearing.
Save the Notice and the envelope. If the Notice takes too long to reach you and you miss the deadline for requesting a fair hearing, you can still try to get aid continuing.
In 1 to 2 weeks you will get a letter telling you that your hearing request was received. This letter is called an Acknowledgement of Fair Hearing Request and Confirmation of Aid Status. It will say if you got aid continuing. Call the Fair Hearing Office (212-417-6550) if you do not get this letter.
Next you will get a letter called a Notice of Fair Hearing. It tells you when and where your fair hearing will be held. Box B tells you if you have aid continuing. After you ask for your fair hearing, you can try to fix your problem at your welfare center. Ask for a conference. Do not withdraw your Fair Hearing request at your conference unless you get proof in writing that all problems with your case have been fixed by your welfare center.
If you asked for aid continuing and your benefits were still cut off or reduced, tell your welfare center about the mistake. Bring the Acknowledgement of Fair Hearing Request or your Notice of Fair Hearing to the Fair Hearing and Compliance Unit of your welfare center. Call (518) 474-8781 if you have problems.
Yes, if you have a good excuse. A good excuse can be an illness or that you need time to get more information or a lawyer. The change is called an adjournment. To get an adjournment call (212) 417-3500 on Monday to Friday between 8:00 AM and 5:00 PM, or go to the Fair Hearing Office. If you do not go to your hearing, you will lose.
If you missed your hearing and did not ask for an adjournment, call or go to the Fair Hearing Office right away. You will get a new hearing date if you have a good excuse.
Remember, you should go to your fair hearing even if your case worker tells you that the welfare center made a mistake. This is the only way you can be sure the mistake will be corrected and to get all your lost benefits.
You can win your fair hearing by being prepared and knowing your rights. Preparations for your fair hearing should include: Getting evidence Getting witnesses Getting organized
Evidence is everything that supports your story. Think about the evidence you need after you ask for your fair hearing. Write down dates and names of people you spoke to about your problem. Make sure you bring copies of your evidence to the hearing. Keep the originals for your own records. Ask for a free copy of the evidence packet for your case. The evidence packet has all the papers that your welfare center will talk about at your hearing. To get the evidence packet, call or write to the welfare office that sent you the Notice of Intent, Notice of Decision, or notice denying you benefits. If you did not get a notice, write to your welfare center. Keep a copy of the letter you sent. Write down the name of the person you spoke to on the phone and the date. If you tell the judge you asked for the evidence packet and did not get it, you should win your hearing.
Evidence includes:
You can also look at your welfare file or case record at your welfare center. Your case record may have the evidence that supports your story. Tell the judge if your welfare center refuses to let you see your case record. The judge will let you see your case record at the hearing or will change the date of the hearing so you have time to see your case record later.
If you asked your welfare center to send the papers from your case record and they failed to send them, you should win your hearing. You must ask for the evidence packet and papers from your case record more than 5 business days before the hearing. If you do not receive anything within 3 days after the request was received, the Notice of Intent, Notice of Decision, or notice denying you benefits should be withdrawn. This is called a Rivera violation.
Witnesses can be very helpful at your fair hearing. A witness can be anyone who can support your story. You will need to ask your witness questions at the fair hearing. Write down questions and practice the questions and answers with your witness. The judge and the welfare center representative can also ask your witness questions at the fair hearing.
Organization can be a very important factor in winning your fair hearing. Your hearing may be very short and you may not get a chance to say everything you want. Plan what you want to say before your hearing. Write down:
It can be easy to lose track of things at the hearing. Don't let anyone rush you. Relax and follow your plan!
Check in with the receptionist. Ask to look at your case record before the hearing, even if you have seen it before. You may have to wait for a while. When the judge is ready to hear your case, you will be sent to a hearing room. A hearing room is not a courtroom. It is an office with a table and chairs.
The judge and a welfare worker will be there. The welfare worker is called the agency representative. He or she will try to show the judge that the city is right and you are wrong. The agency representative is usually not a lawyer and has never worked on your welfare problem. Ask for an official interpreter if you do not speak English.
It is best to bring an advocate to help you win your fair hearing. Check with your local community center, hospital, school, legal services or Legal Aid office to find someone who can be your advocate. If you can't find an advocate, you can bring a family member or friend to help.
The judge runs the hearing. The judge should start the hearing by using the telephone to turn on the recording equipment. This is called going on the record. The judge must record everything that is said when you are in the room. The judge will explain the reason for the hearing. Tell the judge if you asked for a fair hearing for a different reason. Everything recorded at the hearing and all evidence given to the judge is on the record. Make sure everything said is recorded. The recording may help you if you lose and appeal.
The agency representative explains the welfare center's side of the story first. He or she will try to show the judge that the city is right and will give the judge evidence. This proof should be in the evidence packet. Remember that the agency representative may not be from your welfare center and may never have worked on your problem. Don't be afraid to ask questions and tell the judge if you disagree. For example, ask the judge to explain any papers or anything the agency representative says that you don't understand. The agency representative can later ask you and your witnesses questions.
Remember that you cannot change the issue at your fair hearing. The judge will hold the hearing only on the reason you gave when you asked for the hearing. If there is a new problem, ask for another fair hearing.
Your fair hearing should be run fairly. Tell the judge if you think it is not.
You tell your story after the agency representative tells the city's side of the story. Tell the judge dates of events and give the judge copies of papers that support your story. For example, if you talk about a notice sent by your welfare center, give the notice to the judge. The written proof you give to the judge is called an exhibit. The judge may ask questions. Answer them as best you can. Tell the judge if the agency representative said something wrong. Tell your whole story and give all your proof to the judge. The agency representative may also ask you questions. Answer them as best you can.
Yes. After your fair hearing, ask the judge or agency representative where to get your subway or bus carfare. If you have a note from your doctor that says you need to take a car service for medical reasons, you may get car service money too. To get money for child care so that you can come to your fair hearing, you need a letter from your babysitter. The letter must say the babysitter's name and Social Security number, the names of your children, the date and hours of care, and the hourly rate of pay.
After your fair hearing, you will receive a decision in the mail. The decision will tell the center what to do. Your welfare center must obey the decision.
You should receive a decision fair hearing decision in the mail a few weeks after your hearing. If more than 3 months go by from the date you requested your hearing, call the Fair Hearing Office in Albany at (518) 474-8781.
After the decision is made, your welfare center has 10 days to make the changes the judge ordered. Welfare centers often do not obey fair hearing decisions. If your center ignores the decision, send a letter and a copy of the cover page of the Fair Hearing Decision to the address listed on it. In the letter, explain that your welfare center didn't obey the decision.
Don't forget to bring a copy of the decision to the Fair Hearing Compliance Unit in your welfare center.
You can appeal the decision in court. You must file the appeal within 4 months of the date of your fair hearing decision in New York State Supreme Court. It is best to get help from an attorney. Contact The Legal Aid Society or a legal services office for more information. You should request a copy of your fair hearing record and recording. Write to:
Fair Hearing Transcript Unit New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance P. O. Box 1930 Albany, NY 12201-1930
An abandoned fair hearing or default means that you did not show up for your hearing. Unless you ask right away to reschedule your hearing, you will automatically lose.
An Acknowledgment of Fair Hearing Request and Confirmation of Aid Status is a letter telling you that your request for a fair hearing has been received. The letter will also say whether you will get aid continuing while you wait for your hearing.
An advocate is a person who speaks for you at your hearing. This person should know how the welfare system works. An advocate can be a friend, teacher, counselor, social worker, or legal worker.
Agency representative means a worker who represents the welfare center at your hearing. This agency is called the New York City Department of Social Services. It is also called the Human Resources Administration or 'HRA'. The agency representative will try to show the judge that the city is right and you are wrong.
Aid continuing means that your benefits will stay the same while you wait for your fair hearing decision. Aid continuing is important because it may take weeks or months to get a fair hearing decision.
An appeal is when you try to change a decision made by a welfare center or a judge.
The case record is a collection of all the papers about your case kept by your welfare center or other welfare office. It should include more papers than the evidence packet.
A conference is a meeting with a worker from your welfare center to discuss your case.
The evidence packet is a collection of papers your welfare center or other welfare office believes supports its case.
Exhibits are papers given to the judge during the fair hearing. Make sure the judge numbers your exhibits. The judge must take a copy of each exhibit that goes on the record.
A homebound hearing is for someone who can not travel to a fair hearing office. The hearing will be done by telephone.
A Decision after the Fair Hearing is a letter telling you how your fair hearing was decided.
A Notice of Intent or Notice of Decision is a letter that you receive from a welfare office. Before your benefits can be changed, the welfare center must send you a Notice of Intent or Notice of Decision that says when and why your benefits will be changed.
Statements made on the record at your fair hearing are recorded. You can ask for a copy of the recording if you lose your hearing. The recording is important if you want to challenge your fair hearing decision in a court of law.
A Rivera violation means that you requested your evidence packet at least 5 work days before your hearing and the packet was not mailed to you within 3 days after the request was received. You should win your hearing if you requested your evidence packet in time. Make sure to say this to the judge.
A Rodriguez violation means the agency representative did not bring your complete case record to your fair hearing when the issue is a change in benefits. You should win your hearing if your case record is not at your fair hearing. Make sure to say this to the judge.