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Cayuga Milk Ingredients plant expansion set for spring of 2023
AUBURN, N.Y. — Cayuga Milk Ingredients (CMI) is calling it a “new venture,” preparing to expand its Auburn facility for bottling capabilities next spring. Construction on the project has an estimated cost of $145 million, Neil Rejman, CMI board chairman, tells CNYBJ in an email. In all, the plant expansion is expected to create 70 […]
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AUBURN, N.Y. — Cayuga Milk Ingredients (CMI) is calling it a “new venture,” preparing to expand its Auburn facility for bottling capabilities next spring.
Construction on the project has an estimated cost of $145 million, Neil Rejman, CMI board chairman, tells CNYBJ in an email.
In all, the plant expansion is expected to create 70 full-time positions, in addition to construction jobs and retention of the current staff of 91.
The expansion will help “meet the demand for shelf-stable contract manufacturing demanded by the marketplace,” the company said.
The project — a 130,000-square-foot addition on Eagle Drive in Auburn — is in its final engineering phase. It’ll add an aseptic processor, bottling, and packaging line, allowing CMI to produce finished products for the extended shelf-life beverage market.
Aseptic processing utilizes sterilization equipment to produce “safe, shelf-stable, healthy food for the community,” CMI said
Additional improvements will include expanded wastewater-treatment facilities, developing stormwater retention, trucking and parking enrichments, and utility upgrades, the company added.
The high-speed bottling line will have the ability to produce up to 150,000 gallons of milk-based drinks per day. Products will be palletized and then stored onsite in a warehouse using automated storage and retrieval system (ASRS) technology.
Established in 2014, Cayuga Milk Ingredients is a farmer-owned company that processes milk from 30 family-owned dairy farms within the Finger Lakes region.
New York manufacturing index turned positive in November
Empire State Survey indicates sector expansion The general business-conditions index of the monthly Empire State Manufacturing Survey bounced back into positive territory in November — climbing 14 points to 4.5 — as the industry expanded again. The index had declined 8 points to -9.1 in October as the sector contracted. The general business-conditions
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Empire State Survey indicates sector expansion
The general business-conditions index of the monthly Empire State Manufacturing Survey bounced back into positive territory in November — climbing 14 points to 4.5 — as the industry expanded again.
The index had declined 8 points to -9.1 in October as the sector contracted. The general business-conditions index is the monthly gauge of New York state’s manufacturing activity.
The November index reading — based on firms responding to the survey — indicates business activity “edged slightly higher” in New York, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in its Nov. 15 survey report. The improvement was much better than expected as economists were expecting the benchmark index to remain in negative territory at about -6, according to a cnbc.com article.
A positive index number indicates expansion or growth in manufacturing activity, while a negative reading shows a decline in activity.
The survey found 33 percent of manufacturing respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, while 29 percent said that conditions had worsened, the New York Fed said.
Survey details
The Empire State Survey’s new-orders index slipped 7 points to -3.3, pointing to a small decline in orders, while the shipments index rose 8 points to 8.0, indicating that shipments increased, the New York Fed said.
The unfilled-orders index moved down to -6.8, a sign that unfilled orders were slightly lower. The delivery-times index came in at 2.9, indicating delivery times were little changed.
The inventories index jumped 12 points to 16.5, “pointing to rising inventories.”
The index for number of employees climbed 5 points to 12.2, pointing to an increase in employment levels. The average-workweek index edged up to 6.9, signaling a small increase in hours worked.
The prices-paid index was little changed at 50.5, suggesting that input prices increased at about the same pace as the prior month, while the prices-received index rose 4 points to 27.2, pointing to a small pickup in selling-price increases.
The index for future business conditions fell 4 points to -6.1, indicating that on net firms expect conditions to worsen over the next six months. The indexes for future new orders and shipments fell into negative territory, though employment is expected to continue to increase.
Modest increases in capital spending and technology spending are planned for the months ahead.
The New York Fed distributes the Empire State Manufacturing Survey on the first day of each month to the same pool of about 200 manufacturing executives in New York state. On average, about 100 executives return responses.

Seneca Foods’ net sales rise more than 18% in latest quarter
FAIRPORT, N.Y. — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) recently reported that net sales for the three-month period ending Oct. 1 increased 18.1 percent to nearly $440 million from more than $372 million in the year-prior quarter. The company — a Finger Lakes–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including
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FAIRPORT, N.Y. — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) recently reported that net sales for the three-month period ending Oct. 1 increased 18.1 percent to nearly $440 million from more than $372 million in the year-prior quarter.
The company — a Finger Lakes–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including Geneva and Penn Yan — attributed most of the $67.5 million increase in sales in the period to higher selling prices and an improved sales mix.
Gross margin as a percentage of net sales in the latest quarter was 9.5 percent, compared to 11.5 percent in the prior year. The year-over-year decrease was mainly due to a $20.4 million increase in the firm’s LIFO (last in/last out) charge.
“Inflation continues to have an impact on our reported earnings as a non-cash pre-tax LIFO charge of $29.2 million was incurred in the 3 months ended October 1, 2022,” Paul Palmby, president and CEO of Seneca Foods, said in the company’s Nov. 9 earnings report. “However, through cost mitigation and needed pricing advances reflecting the reality of persistent inflationary pressure, we have been able to minimize the impact on our results. In addition, with a successful raw product pack season, inventory levels are sufficient to fully support customer needs.”
Seneca Foods says it is one of North America’s leading providers of packaged fruits and vegetables. Its products are primarily sourced from more than 1,400 American farms and are distributed to over 80 countries. The firm’s corporate office is in Fairport, near Rochester. Seneca says it holds a large share of the market for retail private label, food service, restaurant chains, international, contracting packaging, industrial, chips, and cherry products. Products are also sold under the brands of Libby’s, Aunt Nellie’s, Green Valley, CherryMan, READ, and Seneca.

Verizon to handle Onondaga County’s rural broadband program
LaFAYETTE — Verizon (NYSE: VZ) will carry out the task of deploying broadband services in several communities within Onondaga County. The effort will bring all-fiber, high-speed broadband services to more than 1,500 locations across the county. The funding for the initiative includes $11.1 million from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) and a nearly $7
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LaFAYETTE — Verizon (NYSE: VZ) will carry out the task of deploying broadband services in several communities within Onondaga County.
The effort will bring all-fiber, high-speed broadband services to more than 1,500 locations across the county. The funding for the initiative includes $11.1 million from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) and a nearly $7 million investment from Verizon.
Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon on Nov. 15 made the announcement at the LaFayette Town Hall.
“Onondaga County is proud of this initiative and pleased to help deliver this vital service to our rural residents,” McMahon said in a release. “Verizon’s choice to partner with us and invest in the county is another indicator of the resurgence that is occurring here. Moving forward with FiOS broadband is a huge competitive advantage and will help our residents recover more quickly from the economic impact of the pandemic. It also provides vastly greater data capacity at a time that virtually every consumer is relying more on online services to function remotely. It will also set the stage for increased competition in the data and voice sectors.”
“Verizon is focused on delivering broadband service, and the major economic benefits associated with it, to Central New York,” Kevin Service, senior VP of wireline network operations at Verizon, said. “We are pleased to work with Onondaga County to achieve our common goal of increasing broadband access for unserved and underserved areas in the State. This project will significantly help to close the digital divide in that region.”
The Communications Workers of America (CWA) supported Verizon’s bid, per the Onondaga County announcement.
“On behalf of our members, we are pleased to offer our endorsement of Verizon’s bid to work with Onondaga County and build a state-of-the-art fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) network to unserved and underserved locations in the County,” Dennis Trainor, VP, CWA District 1, said. “Verizon has unparalleled experience in FTTP broadband in Onondaga County and has a directly employed, highly skilled and well-trained union workforce with a proven track record of delivering broadband service with incredible speed, reliability and quality to New Yorkers.”
Verizon will leverage its supplier relationships to meet the goals set by Onondaga County related to minority/women-owned business enterprises (MWBE). Anticipated suppliers include Corning Incorporated and Right Price Companies (RPC technology) of Syracuse, which are expected to supply Verizon with fiber-optic cable and other materials, per the announcement.

Northland VP appointed NYS Council SHRM workforce readiness director
Theresa Jalowiec, VP of people and talent at Northland Communications, and sister company, Oneida County Rural Telephone (OCRT), has been appointed as the new workforce readiness director for the New York State Council of the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM). The State Council serves as the bridge between local state chapters and SHRM. With more
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Theresa Jalowiec, VP of people and talent at Northland Communications, and sister company, Oneida County Rural Telephone (OCRT), has been appointed as the new workforce readiness director for the New York State Council of the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM).
The State Council serves as the bridge between local state chapters and SHRM. With more than 305,000 national SHRM members, SHRM is the voice for the HR profession and strives to create better workplaces where employers and employees thrive together.
Jalowiec begins her new role in January and will evaluate workforce-readiness issues and lead chapter advocates in the planning of activities impacting the workforce-readiness arena. She will monitor state and local activities like workforce-investment authorization, welfare-to-work, and education partnerships.
“We are very proud of Theresa’s appointment [as] workforce readiness director,” Brian Healey, chief operating officer, at Northland Communications, said in a company news release. “Her experience as a leader in the community of SHRM has already made a huge impact internally at Northland and in our local community, but now it will continue to, statewide.”
In addition to her new role, Jalowiec currently serves as past president for the Mohawk Valley SHRM board of directors.
Northland Communications is a Central New York–based telecommunications provider, offering cloud-based voice, data, and equipment solutions to businesses over its fiber-optic network. It has offices in Holland Patent and Syracuse.

Syracuse professor uses NSF future seed grant for cutting-edge work
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — More new therapeutic treatments for various diseases could move into clinical trials and “potentially faster” into mainstream medical use — if scientists could find ways to manufacture “exponentially higher quantities” of the stem-cell components needed for medical testing. Zhen Ma, an associate professor at Syracuse University, is leading the work to make
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — More new therapeutic treatments for various diseases could move into clinical trials and “potentially faster” into mainstream medical use — if scientists could find ways to manufacture “exponentially higher quantities” of the stem-cell components needed for medical testing.
Zhen Ma, an associate professor at Syracuse University, is leading the work to make those cell-manufacturing process discoveries, the university announced Nov. 17. Ma is the Carol and Samuel Nappi research scholar in Syracuse’s College of Engineering and Computer Science.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded Ma a $500,000 future manufacturing seed grant for the project, which he’s coordinating with bioengineering experts at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT).
As Syracuse University describes it, Ma’s project is examining new ways to ramp up the quantity of extracellular vesicles (EVs), produced from mesenchymal stem cells that can be manufactured in a lab to meet the therapeutic “critical need” for biological products.
The cells have the ability to use EVs to communicate with other cells by transferring proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids using EVs as a compartment.
EVs produced by mesenchymal stem cells can inhibit inflammation, modulate immune responses, reduce cell die-off, and enhance tissue repair and regeneration, per a university release.
At present, EV manufacturing capacity remains “far below desired needs,” according to Ma.
“We are currently at the beginning stage, in that engineers can manufacture perhaps 100,000 cells in a lab, although the capacity needed to scale-up production of more than one million cells a day is the level needed to bring EV use to bear in the clinical trial stage,” he added.
With the NSF future manufacturing seed grant, Ma and his research partners are looking to boost EV production in “what would technically be described as integrating human induced pluripotent stem cells for scalability in the donor cell source, genome engineering for scalability in EV biogenesis and advanced nano-membrane technology for scalability in EV purification,” per the release.
It is a project that can be “potentially transformative” in EV biomanufacturing due to several technological advances that would improve not only the scalability, but also the “consistency and therapeutic potency” of next-generation EVs, Ma said.
Partnering with RIT
As principal investigator on the project, Ma is teaming up with co-principal investigators affiliated with RIT.
They include Thomas Gaborski, professor and director of the RIT biomedical and chemical engineering Ph.D. program, and Karin Wuertz-Kozak, a professor of biomedical engineering and director of RIT’s tissue regeneration and mechanobiology lab.
In addition, Aslan (Mehdi) Dehghani, lead extracellular vesicle scientist, is also involved. He is a bioengineer on the corporate research team of Sartorius Stedim North America, one of the largest global biotechnology firms, Syracuse University noted. The company provides products to biopharmaceutical companies and laboratories to simplify and accelerate progress in bioprocessing.
Dehghani, current collaborator and former trainee of Gaborski, will provides his expertise in EV purification to this project.
In addition to the immediate effort to find ways to boost levels of manufacturing EVs in labs, Ma said the team also has a “longer-term goal.” They want to obtain a “fundamental understanding” of the biogenesis process, regulatory mechanism, physiochemical properties, and biological functions of EVs to “further advance” the biomanufacturing of therapeutic EVs from various stem-cell types.
That work calls for new expertise in EV biology, bioreactor design, biomanufacturing processing, and quality controls, Syracuse University said.

Australian company, four Upstate firms win Grow-NY funding
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — An Australian firm and four Upstate startups were among the businesses winning funding in this year’s Grow-NY business competition. Judges awarded the $1 million grand prize to ProAgni of Lavington, Australia during the two-day summit held Nov. 15-16 at the Oncenter Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center in downtown Syracuse. Grow-NY is a
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — An Australian firm and four Upstate startups were among the businesses winning funding in this year’s Grow-NY business competition.
Judges awarded the $1 million grand prize to ProAgni of Lavington, Australia during the two-day summit held Nov. 15-16 at the Oncenter Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center in downtown Syracuse.
Grow-NY is a food and agriculture startup challenge focused on “enhancing the emerging food, beverage, and agriculture innovation cluster in Central New York, the Finger Lakes, and the Southern Tier,” as described in a Nov. 17 announcement from the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
Besides ProAgni, Craft Cannery of Bergan in Genesee County — which specializes in the contract manufacturing of sauces, dressings, and marinades — captured one of two $500,000 prizes. Hempitecture from Ketchum, Idaho was the other $500,000 winner.
Sweet Pea Plant-Based Kitchen of Rochester and Zaliant of Amsterdam in Montgomery County, both picked up $250,000 prizes. Firms from Toronto, Ontario and Cambridge, Massachusetts also took home $250,000.
The competition also included an “Audience Choice” award for the startup voted by the public to have the “most standout and promising pitch.” Seneca Farms Biochar of Odessa in Schuyler County, north of Elmira, received $10,000 in prize money, sponsored by Wegmans.
ProAgni’s ProTect is a range of supplements and feeds for livestock that lowers methane emissions from sheep and cattle without the use of antibiotics, “decreasing a producer’s environmental footprint without increasing costs,” per the announcement.
“We are honored to join the incredible roster of Grow-NY winners, and grateful to New York state, Grow-NY, and the Center of Excellence for Food and Agriculture for their support,” Lachlan Campbell, CEO and co-founder of ProAgni, said. “We’re excited to expand our mission to revolutionize supplements and feeds for livestock that lower methane emissions into Upstate New York and the prize money will allow us to make an even greater impact. We’ve had an amazing experience throughout the program, from the guidance and connections our mentor Brad Goulthrope provided to the regional partners we were able to meet, to our competitors whose cutting-edge work and pitches were truly inspiring.”
ProAgni was one of eight finalists to take home prize money. The winning teams must commit to operating in the Central New York, Finger Lakes, or Southern Tier regions for at least one year, while providing Grow-NY with a small equity-investment stake in their entity.
Funding for the competition, which is administered by Cornell University’s Center for Regional Economic Advancement, is provided through the state’s Upstate Revitalization Initiative, Hochul’s office said.

Workforce development is a priority for MVCC’s AIM
UTICA, N.Y. — The Advanced Institute for Manufacturing (AIM) at Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) offers a host of services to manufacturing businesses within the six-county Mohawk Valley region as a New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) center. “We are one of 11 MEP centers located in the state of New York,” says AIM Director
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UTICA, N.Y. — The Advanced Institute for Manufacturing (AIM) at Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) offers a host of services to manufacturing businesses within the six-county Mohawk Valley region as a New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) center.
“We are one of 11 MEP centers located in the state of New York,” says AIM Director Cory Albrecht. The institute serves Fulton, Herkimer, Montgomery, Oneida, and Schoharie counties as a centralized access point for manufacturing and technology assistance. “Our mission is to support small and mid-sized manufacturing in the Mohawk Valley region, helping them grow their business and become more profitable,” he notes.
Some of the programming topics AIM covers to help those businesses include lean manufacturing, lean six sigma, cybersecurity, risk assessment and training, and quality management systems, to name a few.
“We have a pretty comprehensive program for mid-level managers and supervisors,” Albrecht contends.
AIM also offers a lot of technical training in areas like welding, CNC machining, mechanical, electrical, and HVAC in conjunction with MVCC. As the only MEP located at a community college, AIM is able to access for-credit programming on the college side and bring that training right to a manufacturer’s doorstep, Albrecht notes. In that way, AIM helped companies like Oriskany Manufacturing and Bartell Machinery Systems, both of which needed qualified welders.
Businesses struggle because that trained workforce doesn’t really exist anymore, Albrecht says. “These companies are forced to really change their way of thinking and change their approach to workforce development.” Working with AIM is one way in which companies can get workers the training they need to fill those roles, he says.

While AIM continually offers a mix of programming, Albrecht says the institute works hard to provide companies with what they need. “Every business that we go into, they ask us for workers,” he says, so workforce development remains a dominant area of programming.
In that regard, AIM is collaborating closely with school districts in the region to promote jobs in manufacturing. Locally, that can include jobs at Wolfspeed, Danfoss, and Indium Corporation.
AIM has arranged trips for local high-school counselors, principals, and even superintendents to visit those companies and learn first-hand the types of jobs that are available.
“We have to give them the knowledge and create the awareness of what the Mohawk Valley region needs,” Albrecht says.
AIM also recently visited Rome Free Academy with FuzeHub and the Expertise Project to give a workforce presentation to more than 100 technology students. AIM also gifted the school with virtual reality (VR) headsets and no-cost licenses for career-exploration programming. Albrecht says AIM was able to make videos about what it’s like to work at local manufacturing companies like Fiber Instrument Sales Inc. and FX Matt Brewing Co. Students can explore welder, machinist, quality engineer, and other jobs with the VR headsets.
It’s all about providing information and also breaking down barriers that may prevent people from pursing manufacturing jobs, Albrecht says. For many, the perception of a manufacturing job is likely significantly skewed from the reality, he notes. Rather than a low-paying job in a dirty factory, the reality is much different in many of today’s manufacturing positions. “You wouldn’t believe what some of these advanced-manufacturing jobs pay,” he says.
New York state currently has more than 9,500 manufacturing jobs posted on Indeed.com, Albrecht says, and the average annual manufacturing compensation in the state is $80,394.
While AIM is able to help almost any manufacturing business, it specializes in microelectronics and semiconductors, food and beverage, metal and wood, and distribution.
VIEWPOINT: Celebrating a Well-Rounded, Skilled Workforce
Apprenticeship Week is a time when business, education, and government leaders can highlight the impact that workforce training and alternative pathways have on our state and our economy. Celebrated nationally from Monday, Nov. 14 to Sunday, Nov. 20, the week offered individuals a chance to consider some of the important benefits apprenticeship programs have, especially
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Apprenticeship Week is a time when business, education, and government leaders can highlight the impact that workforce training and alternative pathways have on our state and our economy. Celebrated nationally from Monday, Nov. 14 to Sunday, Nov. 20, the week offered individuals a chance to consider some of the important benefits apprenticeship programs have, especially students who want to explore trade work and other highly skilled positions.
In our community, we celebrated the week by showcasing Chloe Bonoffski, who signed an “earn-while-you-learn apprenticeship agreement” with locally owned and operated machine shop N.E.T. & Die, sponsored by MACNY, The Manufacturers Association.
Chloe was a student in the Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH) program before moving over to the Center for Instruction, Technology & Innovation (CiTi). Now, she has taken a huge step forward in her advanced-manufacturing career with this four-year agreement.
Stories like Chloe’s are great examples of how a vibrant professional-skills education pipeline can set students up for long-term career success. Our Assembly Minority Conference has been a strong voice for that pipeline, and we have pushed to strengthen it at every level of education. One such effort was our Assembly Minority Task Force on Learning for Work. At a series of several regional task-force forums, we engaged with business and education leaders to discuss important strategies for closing the professional-skills labor gap and ensuring every student has an opportunity to thrive in New York.
At the conclusion of the forums, the task force published a comprehensive report, including ways to make it easier to certify P-TECH teachers, expand awareness of the P-TECH program, and better integrate professional-skills training into the general public-school education system. As part of that initiative, members of our conference sponsored bill A.8426, which would create a three-part Learning for Work Program, including a youth-apprenticeship program, enhanced Regents professional degree, and youth-apprenticeship tax credit.
Further, I am proud to have co-sponsored bill A.7319 with Assemblyman Josh Jensen (R,C,I-Greece), which would establish a New York State Pathways in Technology Early College High School Program into law and create a funding mechanism to help ensure P-TECH programs thrive.
Well-rounded, effective education is the foundation of a strong workforce. I am hopeful each year we can celebrate more students like Chloe during Apprenticeship Week and continue to build the strong, vibrant workforce that our state needs.
William (Will) A. Barclay, 53, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses all of Oswego County, as well as parts of Jefferson and Cayuga counties.
Ask Rusty: How Do I Handle an Overpayment Notice from SSA?
Dear Rusty: Things have gone well for me until now. I got a job and have enjoyed going back to work after being retired. But I just got some bad news — a letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA), saying I owe it $17,000 because when I went back to work, I earned more
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Dear Rusty: Things have gone well for me until now. I got a job and have enjoyed going back to work after being retired. But I just got some bad news — a letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA), saying I owe it $17,000 because when I went back to work, I earned more than allowed in 2021. The agency never mentioned that I told it I was going back to work. The SSA now says it cannot pay me benefits in 2022 because I am working. Good job SSA, since I told you when I went back to work. Anyway, I can’t repay it all at once; I’m lucky to buy gas to get groceries. The SSA lists items for a waiver, but I am not sure what is best for me. I was planning to move for health reasons, but if I paid the agency all at once I would have nothing left for the move. I just started my research on how to handle this but hoped you would have some insight.
Signed: Un-retired Worker
Dear Un-retired Worker: Sorry to hear about the overpayment notice you have received from the SSA. Here are my thoughts: The repayment options it offered you are probably: a) remit the entire amount in full, or b) have your Social Security (SS) benefits withheld until the agency recovers what you owe, or c) ask for special payment terms because doing either of the above is a hardship.
At this juncture, you can request a waiver of the overpayment in either of two ways:
• File form SSA-632, which essentially says you agree you’ve been overpaid but think you shouldn’t be required to pay it back because it wasn’t your fault (it was Social Security’s fault because you notified it when you returned to work).
• File form SSA-634, which essentially says you agree you’ve been overpaid and want to pay it back, but you can’t afford to pay it back in the manner SSA offered.
I suggest you start by filing SSA-632, mainly because you notified the SSA in August 2021 that you had returned to work and it, nevertheless, continued to pay you — thus causing the overpayment itself (see Section 3, question.12 of SSA-632). While I cannot predict the probability of you having the entire amount waived, I think there’s a reasonably good chance the SSA may provide you with some special accommodation because the overpayment was, indeed, a result of its own inaction after you notified the SSA you had returned to work.
I suspect what happened is that the SSA simply neglected to act after you notified it, and then when the SSA received your 2021 earnings data from the IRS, it found you had earned more than the 2021 limit, causing the agency to issue the Overpayment Notice. But its lack of action shouldn’t result in a financial hardship for you, which is why I suggest you seek a waiver. Be aware too that if your waiver request is denied you have the right to appeal that denial, including requesting a hearing by an independent administrative law judge, or by the SS Appeals Council, or even in federal court if desired.
In any event, while your case is pending, the SSA shouldn’t require you to repay it — the agency should temporarily suspend the repayment demand until your case is decided.
Assuming you are still working full time, it’s probable that your benefits are now suspended because your income is too high. FYI, you will later get credit for any months in which your benefits are suspended, which will result in your benefit amount increasing after you reach your full retirement age (FRA). Thus, you may be able to, over time, recover some of the SS benefits you’ve lost because of your earnings prior to reaching your FRA.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4-million-member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author’s note: This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.
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