congressional inquiry

Your U.S. congressional reps don't have any impact on the decision as far as approval or denial. You should be able to goggle the contact information for your congressional representatives.

Information about confessional inquiry:
A congressional inquiry is a “status check” of your disability claim conducted by your local U.S. senator or representative on your behalf.
To initiate a congressional inquiry, which the congressperson can refuse to undertake, you will need to contact your local U.S. senator or representative’s office to request that he or she look into where your disability claim stands.
In your request, you should give a general overview of the circumstances surrounding your claim. You may include factors such as how long it has been since you began the application process; how long you have been waiting for an appeal hearing to be scheduled; any medical, emotional, or financial distress the application process has caused; or the number of family members you are currently supporting; and any other reasons (for example, "dire need"~~if you are facing eviction; loss of electricity, water and/or gas for heating your home; or if you are terminal with a life expectancy of less then 6 months) you feel you cannot wait for the scheduled hearing to receive the decision on your claim.
If your congressperson takes action on your request, he or she (typically, one of his or her staff members) will contact the SSA by phone, email, or letter, to ask for an update on the status of your disability claim.
Typically, congressional inquiries are only sought by applicants whose initial claims and reconsideration reviews have been denied. Congressional inquiries are helpful for individuals who, due to financial or medical hardship, can no longer wait for a disability hearing to be scheduled.
If a congressional inquiry is made before the initial decision and/or before the decision on the Reconsideration has been made, the SSA will usually simply note that in your file, but take no action to expedite the decision.
It is extremely important to understand that while a congressional inquiry may speed up the process, it can’t and won’t change the decision regarding your eligibility to receive SSDI or SSI benefits.
Also, again, while it may be tempting to try to request a congressional inquiry to expedite your disability claim during the initial application or reconsideration review, it notmally will do very little to speed up your claim, at those stages of the process.

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