Parks v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration

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Petitioner Rachel Parks appealed an administrative law judge's denial of her application for supplemental security income on behalf of her minor son, D.P. D.P. suffered from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and borderline intellectual functioning. An administrative law judge denied Parks’s application because D.P. did not suffer from a condition that entitled him to supplemental security income. Parks filed a request for review with the Appeals Council, and she submitted new evidence of D.P.’s academic struggles. The Appeals Council supplemented the record with the new evidence, but denied review. Parks then filed a complaint in the district court, which affirmed the denial of her application. She argued on appeal to the Eleventh Circuit: (1) the administrative law judge's denial of Parks's application was not supported by substantial evidence; and (2) the Social Security Appeals Council needed to make explicit findings of fact about new evidence that it added to the record when it denied review. Because the administrative law judge’s decision was supported by substantial evidence and the Appeals Council was not required to make specific findings about Parks’s new evidence, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed. View "Parks v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration" on Justia Law