Arizona Section 218 Agreement

” (B) In any event, when the Minister of Health, Education and Welfare [now Health and Human Services] informed a State, prior to the start of such a second calendar year, that an amount owed by that state is due, that that state`s right to credit or repayment of an overpayment is not admissible, or that a payment on payment has been made to such a state. , pursuant to an agreement under section 218 of the Social Security Act [42 U.S.C 418], the secretary is deemed to have made the amount due under section 218 (q) of this Act on the first day of this second calendar year, or notified the State of this allowance or non-admission. In this case, the 90-day limit in Section 218 (s) of this Act does not apply to the assessment that is considered made or to the notification of the allowance or denial of admission granted as a state. However, the above sentences of this paragraph do not apply if the secretary makes an assessment of this amount owed or if the state makes an assessment of that amount on or after the first day of the second calendar year following the year in which the Act is passed [1960] and within the time limit set out in Section 218 (q) of the Social Security Act or within the time limit set for section 218 (q) of the Social Security Act or within the time limit set for the section 218 (r) of this Act. as can be the case. That`s not the case. pub. L. 103-296, 305 (a), the name “Any agreement with” has been removed, has replaced “a state registered in accordance with this section” with “the State of Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, North Dakota, Oregon , Puerto Rico, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia or Washington, which were removed before August 1, 1956, and abs 2. , which reads: “A state not otherwise in paragraph 1 is considered a state covered in this paragraph to extend the coverage covered in this sub-chapter to the positions of firefighters covered by a pension plan when the governor of the state or a state official whom he appoints for that purpose certifies that the general protection of workers in these positions would be enhanced by extending that coverage to those workers.