Fatcow Icon
Too many ‘disabled’ people living on dime of taxpayers
Oct 28, 2011 | 1163 views | 5 5 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

To the Editor,

I am writing this letter because I am very concerned about the large number of people who are being classified as “disabled.” Every time I go to Walmart or Food Lion, I notice folks taking the premium parking spots and walking in to get their goods. They are not disabled. So, who did they pay or how did they get those parking permits?

More importantly, as a property owner/renter I am having an onslaught of people apply for rentals who declare they are disabled That is their income!

One gal, 27, told me she had post traumatic stress disorder. Now this woman is getting $900 a month for life. She, under questioning, said, “Well my parents were divorced and I was in the middle.” Oh, how tragic! So are 50 percent of us.

Another man who rented from me was 29. He receives $2,400 a month for life. Seems he fell from a roof while building a house. Spent months in a hospital. I asked him about his new car, and he confessed it was a convertible. OK, taxpayer problem.

Last week a woman applied for a condo. She and her eight-year fianceé were both disabled. On her application she stated she was 49, and he was 50. When I inquired more, she had an irregular heart beat, and he had asthma. Wow, that sounds like taxpayers should pay her rent, don’t you agree?

Listen, I’m ending this but when I see TV ads from lawyers inviting folks to come to them to get disability, saying ” if we don’t win, you don’t pay,!” I get sick.

D.V. Townsend

High Point



Comments
(5)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
stoneray
|
November 03, 2011
It is sad when programs that were created to help those truly in need, (in some cases temporarily and in others permanently,have turned into a system of enabling. Our current system will fail when the abuse outpaces what tax payers are able to contribute.

I have heard of individuals that do not understand how the system is supported. They realize on some levels that the money is funded by the government, but they do not connect the funding back to the taxpayers. In many cases they probably do not care as long as that monthly check is in the mail.
HFaith
|
November 23, 2011
ALL of these "Comments" are exactly what I was talking about in my Letter a week or so ago about how so many people take advantage and "work the system" --- it is amazing to me how this is allowed to continue and it is also amazing to me how "easy" it seems to be for these people to receive "assistance"; I have so many joint/bone problems (a page full)and it is very difficult for me to even walk at times but I "walk" from a regular parking space into the stores - I have on many occasions seen young people park in the "Handicap" Parking Spaces and "run" into the store ...!!! yep, they had a "card" on their mirror(???) -. Seems to me two very important things are now missing in our Society today -- those are "PRIDE and RESPECT" ... obviously these words are no longer what they once were - along with many other things. I am amazed when I go into a store and see the "young people" with their pants hanging down to their knees, talking on a cell phone, give the cashier Food Stamps, every other word a curse word and very rude to many of those around them. Hopefully the Health Department will wake up in Robeson County and hire some additional help to investigate fraud, etc. of the "System" and do more checking into applicants who are constantly in line for more "assistance" ... it is my understanding there is a maximum of $600 per year people can receive - if this is the case, HOW do they continue receiving far more than that???? Someone also told me how some people who receive food stamps have a "BIG RACKET" and they sell them to people - if they are verified when used, how could this be happening? Obviously those who should be in charge are not doing what should be done to prevent all the fraud taking place and all those who are not qualified being allowed to "work the system" ... it certainly doesn't take a "MENTAL GIANT" to verify women who have one baby after another in order to receive ADC, as well as couples who have these children, live together, not married so they will qualify for assistance. I would recommend someone be hired to "check" on all the women receiving ADC and confirm some of these issues or even better - ask them to present their Marriage License at the time they apply and certainly LIMIT the number of children the tax payers have to pay for and make certain their claim is legitimate - if they were raped or some other reason other than simply having sex and becoming pregnant - surely they must know "what" causes them to become pregnant and if not, educate them!! It's time this racket come to an END once and for all - in many areas.
Disturbed
|
November 01, 2011
I have asthma and at times I have trouble walking 30 feet without wheezing and giving out of breath. Not only that I have arthritis in all of my joints that is very advanced making it very painful to walk at times. I have spinal stenosis, along with several other ailments that severely hinder my ability to walk any distance at all. Still, if I can I do not use my disability placard and try to save those spaces for those who are in worse shape than I am. It makes me so mad that I can hardly find a handicapped space when I really have to have one only to see a perfectly healthy 20 something hop out of their mom or dad's car and run into the store. My kids will often let me out at the door and then find a parking space. I know several people that are drawing disability checks that seem perfectly healthy enough to keep having babies and they go to dances on Saturday night.. hmm wonder if that is physical therapy?>
reverend_katharine
|
October 30, 2011
I agree, by and large, with the vast majority of your letter. That said, two things I would like to add to take into account. Simply because somebody parks in a placarded area and is able to walk into the store doesn't mean they don't have a disability that would make getting into the store from a longer distance difficult. Not all disabilities are immediately visible, and trying to judge whether somebody has a disability that would make ambulation difficult at first glance doesn't always work.

Secondly, I FULLY and THOROUGLY agree that there are far too many people living off of disability who actually could very well hold down jobs. In some cases, the individuals don't have the get up and go to get up and go and actually try. That said, in many more cases the problem isn't with the individuals with the disabilities. It's with the employers in North Carolina. More than 50% of them do not follow the laws set forth by the Americans with Disabilities Act. Many buildings aren't accessible. Many employers do not allow for an employee to have an aide or to step away from their desk for medical purposes. Many employers insist that the use of a service animal in the workplace would disrupt the other employees. Legal? No. But it happens. And as we're an "at will" state, employers don't have to give a reason for their decisions.

Just a few things to add to the problem.
BBBD
|
October 28, 2011
Too true. There are plenty of jobs that don't require manual labor, so what's preventing these people from working? Oh, yeah, that monthly check they get "for free."

You'd be surprised how many people at the fitness center get free/reduced memberships because they are disabled. Read that again. They WALK into the fitness center and work out for free/less because they are disabled.

BRB, building a multi-million dollar building to facilitate the taking of money from those who work in order to give it to those who don't.
Weather
Sponsored By:

Lottery
Sponsored By:

Stocks
Sponsored By:

Gas Prices
Sponsored By:

Featured Businesses
Recipes
Sponsored By: