Full opinion text
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY 3 II. DISABILITY PAYMENTS UNDER THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT: SSDI AND SSI 5 III. THE NAMED PLAINTIFFS AND CLASS MEMBERS 23 IV. JURISDICTION 35 V. CLASS CERTIFICATION 53 VI. PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION 60 VII. RELIEF 71 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ANN ALDRICH, District Judge. This class action raises statutory and constitutional challenges to policies and procedures by which federal and state officials have terminated social security disability benefits without demonstrating by substantial evidence that the recipients are no longer disabled within the meaning of the law. The plaintiffs contend that this practice causes widespread financial hardship and physical and mental suffering and is being conducted in defiance of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals’ clear and consistent rulings interpreting the Social Security Act. They seek relief forbidding the bureaucracy that grants disability benefits from revoking them unless it proves that the recipient’s medical condition has improved, and restoring benefits to individuals who were wrongfully terminated. After considering complicated legal questions and compelling testimony by victims of the termination policy, this Court certifies this case as a class action and orders the declaratory and injunctive relief set forth below. I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY This opinion deals with two virtually identical class actions filed with this Court in recent months: Brest v. Heckler, No. C83-4893 (N.D.Ohio filed Dec. 14, 1983) and Holden v. Heckler, No. C84-548 (N.D. Ohio filed Feb. 16,1984). On March 12, the two actions were consolidated under Fed.R. Civ.P. 42(a). The parties argued the plaintiffs’ Joint Motion for Class Certification on March 21, after which the proposed class in Holden was tentatively certified. A day-long hearing on plaintiffs’ Joint Motion for a Preliminary Injunction was held on March 30. The plaintiffs in both cases challenged programs administered jointly by the Social Security Administration (“SSA”), part of the Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), and by the Ohio Bureau of Disability Determinations (“BDD”); the original defendants in each case were Margaret M. Heckler, the Secretary of HHS (“Secretary”), and Leonard F. Herman, the director of the BDD. Since the State of Ohio had previously appeared as amicus curiae for the plaintiffs in a similar class action, Mental Health Association of Minnesota v. Heckler, 720 F.2d 965 (8th Cir. 1983), it negotiated to alter its role in this case. On March 29, the State and the plaintiffs submitted a stipulated motion dismissing Herman as' a defendant, which was granted. After oral argument at the preliminary injunction hearing the following day, the State was permitted to intervene as a plaintiff under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(b) and participate in the hearing. The Secretary was given leave to move to dismiss the complaint in intervention, and subsequently did so. The named plaintiffs, the tentatively certified Holden class, and the State of Ohio are now aligned against the Secretary, who is the sole defendant. Jurisdiction over her is invoked under the general federal question jurisdictional provision, 28 U.S.C. § 1331; the mandamus jurisdiction provided by 28 U.S.C. § 1361; judicial review provisions of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g) and 1383(c)(3); the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201. and 2202; and the judicial review provision of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702. In addition to moving to dismiss the State, the Secretary has challenged this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the class in a number of her pleadings. II. DISABILITY PAYMENTS UNDER THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT: SSDI AND SSI A. Initial Determinations of Disability 1. The Programs The named plaintiffs and the proposed class members are all residents of Ohio who currently receive, or formerly received, benefits under Title II or Title XVI of the Social Security Act (“Act”). Title II provides Social Security Disability Insurance (“SSDI”) benefits to disabled workers based upon their earnings records. 42 U.S.C. §§ 401-431. Title XVI, the Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”) program, provides disability payments to the aged, blind, and disabled if they meet certain income eligibility standards. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1381-1383. Both programs were established to relieve state and local governments of the financial burden of assisting the disabled. SSDI was enacted in 1956 and SSI in 1972, and both programs expanded far beyond their sponsors’ expectations. In 1956 approximately 150,000 Americans drew some $59 million in SSDI benefits; by 1982 more than four million workers and beneficiaries drew an estimated $18.5 billion in SSDI and SSI funds. See S.Rep. No. 97-648, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 13-16, reprinted in 1982 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 4373, 4384-87. Under both the SSDI and SSI programs, disability is defined as the “inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months.” 42 U.S.C. §§ 423(d)(1)(A), 1382c(a)(3)(A). The Secretary promulgates regulations governing determination of eligibility for disability payments. 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P; 20 C.F.R. pt. 416, subpt. I. These complex regulations implement the broad congressional directive expressed in 42 U.S.C. §§ 423(d)(2)(A) and 1382c(a)(3)(B), which requires that an individual “shall be determined to be under a disability only if his physical or mental impairment or impairments are of such severity that he is not only unable to do his previous work but cannot, considering his age, education and work experience, engage in any other kind of substantial gainful work which exists in the national economy”. Under 42 U.S.C. §§ 421 and 1383b, state agencies conduct disability determinations pursuant to contracts with the Secretary; BDD, a unit of the Ohio Rehabilitative Services Commission, makes all determinations of initial and continuing disability in the State of Ohio. 2. The Implementing Regulations and the Five-Step Evaluation The regulations create a five-step “sequential evaluation” process for evaluating benefits claims by applicants and recipients. The first step disqualifies individuals who are engaged in “substantial gainful activity”. 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520(a), 416.-920(a). Claimants who pass this barrier must then demonstrate that their impairment is severe; if it is not, benefits may not be issued. §§ 404.1520(c), 416.920(c). If the individual meets or equals a disability described in the “Listing of Impairments”, he or she is presumed disabled and automatically receives benefits. §§ 404.-1520(d), 416.920(d); see subpt. P, app. 1 (list of conditions, signs, symptoms). An individual with a severe impairment that does not meet or equal any of the listed impairments is evaluated under the fourth step, which involves two sub-steps: (1) a determination of the claimant’s residual functional capacity (“RFC”); and (2) a determination of whether the claimant has sufficient RFC to return to the physical or mental demands of the work he or she performed in the past. §§ 404.1520(e), 416.920(e). The RFC assessment is not limited to formal medical findings; it includes other pertinent, informal evidence. If the individual can do his or her past work, no benefits are awarded. If not, the fifth and final test is applied: a determination of whether the individual is unable to do other work which exists in substantial numbers in the economy. §§ 404.1520(f), 416.920(f). This assessment includes evaluations of the claimant’s age, education, and work experience. If the claimant would be unable to perform this "other work”, he or she is awarded benefits. . The regulations thus provide two paths claimants can follow to obtain benefits: (1) a listed impairment; or (2) a lack of RFC combined with an inability to do other work. All initial disability claims are made by lay examiners employed by BDD. If the claim is denied, the claimant may ask for reconsideration by BDD. A claimant who receives a second adverse decision may appeal to an Administrative Law Judge (“AU"), an Article I judge employed by the SSA. Adverse decisions by the AU may be appealed to the SSA Appeals Council; adverse decisions by the Council may be appealed to federal district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). B. Termination of Disability Payments 1. Interpretation of the Act: 1954-1976 Title 42 U.S.C. § 423(a)(1)(D) governs termination of SSDI disability benefits. In pertinent part it provides: ... [T]he termination month for any individual shall be the third month following the month in which his disability ceases; except that, in the case of an individual who has a period of trial work ..., the termination month shall be the earlier of (I) the third month following the earlier month after the end of such period of trial work with respect to which such individual is determined to no longer be suffering from a disabling physical or mental impairment, or (II) the third month following the earliest month in which such individual engages or is determined able to engage in substantial gainful activity____ While there is no parallel statutory section concerning SSI terminations, the Secretary has. promulgated identical regulations governing terminations under the two programs, and the allocation of the burden of proof between the claimant and the Secretary shall be considered the same for each program. The legislative history accompanying passage of the SSDI program in 1956 provides few clues as to whether Congress did or did not intend that an individual who was awarded benefits would be entitled to receive them until his or her underlying condition improved. The relevant conference report stated that the term “disability ceases” was added to the statute to terminate payments to individuals who were “no longer disabled”. Conf.Rep. No. 2936, 84th Cong., 2d Sess. reprinted in 1956 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 3877, 3956. However, the legislative history of subsequent amendments to the Act indicates that one of the Congressional panels with jurisdiction over the SSA, the Senate Finance Committee, consistently has read the phrase “disability ceases” to require that the claimant’s medical condition actually have improved before his benefits may be terminated. In 1960 it read a statutory reference to the month in which a recipient’s “disability ceases” to mean “the month in which his physical or mental impairment improves to a point where .:.” S.Rep. No. 1856, 86th Cong., 2d Sess. reprinted in 1960 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 3608, 3703 (discussing Pub.L. No. 86-778, § 403(a), 74 Stat. 924). In 1965 it interpreted “the day disability ceased” to permit the Secretary “to terminate entitlement to disability benefits in cases of recovery ...” S.Rep. No. 404, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., reprinted in 1965 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 1943, 2044. And in 1980 the committee stated that “[ujnder the present law an individual is not entitled to [SSDI] and SSI benefits after he has medically recovered”. S.Rep. No. 96-408, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. 4, reprinted in 1980 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 1277,1282 (discussing Pub.L. 96-265, § 301(a), codified at 42 U.S.C. § 425(b)). In 1982 and 1983 Congress considered, but did not pass, amendments explicitly adopting a medical improvement standard. Sponsors stressed that the purpose of the amendments was not to “change the status quo” or to'“overturn[] current case law” applying the improvement standard but to reaffirm it. See 128 Cong.Rec. S13861 (daily ed. Dec. 3, 1982) (statement of Sen. Metzenbaum). Since this case began, the House of Representatives has passed H.R. 3755, the Social Security Disability Insurance Amendments of 1984. Section 101 establishes an explicit medical improvement standard for terminations. Both H.R.Rep. 98-618, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. (March 14, 1984) (“House Report”) and the debate prior to the 410-1 vote adopting the bill, 130 Cong.Rec. H1956-93, (daily, ed. March 27, 1984), applaud judicial decisions discerning a medical improvement standard in the SSDI and SSI statutes; the purpose of the bill is to codify those decisions and establish “a clear ‘medical improvement’ standard that creates a category of beneficiaries who, because their medical conditions have not improved, are presumed to be unable to work and who therefore must continue to receive benefits.” House Report at 11. The Committee recognized that “the criteria for termination of benefits as a result of review were left unstated in the law”, Id., but nowhere criticizes the unanimous earlier legislative and judicial readings of the phrase “disability ceases” as requiring a medical improvement standard. 2. The SSA’s Abandonment of the Medical Improvement Standard Secretaries of Health, Education and Welfare concurred with Congress’ reading of the statutes and applied a medical improvement standard to disability terminations from 1954 until 1976. So did various courts which interpreted the Act during those years. See Hall v. Celebrezze, 314 F.2d 686, 688 (6th Cir.1963) (“Once a condition has been shown to exist, there is a presumption, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that it has continued.”) In 1976, the Secretary abandoned the medical improvement standard and instituted a “current disability standard”. The parties in this case have stipulated that: Upon instruction of defendant Heckler and her predecessors, BDD has since June 1, 1976 applied a standard of current disability to continuing disability claims of Ohio residents ... and has not applied a medical improvement standard or presumption of disability standard to these cases. In August of 1980, the Secretary formally promulgated regulations interpreting the Act as not requiring that there be medical improvement in the claimant’s disability before termination. Responding to arguments that a showing of medical improvement had to be made before benefits could be terminated, she stated: ... These recodified regulations make it clear that disability ends when current evidence shows that the individual is able to engage in [substantial gainful activity] regardless of whether actual improvement can be demonstrated____ We do not agree that a finding that a person is disabled or blind should be allowed to stand in the face of evidence to the contrary simply because of the lack of evidence clearly showing medical improvement. 45 Fed.Reg. 55583 (August 20, 1980). In addition to the 1980 regulations, HHS has set forth the current disability standard in numerous internal publications. See Program Operations Manual System [POMS] § 2864 (“The question to be resolved is whether the individual is currently disabled”); Social Security Ruling 81-6 (“It will not be necessary to determine whether or how much the individual’s condition has medically improved since the pri- or favorable determination”) (and cross-references cited therein); 6 OHA Law Reporter No. 3 at 20 (July 1982) (published by SSA Office of Hearings and Appeals) (“... there is no current regulatory criteria demanding improvement in any impairment or impairments before a finding of cessation”). 3. Implementation of Continuing Disability Investigations The Secretary’s new termination criteria grew in significance when she began to conduct the periodic reviews of disability recipients that Congress mandated in the Social Security Amendments of 1980. During the late 1970’s, Congress increasingly became concerned about reports that as many as half a million SSDI or SSI recipients — some twenty percent of all workers receiving benefits — did not meet eligibility requirements, leading to improper payments of more than $2 billion annually. See, e.g., General Accounting Office Report, More Diligent Follow-Up Needed to Weed Out Ineligible SSA Disability Beneficiaries (March 3, 1981). Consequently, § 311(a) of the Amendments, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 421(h)(1), provided for periodic reviews of many beneficiaries: In any case where an individual is or has been determined to be under a disability, the case shall be reviewed by the applicable State agency or the Secretary (as may be appropriate), for purposes of continuing eligibility, at least once every 3 years ... except where a finding has been made that such disability is permanent, such reviews shall be made at such times as the Secretary determines to be appropriate____3 ** The statute required that these Continuing Disability Investigations (“CDI’s”) begin in January of 1982. “However, the [Secretary] moved up the date of implementation ..., and accelerated the rate of review____ Beginning in March of 1981, SSA began sending out about three times the normal number of CDI cases: about 160,000 were done in [Fiscal Year] 1981, 496,771 in FY 1982, and 640,000 were budgeted for FY 1983 prior to the Secretary’s new initiative to slow down the review process announced in June, 1983.” House Report at 10. POMS § DIT 30001 dictates that every person previously found eligible for disability benefits must undergo a CDI every three to seven years if he or she suffers from a permanent disability. Following the reviews, the SSA terminated the benefits of more than 460,000 disability recipients. One-third of those had their benefits restored after administrative appeals; federal courts have ordered reexamination of 100,000 additional cases. In fiscal year 1983, sixty-one percent of the termination decisions appealed to ALJ’s were reversed. 130 Cong.Rec. H1956-93 (passim). BDD has conducted more than 50,000 CDI’s in Ohio since the start of the fiscal year 1981. The parties have stipulated that BDD decided to terminate approximately 23,025 of those beneficiaries. Eight hundred and fifty others would have been terminated but for a moratorium ordered by Gov. Richard Celeste. See Executive Order 83-52 (Oct. 8, 1983); Executive Order 84-13 (March 15, 1984). 3. Judicial Endorsement of the Medical Improvement Standard: The Law in Other Circuits While the Secretary’s interpretation of the administrative burden in disability cases has varied during the thirty years since the SSDI program was initiated, judicial interpretation of the Act has remained consistent. Using different language, ten circuit courts of appeals have held that the Secretary may not terminate disability benefits without offering substantial evidence that the record supporting the initial determination of disability is no longer valid. The standard imposed by the courts has been called either a “medical improvement standard” or a “presumption of continuing disability”. The former position was articulated in Miranda v. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, 514 F.2d 996, 998 (1st Cir.1975): ... And once having found a disability, the Secretary may not terminate the benefits without substantial evidence to justify so doing. This will normally consist of current evidence showing that a claimant has improved to the point of being able to engage in substantial gainful activity; but it might also consist of evidence that the claimant’s condition is not as serious as was at first supposed. Having permitted the Secretary to consider medical evidence presented during the original disability determination, the court carefully narrowed the scope of this “second look”. “It would be wrong for the Secretary to terminate an earlier finding of disability on no basis other than his reappraisal of the earlier evidence.” Id. at 998 n. *. Several courts have read Miranda as articulating an explicit “medical improvement” standard and have adopted it as such. See Cassiday v. Schweiker, 663 F.2d 745, 749 (7th Cir.1981) (“Given that the evidence continued to show the existence of the same condition, and given that there was no question of improvement but only disagreement about how disabling the condition had ever been, we think Mrs. Cassiday made out a prima facie case and the burden had shifted to the Secretary to justify the termination of benefits.”);. Van Natter v. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, No. 79-1439, slip op. at 6-7 (10th Cir. Jan. 8, 1981) (not for routine publication) (adopting Miranda standard as “reasonable”). In Finnegan v. Matthews, 641 F.2d 1340 (9th Cir.1981), the court reversed the Secretary’s decision to terminate benefits and announced that: ... [Ajbsent a finding of subsequent material medical improvement a recipient must logically still be disabled ... The Secretary may not terminate benefits absent a showing of previous clear and specific error or medical improvement which is sufficient to establish that an applicant is no longer “continuously disabled as so defined.” * # # sis * * ... Since there has clearly been no material improvement in Finnegan’s medical condition or clear and specific error in the prior state proceedings awarding benefits to Finnegan, it was improper for the district court to allow a termination of Finnegan’s benefits. Id. at 1345, 1347. Other circuits have placed the same burden on the Secretary by adopting a “presumption of continuing disability”. This standard, articulated tersely in older cases such as Hall v. Celebrezze, was first spelled out in Rivas v. Weinberger, 475 F.2d 255 (5th Cir.1973). Citing Hall, the court announced that “[o]nce evidence has been presented which supports a finding that a given condition exists it is presumed in the absence of proof to the contrary that the condition has remained unchanged.” Id. at 258. Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 336, 96 S.Ct. 893, 903, 47 L.Ed.2d 18 (1976), did not alter this presumption by imposing on the disability claimant “a continuing burden of showing ... that he has a physical or mental impairment ...” As pointed out in Patti v. Schweiker, 669 F.2d 582, 587 (9th Cir.1982), the presumption created by the prior finding of disability “does not affect the [claimant’s] ultimate burden of proof. It does, however, impose ‘on the party against whom it is directed the burden of going forward with evidence to rebut or meet the presumption.’ Fed.R.Evid. 301.” That is, the presumption of continuing disability “impose[s] on the Secretary a burden to come forward with evidence that [the claimant’s] condition has changed.” Id. The presumption of continuing disability as articulated in cases such as Rivas and Patti has been widely adopted. Dotson v. Schweiker, 719 F.2d 80, 82 (4th Cir.1983); Crosby v. Schweiker, 650 F.2d 777 (5th Cir.1981). Courts frequently have linked the presumption to elemental notions of administrative fairness. ... In reviewing the appeal of an initial disability case, we must consider whether the Secretary’s finding of no disability is supported by substantial evidence. However, in light of principles of administrative res judicata, this is not the proper inquiry in a benefits continuation case. We must ascertain whether the Secretary’s finding of improvement to the point of no disability is supported by substantial evidence. In each case, the burden remains with the claimant to prove the existence of a disability____ If, however, the evidence in a continuation case is substantially the same as the evidence had been in the initial disability benefits request case, benefits must be continued. Otherwise, termination of benefits will often depend not on a finding of changed condition, but simply on the whim of a changed AU____ Simpson v. Schweiker, 691 F.2d 966, 969 (11th Cir.1982) (citation omitted) (emphasis in original). See also Kuzmin v. Schweiker, 714 F.2d 1233,1237 (3d Cir.1983) (“[T]he Secretary’s prior determination that a particular medical condition has resulted in a statutory disability does implicate administrative consistency.”) Clearly the “medical improvement” and “presumption of continuing disability” standards are substantively identical. Recognizing as much, the Eighth Circuit adopted Miranda, a medical improvement case, in support of “the proposition that when evidence of disability does not change, the Secretary shall be bound by its prior determination of disability.” Weber v. Harris, 640 F.2d 176, 178 (8th Cir.1981). In Kuzmin v. Schweiker, 714 F.2d at 1238, the court found Miranda and Simpson, a presumption case, to apply “a similar approach”. Most succinctly, Trujillo v. Heckler, 569 F.Supp. 631, 635-36 (D.Colo. 1983), found that “[t]he presumption of disability approach ... accomplishes the same things as an improvement standard ... [and] typically incorporates an improvement standard____ Under either standard benefits may not be terminated without showing that the recipient’s medical condition has improved.” By whatever name, this is the law in ten circuits. 4. Judicial Endorsement of the Medical Improvement Standard in the Sixth Circuit The Sixth Circuit is one of those circuits. Hall v. Celebrezze is one of the earliest cases adopting a “presumption of continuing disability” standard. And Hayes v. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, 656 F.2d 204 (6th Cir.1981) — an opinion written after the Secretary issued the 1980 regulations — imposed a “medical improvement” standard for the circuit. Reversing administrative and lower court rulings that had terminated the SSI benefits of a 23-year-old mentally retarded woman, the court wrote: ... We find that the evidence does not support the conclusion that the termination of Hayes’ benefits was proper because her condition had improved. * * # * # >j< ... If at some time in the future the training is found to have been successful and Hayes’ condition has improved, the Secretary may of course reevaluate the award in light of the changed circumstances. Id. at 206. As the Sixth Circuit’s only published case dealing with the medical improvement standard, Hayes is the governing law for this Court. Moreover, the position stated there was vigorously reaffirmed in two subsequent, unpublished Sixth Circuit opinions. Burnett v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 703 F.2d 559 (6th Cir. 1982), reversed the Secretary’s decision to terminate Burnett’s benefits because no showing had been made to satisfy the test of Miranda and Weber v. Harris: ... In termination cases, the Secretary bears the burden of proving either: (1) that the claimant’s condition has improved since the initial award of benefits; or (2) that the claimant’s condition is not as serious as first supposed. See 20 C.F.R. 404.1539(a)(1); Miranda v. Secretary, ...; Weber v. Harris . . . . In the present matter the Secretary failed to introduce evidence which supports either proposition. There is nothing whatsoever in the record to indicate that Mr. Burnett’s health has improved since 1976 ... A second case, Hall v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 711 F.2d 1056 (6th Cir.1983), utilized the presumption of continuing disability standard. Citing Patti, it held that an initial grant of benefits ... places the burden of producing evidence to rebut the presumption on the Secretary. Patti. That is, the Secretary must produce evidence of improvement in the claimant’s condition. The law of the Sixth Circuit is clear: no recipient of SSDI or SSI disability benefits may be denied those payments unless the Secretary produces substantial evidence demonstrating that the recipient is no longer disabled within the meaning of the law. Notwithstanding these rulings, the Secretary has not applied Hayes to any other disability terminations; rather, she has continued to instruct BDD and the AU’s to follow SSA’s regulations and internal procedures, mandating a .current disability standard. See Part II-B-2, supra. As the Associate Commissioner for Hearings and Appeals stated in a memorandum to ALJ’s in January of 1982: The Federal courts do not run SSA’s programs, and [SSA’s adjudicators] are responsible for applying the Secretary’s policies and guidelines regardless of court decisions below the level of the Supreme Court. House Report at 24. See also 6 OHA Law Reporter No. 1 at 27 (January, 1982) (“[I]f a district or circuit court’s decision contains interpretations of the law, regulations, or rulings which are inconsistent with the Secretary’s interpretations, the administrative law judge should follow the Secretary’s interpretations.”) Her position is that the legal principles enunciated by the Sixth Circuit in Hayes apply only to the parties in that case. III. THE NAMED PLAINTIFFS AND CLASS MEMBERS In their pleadings and through testimony and exhibits at the class certification and preliminary injunction hearings, the plaintiffs presented considerable information about the impact of the Secretary’s policies on the named plaintiffs, on specific class members, and on the proposed class as a whole. A. Named Plaintiffs The allegations of the five named plaintiffs in these two actions — Gerald Brest, Norma Holden, Willie Baker, Edward Grant, and Larry McGinty — are set forth in their complaints and in the affidavits they submitted at the hearing. 1. Gerald Brest Gerald Brest is thirty-seven years old and lives in Boardman, Ohio, near Youngstown. He received a shrapnel wound to his head while fighting in Vietnam in 1967. In 1969 he underwent surgery to clamp a ruptured artery in his brain; following the operation, he suffered a stroke that temporarily left him partially paralyzed. A piece of shrapnel remains lodged in the sinus cavity of the right hemisphere of Brest’s brain. Brest claims that since being wounded he has suffered from severe head pain and headaches, which are aggravated by sunlight, heat, and noise; .has suffered from the side effects induced by the medications he must take to combat the pain; is unable to stand, sit or walk for any reasonable time; and cannot bend over without becoming dizzy. An ALJ awarded Brest SSDI benefits in 1974, finding him disabled for a period beginning in June of 1969. In April of 1982, BDD informed him that it was reviewing his case and asked him to provide evidence of his current medical status. Brest responded by completing and submitting Form SSA 454 F4, in which he set forth descriptions of his ailments and symptoms. He also submitted letters by two doctors. The BDD referred him to a Robert Gilliland, M.D. Brest was examined by , the doctor on August 25, 1982; he claims that the entire examination lasted less than ten minutes and that the doctor spent most of that time asking questions. The following day, Gilliland sent a report to BDD. On September 7, 1982, the SSA wrote to Brest to inform him that it had determined he had possessed “the ability to engage in substantial gainful activity since September, 1982.” The letter did not state any conclusion that Brest’s medical condition had actually improved. Although he submitted additional medical evidence, Brest’s request for reconsideration was denied on January 20, 1983. He later was denied reinstatement of benefits by an AU and the Appeals Council. In his August 5,1983 opinion, the ALJ found that Brest’s disability had ceased on September 1, 1982, but made no finding that Brest’s medical condition had improved. Brest states that none of his medical problems have improved since he was first found to be disabled and that, in particular, his headaches have continued unabated. Since his benefits ceased, Brest has, by his account, incurred $6,000 in debts which he is unable to repay, been forced to borrow from his parents and in-laws to pay for basic necessities, and suffered emotional trauma. 2. Norma Holden Norma Holden is fifty-eight years old and lives in Cleveland. Prior to 1977, she worked as a keypunch operator. Because of worsening arthritis and hypertension, she applied for SSDI benefits in May of 1979 and was found disabled by an ALJ. BDD notified her in October of 1982 that it was reviewing her case. Like Brest, she completed a questionnaire and signed medical release forms. She does not state whether she was examined by a BDD-affiliated doctor. On January 3, 1983, BDD informed her that her disability had concluded and that her benefits would end in March. In March and April, she received two formal termination notices from SSA. Holden claims that neither notice stated that her condition had improved. She received an unfavorable decision from an ALJ on November 28, 1983 and received her last check in December. She awaits a decision from the Appeals Council. Holden contends that her medical condition has not improved but actually worsened. Specifically, she stated that because of the arthritis: 1) her knees have deteriorated, causing her to fall several times, once breaking her ankle; 2) her hand hurts and swells, preventing her from sleeping; and 3) her back has become painful. In addition, she states that she has developed diabetes; among the symptoms related to that affliction are swollen gums and unusual sensations in her right eye. Until December, Holden received $377 per month in SSDI payments and was covered by Medicare. Having been terminated from both programs, her only income is $130 per month from a tenant who lives in the house Holden bought in 1971. This sum does not cover her expenses but renders her ineligible for the State’s General Relief (“GR”) welfare program. Her description of her present medical and financial position is frightening: she is eight months behind on mortgage payments on her house and is threatened with foreclosure; she has received termination notices from the electric and gas utilities; her telephone has been disconnected. Holden stated that she borrows from friends to pay for the basic. necessities of life, has been unable to go to a doctor since Medicare coverage stopped in December, and has been unable to pay for the blood sugar tests recommended for diabetics. 3. Willie Baker Willie Baker is forty-eight, also lives in Cleveland, and supports six children. In February of 1970, Baker was found to be disabled as of October 20, 1969 because of chronic low back pain and tuberculosis-related breathing difficulties. For fourteen years after that decision, Baker received SSDI benefits. BDD commenced a review of his case in January of 1983. Baker completed questionnaires informing the Bureau that his medical condition had not improved and that he was unable to work. On April 26, 1983, BDD ruled that Baker was able to work as of April of 1983. His request for reconsideration was turned down on July 14, 1983. After a hearing, the AU ruled that Baker was no longer disabled. His checks stopped in January of this year. On January 25, the Appeals Council denied his request for review. Baker states that his medical condition has not improved and that he suffers from shortness of breath, back injuries, tuberculosis and hypertension, leaving him unable to hold employment. His only current source of income is $600 per month received from the Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation. Baker states that he is behind in paying his monthly rent of $150 and is also $300 behind in paying for monthly treatments by his doctor. He claims that his doctor will not see him again until he pays his bills. 4. Edward Grant Edward Grant is sixty-three and also lives in Cleveland. He states that he was forced to leave his job in a steel foundry in 1975 because of arthritis, a condition which also forced him to abandon a subsequent career as a security guard. He was later found to have been disabled since June 1, 1975 and awarded SSDI benefits. When BDD commenced a review in September of 1981, Grant filled out the appropriate forms informing the Bureau that his arthritic condition had not improved. In November, BDD informed him that he was able to work and ineligible for SSDI benefits. Grant’s request for reconsideration was denied in March of 1982; he received an adverse decision from an AU in September of 1982, and the Appeals Council denied his request for review on December 18, 1983. Grant states that since January of 1982 he has supported four children each month on $393 in payments from the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (“AFDC”) program, $196 in food stamps, and $50 from a boarder. Each month Grant must borrow money from a friend to buy food for his children — aged fifteen, fourteen, thirteen, and nine — whom he has raised alone since his wife died in December of 1982. He owes more than $1,000 in utility bills. Grant states that, because of the children’s expenses, he worries constantly about not being able to keep up with the bills. A particularly difficult period, he claims, was the interim between the cut-off of his disability benefits and the start of AFDC payments, when he had no source of income at all. 5. Larry McGinty The final named plaintiff, Larry McGinty, represents class members who pursue this action because they believe the administrative review process now in effect will not consider their claims under the proper legal standard. McGinty was awarded SSDI benefits in 1974 or 1975 because of a kidney disorder, an ulcer, and hypertension. His ease came up for review in the fall of 1982. Like the other named plaintiffs, McGinty filled out a disability questionnaire and signed medical release forms. He informed BDD that his condition had not improved and that he could not work, and signed the required SSA forms and medical releases. SSA found him to be no longer disabled and terminated his check in December of 1982; his request for reconsideration was denied. However, his benefits were restored pending appeal to an AU under the terms of the Federal Supple-,, mental Compensation Act of 1982. In his March 20, 1984 affidavit, McGinty states that he was scheduled for a hearing before an AU on March 28. He became a plaintiff in this action prior to that hearing “because Social Security will not consider whether my medical condition has improved.” B. Other Class Members Three members of the tentatively certified class testified at the preliminary injunction hearing and a dozen others submitted affidavits. Luvenia Chatman testified that she injured her shoulder and spine while working as a cook at Stouffer’s in 1970. Since then she has suffered from a number of ailments. In October of 1982 she underwent open heart surgery following a heart attack; in 1983 she was hospitalized five or six times for chest pains, urinary infections, and other medical problems. She has already been hospitalized once in 1984. .Chatman testified that she received a letter from BDD in June of 1983 — while she was in the hospital — instructing her that her case was being reviewed and that she should appear for an appointment with a doctor. Following the appointment, her disability benefits of $258.00 per month and her Medicare coverage were terminated. Because of the loss of benefits, Chatman stated that she is unable to receive any further treatment by her cardiologist, to whom she owes $1,300, and is unable to receive treatment for her back problems. In addition, the termination induced a nervous rash and left her unable to sleep because she is so worried about her financial situation. Her hospital bill has been turned over to a collection agency. Mary Louise Utz is a forty-seven-year-old former registered nurse with two daughters aged twenty-one and nineteen. After being graduated from college in 1957, she worked as a nurse until 1965 or 1966, when severe back pain forced her to leave work. She was awarded SSDI benefits. Utz testified that she suffers from severe back pains, and it is obvious that her left leg drags when she walks, and that even with the aid of a cumbersome brace she cannot sit, stand, or walk with any comfort. She testified that her condition has worsened, not improved, over the past two decades: she has had a total of seven operations (several on her back as well as a mastectomy) and must ingest muscle relaxants and receive frequent heat and massage treatments to alleviate her back pains. On April 29, 1982, BDD informed her that her medical conditions would not prevent her from working, and that her disability benefits and medical insurance would be terminated in June. After losing the benefits, she developed a nervous condition, bleeding in the stomach and rectum, stomach pains, and a condition later diagnosed as stress diabetes. In 1983, after a hearing before an ALJ in Pittsburgh, Utz’ benefits were reinstated immediately and retroactively. However, attorney’s fees of $1,155.00 were withheld from the check she received. Despite her reinstatement, under doctor’s instructions she has continued to take Elevil, a prescription anti-depressant. The third class member to testify, Georgia Lloyd, first injured herself while working at the IRC Fibers factory in Painesville in 1971. After surgery to repair a herniated disc, Lloyd returned to work but developed tendonitis in her arms and was advised by doctors to find other, less strenuous work. Following their advice, she worked as a waitress, bartender, and then again as a factory employee. In 1976 she hurt her back again and underwent a second operation. . She was awarded SSDI benefits in 1978. Lloyd’s benefits were terminated in June of 1979. She testified that at that time her medical condition had not improved, and that she continued to suffer from arthritis and hypertension. After being terminated, Lloyd subsisted on GR payments of $100 per month plus food stamps. Formerly able to keep her “head above water” financially thanks to the disability payments, Lloyd thereafter met her living expenses only by selling all her possessions, even the registered beagles she had raised “like part of the family.” She and her mother were forced to sell their home in Turnbull Township; Lloyd moved into a low-income housing project in Ashtabula. In addition to her financial woes, Lloyd suffered emotional anguish after her termination. Describing herself as a strong, friendly, outdoors-oriented person, Lloyd said she was traumatized by having to go to the welfare office each month and became increasingly unfriendly to those around her. At her lowest point, Lloyd said, she contemplated suicide. In 1980 her appeal was successful and her benefits were reinstated. Like Utz, Lloyd received retroactive payments minus the considerable sum withheld to pay her attorney’s fees. In an affidavit, John Janosek, a former soldier and police officer stated that he had received mental disability benefits for chronic brain syndrome caused by an aneurism, a stroke and cerebral hemorrhage he suffered in 1974. His speech and body movements are impaired. BDD began to review his case in February of 1982 and that September found him to be no longer disabled. Unable to support himself and his two children, Janosek became extremely distressed and considered suicide. He was referred to a psychiatrist, Dr. Kathleen Quinn, who referred him for emergency treatment and testified that the termination was a significant cause of Janosek’s worsened medical condition. After running up $3,000 in unpaid medical bills and being hospitalized for a week for medical and neurological problems, Janosek finally had his benefits restored by an AU in May of 1983. Similarly, Barbara Williams became so nervous and upset after being informed of her CDI review that she contemplated suicide and was admitted to a state mental hospital. There she received word from SSI that her benefits were being terminated. An AU later found her to be disabled. Affiants Margaret Schroeder, Jane Meding, and Helen Gordon set forth similar tales of family members who became extremely depressed, withdrawn, tired, stressed and in: consolable after learning that their benefits were being terminated or considered for termination. In each case the relative died. In the case of Meding’s father, Ralph Grunau, an AU finally found him to be still disabled — a month and a half after his death. ■ The affiants’ descriptions of their financial problems resembled the testimony given by Chatman, Utz and Lloyd. Pat Blake, William Wood, Lillie Burnett, James Stall-man, Dorothy Tolliver and Raymond A. Busby, Jr., repeat similar histories: since losing their disability benefits, they have had their utilities cut off, lost their homes and cars to repossession, been forced to sell their possessions, been harassed by bill collectors, and been unable to afford essential medication, food, visits to doctors, and the bare necessities of life. C. Statistical Testimony Concerning All Disability Terminations As discussed in Part II-B-3, supra, more than 23,000 individuals have lost their disability benefits in Ohio since the start of fiscal year 1981. The plaintiffs presented testimony from Linda Craft, BDD’s assistant director of operations, concerning a study which she had supervised, and which demonstrated that a large proportion of those terminations would not have taken place had BDD applied a medical improvement standard while conducting the CDI reviews. Craft stated that BDD randomly selected 165 case files from approximately 900 cases in which a decision to terminate benefits has been made but not implemented because of Governor Celeste’s moratorium on terminations. Six senior staff members — all of whom had once been claims examiners — applied a “common sense approach to medical improvement” and determined that fifty-seven of the 165 recipients would continue to receive benefits if a medical improvement standard were applied. In a deposition admitted in evidence, BDD director Herman stated that the rate of terminations was low when the medical improvement standard was applied in the 1960’s, rose significantly when SSA switched to the current disability standard in 1976, and could probably drop by eighty percent if the medical improvement standard were reinstated. IV. JURISDICTION The plaintiffs allege federal subject matter jurisdiction under 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g) and 1383(c)(3); 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331,.1361, 2201 and 2202; and 5 U.S.C. § 702. The Secretary contends that § 405(g) is the only possible basis of jurisdiction over any of the claims at issue and that even that statute does not provide jurisdiction over many members of the proposed class. This Court concludes that it possesses jurisdiction over the tentatively certified class and the State of Ohio under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) and 28 U.S.C. § 1361; the applicability of other jurisdictional statutes need not be decided.- A. 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) The Act provides for federal district court review of determinations by the Secretary that a claimant’s disability has ceased and that his or her benefits should be terminated. Title 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) provides in part: Any individual, after any final decision of the Secretary made after a hearing to which he was a party, irrespective of the amount in controversy, may obtain a review of such determination by a civil action commenced within sixty days after the mailing to him of notice of such decision____ The Court shall have the power to enter, upon the pleading and transcript of the record, a judgment affirming, modifying, or reversing the decision of the Secretary, with or without remanding the cause for a rehearing____ The literal language of the section specifies three requirements for judicial review: (1) the final decision of the Secretary after a hearing; (2) commencement of a civil action within sixty days after the mailing of the notice of the decision, or within such times as otherwise provided; and (3) filing of the action in an appropriate district court. While the requirement of a final decision by the Secretary is “central to the requisite grant of subject-matter jurisdiction”, Weinberger v. Salfi, 422 U.S. 749, 764, 95 S.Ct. 2457, 2466, 45 L.Ed.2d 522 (1975), ... this condition consists of two elements, only one of which is purely “jurisdictional” in the sense that it cannot be “waived” by the Secretary in a particular case. The waivable element is the requirement that the administrative remedies prescribed by the Secretary be exhausted. The nonwaivable element is the requirement that a claim for benefits shall have been presented to the Secretary. Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 328, 96 S.Ct. 893, 899, 47 L.Ed.2d 18 (1976). The plaintiffs contend that all members of the proposed class satisfy both prongs of the test. 1. Presentation The requirement that individuals present a claim for benefits before a federal court has jurisdiction over them has been read to require “some decision by the Secretary”. Id. In Weinberger v. Salfi, the court distinguished between the district court’s jurisdiction over named plaintiffs in a class action who had “fully presented their claims for benefits ‘to their district Social Security Office and, upon denial, to the Regional Office for reconsideration’ ” and its lack of jurisdiction over class members about whom the complaint “contain[ed] no allegation that they have even filed an application with the Secretary____” 422 U.S. at 764-65, 95 S.Ct. at 2466-67. Mathews.v. Eldridge expanded the first portion of Salfi and held that the plaintiff had satisfied the presentation requirement when [tjhrough his answers to the state agency questionnaire, and his letter in response to the tentative determination that his disability had ceased, he specifically presented his claim that his benefits should not be terminated because he was still disabled. 424 U.S. at 329, 96 S.Ct. at 900. Interpreting Eldridge, numerous courts have held that the presentation requirement is satisfied in Social Security class actions where “all claimants were benefit recipients whose benefits had been reduced or terminated.” Kuehner v. Schweiker, 717 F.2d 813, 817 (3d Cir.1983); Liberty Alliance of the Blind v. Califano, 568 F.2d 333, 344 (3d Cir.1977); Ellison v. Califano, 546 F.2d 1162, 1164 (5th Cir.1977); Wilson v. Edelman, 542 F.2d 1260, 1270-71 (7th Cir.1976); Lopez v. Heckler, 725 F.2d 1489 (9th Cir.1984) (“Lopez II”) (“These decisions seem eminently sensible.”). At a minimum, “in the case of someone who had been receiving benefits and was terminated, [§ 405(g) merely] requires notification to the agency that the claimant still asserts disability.” Mental Health Association of Minnesota v. Heckler, 720 F.2d at 969, citing Mathews v. Diaz, 426 U.S. 67, 72, 76, 96 S.Ct. 1883, 1887, 1889, 48 L.Ed.2d 478 (1976) (jurisdiction extended to claimant who had filed application after the case had been filed); City of New York v. Heckler, 578 F.Supp. 1109, 1117 (E.D.N.Y.1984) (recipients informed of benefit termination satisfied presentment requirement by returning questionnaire to SSA); cf. Wheeler v. Heckler, 719 F.2d 595, 599-600 (2d Cir. 1983) (presentation requirement held not satisfied because “plaintiffs presented no allegations that the unnamed plaintiffs had initiated even informal communications with SSA or [the affiliated state agency], either prior or subsequent to receipt of a termination notice.”) Since the tentatively certified class in this case includes only those Ohio SSDI and SSI beneficiaries “who have been or are receiving disability benefits and who have presented or will present a claim to the defendants that their disabilities have continued”, every class member has satisfied the presentation requirement under § 405(g). 2. Exhaustion In Weinberger v. Salfi, Justice Rehnquist explained the rationale for administrative exhaustion requirements: ... Exhaustion is generally required as a matter of preventing premature interference with agency processes, so that the agency may function efficiently and so that it may have an opportunity to correct its own errors, to afford the parties and the courts the benefit of its experience and expertise and to compile a record which is adequate for judicial review. 422 U.S. at 765, 95 S.Ct. at 2466. The Salfi Court also recognized, however, that in certain instances courts could themselves waive the requirement and entertain challenges to the Secretary’s actions when further administrative action would be “futile”: ... Once a benefit applicant has presented his or her claim at a sufficiently high level of review to satisfy the Secretary’s administrative needs, further exhaustion would not merely be futile for the applicant, but would also be a commitment of administrative resources unsupported by any administrative or judicial interest. Id. 422 U.S. 765-66, 95 S.Ct. at 2466-67. A year later, in Mathews v. Eldridge, the Court read Salfi to stand for the proposition that “cases may arise where, a claimant’s interest in having a particular issue resolved promptly is so great that deference to the agency’s judgment is inappropriate.” 424 U.S. at 330, 96 S.Ct. at 900. One such situation is when the plaintiff’s statutory or constitutional claim “is entirely collateral to his substantive claim of entitlement [to benefits].” Id. Another is where “full relief cannot be obtained at a post-deprivation hearing” — that is, where retroactive benefits awarded at a judicial hearing following complete exhaustion would afford inadequate compensation. Id. The present case satisfies the requirements for judicial waiver of the Secretary’s exhaustion requirements. a. Collaterality The Secretary argues that the class members’ contention that the medical improvement standard must be applied to their eases “goes to the very heart of the merits of their substantive claims for disability benefits” and is not a collateral issue meriting exhaustion. Post-Hearing Brief at 20. In fact, the claims are collateral, for they are by no means confined to a direct claim for the payment of benefits. Rather, the principal relief sought is an order that in conducting disability benefit terminations the Secretary must apply the medical improvement standard adopted by this circuit in Hayes. In ruling on the merits of their legal claim, this Court would not be evaluating their underlying claim for benefits but only the procedures by which such determinations have been and will be made by BDD and SSA. As Judge McMillan has noted: ... Of course, plaintiffs’ claims are generated from a belief that benefits would be awarded to them if SSA were to apply lawful standards to the review of their cases. Nevertheless, that fact does not convert their suit into a direct claim for benefits, in which the court would be asked to review the record of each individual case to determine whether the Secretary’s decision is supported by substantial evidence. In Mathews v. Eldridge, supra, the Supreme Court held that a plaintiff’s due process claim to a pre-deprivation hearing was collateral to a substantive claim for benefits. 424 U.S. at 330 [96 S.Ct. at 900]. That the plaintiff in Eldridge hoped ultimately to have his benefits reinstated did not affect the court’s decision concerning the essential nature of his claim. Hyatt v. Heckler, 579 F.Supp. 985, 997-98 (W.D.N.C.1984). Other courts have treated the Secretary’s argument similarly. See Lopez II, 725 F.2d at 1502. (“If plaintiffs are regarded only as vindicating once again the right that this court has already held in Patti and Finnegan they are entitled to, then the claim is just as collateral to the substantive claim for benefits as was Eldridge’s.”); Kuehner v. Schweiker, 717 F.2d at 818 (“the plaintiffs in effect charge that the Social Security Administration has for budgetary reasons instructed those responsible for termination adjudications to disregard definitive interpretations of the Act made by the courts.”). The Sixth Circuit enunciated a similar position on the collaterality question in Blankenship v. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, 587 F.2d 329 (6th Cir. 1978). In Blankenship, the district court certified a class of Kentucky plaintiffs seeking SSDI and SSI benefits who had experienced delays of more than thirty days in obtaining a hearing. Rejecting the argument that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over members of the class who had not exhausted their administrative and judicial appeals, the court of appeals stated: ... The plaintiffs’ claim does not pertain to their entitlement to benefits, but it arose in the .context of a request for benefits, and it was raised only after the plaintiffs applied for benefits and received an unfavorable decision. Id. at 332. The plaintiffs allege a collateral question which provides this Court with subject matter jurisdiction over the class. b. Substantial Hardship and Irreparable Harm The Secretary also contends that waiver of exhaustion requirements is inappropriate because the application of an incorrect legal standard to terminate any individual recipient’s disability benefits can be remedied by administrative appeals or by the District Court, after which full retroactive benefits may be awarded. The testimony and affidavits of many class members, especially plaintiffs Utz and Lloyd, refute this argument. Most members of the plaintiff class are entirely dependent upon public assistance. When their disability benefits were terminated, they and their dependents often went without proper food, shelter and medical treatment. In some cases, actual or threatened termination of benefits induced severe stress that apparently caused medical setbacks, hospitalization, and conceivably death. No later lump sum payment can redress these forms of deprivation. Moreover, the Secretary’s argument ignores the “irreparable harm inherent in the pursuit of administrative relief ...” Mental Health Association of Minnesota v. Heckler, 720 F.2d at 970. The review process is slow, it is stressful, and, from the evidence presented, it is conducted according to an incorrect legal standard until an appeal reaches the district court. Even if the claimant succeeds there, he or she is not made whole — as Utz and Lloyd testified, the price of a successful appeal to district court is often a hefty payment to an attorney, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 406(b)(1). c. Futility Finally, this is a case where “deference to the agency’s judgment is inappropriate” because the Secretary has taken a fixed, final, and unyielding position that she will not abide by the law of this circuit as set forth in Hayes. See Part II-B-2, supra. In such a situation, exhaustion serves no purpose. The Secretary relies on Smith v. Schweiker, 709 F.2d 777, 780 (2d Cir.1983), for its statement that “[ejxhaustion ... would frame the issue in a much clearer fashion than is possible when it is posed as an abstraction.” This case does not involve an abstraction. It involves a clear policy enunciated by the Secretary in numerous directives. “Under these circumstances, exhaustion of administrative remedies becomes a mere exercise in futility, both for the claimants and for the courts. It makes far more sense to allow the claimant to litigate the case and, if successful, to obtain a decree enforceable via contempt proceedings.” Kuehner v. Schweiker, 717 F.2d at 824 (Becker, J., concurring). As in Blankenship, “[tjhis is not a case where taking jurisdiction would circumvent ‘an orderly administrative mechanism’ or contravene a congressional policy ...” 587 F.2d at 332 (citation omitted). Accordingly, this Court finds that the plaintiff class has satisfied the presentation and exhaustion requirements of 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). Furthermore, insofar as they raise constitutional as well as statutory issues, there is no exhaustion requirement. Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. at 330, 96 S.Ct. at 900; Kuehner v. Schweiker, 717 F.2d at 817; cf. Tatum v. Mathews, 541 F.2d 161, 164 (6th Cir.1976). 3. Sixty-Day Requirement The Secretary also contends that, whatever its jurisdiction over other class members, this Court lacks jurisdiction over claimants who: 1) failed to seek administrative review of adverse initial termination decisions within sixty days; 2) failed to seek further administrative review of adverse decisions by- an examiner on a request for reconsideration, or by an AU; or 3) failed to seek judicial review within sixty days after exhausting their administrative remedies. But the sixty-day requirement is not jurisdictional, Weinberger v. Salfi, 422 U.S. at 764, 95 S.Ct. at 2466, and is subj