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Individuals released from incarceration may be eligible for Social Security retirement, survivors, or disability benefits if you have worked or paid into Social Security enough years or Supplemental Security Income benefits if you are 65 or older, or are blind, or have a disability and have little or no income and resources.
The following information is for people who got a Notice of Overpayment from the Social Security Administration (SSA).
The information is from a website called Learn the Law.org that is information put together by Statewide Legal Services, CTLawHelp.org and Center for Computer-Assisted Learning (CALI) to help people with common legal aid problems.
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This info will give you a better look at the problems with payday loans.
It will also give you other options available.
In a nutshell, payday loan organizations prey on low-income families. That is because they tend to have fewer resources for cash. Often, these loans end up making their financial situation worse.
Please read this before you consider a payday loan.
Kansas Attorney General on Payday Loans
Explains what a payday lender can and cannot do under Kansas law. If you believe a payday lender has violated this statute, see the link to the Attorney General's Consumer Complaint form that can be filled out and submitted on the web.
Kansas Payday Loan Statute
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