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May
2008
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Why Are You Getting This Newsletter?
This free e-mail newsletter is sent to current and
former clients of our law firm, to those who
have specifically asked to receive it, and to
those who have contacted our firm for legal
advice in the past.
If the newsletter is being sent to you
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Kraft & Associates will never sell or give
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Average
Processing Times For
Social Security
Disability Claims
The list of the most
recently available
average processing
times for Social
Security disability
claims throughout
the nation has been
published by
NOSSCR. The
Dallas and Forth
Worth offices rank
closer to the top
than to the bottom,
but processing times
across the country
are abysmal and
grossly unfair to claimants.
The times as of the
first of March 2008
range from 258 days
in Harrisburg, to
816 days in
Indianapolis. Fort
Worth ranks 43rd out
of 143 offices, with
an average
processing time of
405 days. The North
Dallas office ranks
57th, with an
average processing
time of 437 days,
and the Downtown
Dallas office ranks
66th, with an
average processing
time of 460 days.
There have been so many food recalls lately that some of us are losing weight just worrying about the safety of what we eat. The federal government has a site filled with good information about food safety. FoodSafety.gov is a gateway Web site that provides links to selected government food safety-related information.
Free Legal Advice?
Yes, at Kraft &
Associates we are glad to provide our clients
and friends with free information on a variety
of subjects. If you want details about how to
lower your automobile insurance rates,
Texas Workers' Compensation law or
Social Security Disability claims, please
contact us and we will send you any of these
brochures without charge or obligation. |
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Suite 1300
2777 Stemmons Freeway
Dallas, TX 75207
(214) 999-9999
(817) 999-9999
(800) 989-9999
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FOR THE RECORD |
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Texas May Actually Punish Uninsured
Motorists (Finally)
As reported in the Dallas Morning News,
Texas may actually start getting serious
about
punishing uninsured motorists. Of
course, I'll believe that when I see it
happen.
For many years, it has been against the
law to operate a motor vehicle in Texas
without complying with the financial
responsibility act — basically either
showing proof of liability insurance or
putting up a bond to be self-insured.
But that law has never been vigorously
prosecuted, and there has been no
state-wide effort to identify uninsured
motorists and get them off the road.
Why? Because the auto insurance
companies have always been opposed to
mandatory auto insurance, and in Texas the
insurance companies control the
Legislature and the courts.
Auto insurance companies make high
profits for the same reasons health
insurance companies do — they insure
only the cream of the crop, unless
forced to do otherwise by law. So auto
insurance companies are perfectly happy
to insure only the people who are rich
enough to easily afford insurance and
who are responsible enough to buy it. As
for the poor and/or irresponsible
drivers, the carriers would much rather
not be burdened by insuring them. Here
are excerpts from the newspaper article:
Three years after the Legislature
passed a law to crack down on
uninsured motorists, the number of
drivers caught without insurance
coverage under the 2005 statute is
exactly – zero.
Start-up of the new insurance
verification program has been
snagged by initial delays in hiring
a private contractor to create a
database, differences among state
agencies responsible for
implementing the law, worries that
some data may be inaccurate and
doubts about the program by the
insurance industry.
The program, funded with an annual
$1 fee paid by all Texas drivers
when renewing their vehicle
registration, aims to create a
database for police officers, state
troopers and vehicle inspection
stations to instantly verify whether
a motorist has the minimum coverage
required under state law. The
database would be set up with
information provided by insurers.
An estimated one in five Texans
drives without insurance, costing
insured motorists an extra $1
billion a year for protection
against uninsured drivers. State
officials say they are aiming to
launch a pilot program in June.
Between 3 million and 4 million of
the state's 16 million drivers are
uninsured, according to state
officials and the insurance
industry.
"We have never supported any sort of
compulsory auto insurance,
particularly one open to
inaccuracies when using a database,"
said Jerry Johns, president of
Southwestern Insurance Information
Service, an industry group.
Although Texas has had a financial
responsibility law requiring drivers
to buy insurance for several years,
enforcement has been difficult even
though proof of insurance must be
furnished to get a license renewal
or safety inspection.
Millions of motorists skirt the law
by using counterfeit
proof-of-insurance cards or by
obtaining a month's coverage of
insurance to get an ID card, only to
cancel the policy once they get
their licenses renewed or their
vehicles inspected.
Under the state program, a driver
pulled over for a traffic violation
or involved in an accident will
still be asked to produce proof of
insurance. But the officer also will
run the license plate of the vehicle
through the insurance database to
determine whether the driver has
insurance.
The state also will contact drivers
without insurance by mail, warning
them of the consequences for not
having an insurance policy.
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YOUR INFORMATION |
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Reminder - Texas
Auto Liability Minimum Limits Raised
I've written before about
the woefully low minimum automobile
liability insurance limits in Texas, and how
they were going to be changed in April 2008.
Well, the time has finally come, and as of
April 1, 2008, the minimum insurance
requirements were increased under the Texas
Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility Act.
This applies to policies purchased or
renewed on or after that date.
Now, the minimum limits are no longer
20,000/40,000/15.000. The new state-mandated
limits are 25,000/50,000/25,000. That means
$25,000 for bodily injury to or death of one
person in one accident; $50,000 for bodily
injury to or death of two or more persons in
one accident; and $25,000 for damage to or
destruction of the property of others in one
accident. These limits are still far too
low, both for injury and property damage,
but at least it's a small step in the right
direction.
We advise all our clients to purchase more
than the minimum limits if possible, and
please pay the few extra dollars to add
Personal Injury Protection and Uninsured
Motorist coverage to your policy. Statistics
show that approximately 25% of all Texas motorists
have no auto insurance coverage. If you get
hit by one of those drivers and you don't
have Uninsured Motorist coverage, you'll
probably be out of luck. Talk to your
insurance agent now about adding this
coverage.
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| FEATURED
EMPLOYEE |
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Vera Hicks
Social Security Department Manager
E-mail:
vhicks@kraftlaw.com
Ms. Hicks joined our law firm in 1986.
She has filled various positions for us
over the years, including Bookkeeper. Ms.
Hicks now serves as Social Security
Department Manager, and also as our
Administrative Assistant. As
Administrative Assistant, she works
closely with other management personnel in
training new employees, and in
establishing firm policies. Ms. Hicks is
fluent in Spanish.
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| FEATURED
CASE |
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Positive Changes For F-1
Students With "STEM" Degrees
Our law firm represents
foreign students in
various types of cases.
The government made
changes recently that
will benefit some
students in certain
degree plans.
An optional practical
training (OPT)
authorizes F-1 students
to receive up to 12
months of practical
training either before
or after completion of
their studies. On April
8, 2008, an interim
final rule was issued
stating that certain F-1
students will be
eligible to receive a
17-month extension
following the completion
of their OPT. Under the
new rule, F-1 students
with a degree in
Science, Technology,
Engineering, or
Mathematics (STEM), who
are employed by
employers enrolled in
E-Verify, and who have
received an initial OPT
related to such a degree
may apply for a 17-month
extension of the OPT.
The student will file
for the 17-month STEM
extension on Form I-765
Application for
Employment
Authorization, and
include a copy of the
STEM degree, and Form
I-20 endorsed by the
Designated School
Official.
F-1 students with STEM
degrees may benefit from
this final rule if they
are the beneficiaries of
an approved H-1B
petition by
automatically extending
their F-1 status. This
allows the student to
remain in the U.S. and
continue working until
October 1, the start
date of the H-1B
petition.
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| HOW
CAN WE HELP YOU? |
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Our law firm has helped thousands of clients
over the years. Sometimes clients who use
our firm for one type of case may not
realize that there are other legal problems
we could help them solve.
We handle
most types of injury claims — including
automobile collisions, "slip and fall"
cases, injuries suffered as a result of
defective products, injuries resulting from
inadequate security, medical malpractice
claims, nursing home negligence claims,
prescription drug injuries and many others.
We invite you to call us about any
serious injury to see how we can help you.
Kraft & Associates also represents people
who have been denied their Social Security
Disability benefits. We can help at the
Initial stage, the Reconsideration stage or
the Hearing stage. We can help you, your
family or friends with any Immigration question.
Our law firm represents people who have immigration
problems of any kind, whether family-based
immigration or employment-based immigration.
We also help people who have problems
regarding family issues, such as divorce, child
support, adoption, modifications, enforcements,
attorney general disputes, paternity and other similar
matters. We also represent clients who have been
arrested or charged with committing a crime.
Please feel free to call us with any
legal questions you may have. If we cannot
represent you, we will attempt to refer you
to another attorney or to a government
agency that can help you. There is never any
charge or obligation for our initial
consultation. |
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Copyright
© 1997- 2008 Kraft & Associates : Injury &
Disability Lawyers, P.C. All Rights Reserved Worldwide. Personal Injury,
Automobile Accident, Wrongful Death, Nursing Home Negligence,
Social Security Disability.
DISCLAIMER:
This newsletter is presented by Kraft & Associates for
informational purposes only, and not as legal advice.
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