Wheelchair-bound Harlem retiree upset Social Security benefits won't increase next year

"My check is already not enough to pay my expenses. I worked my entire life to be comfortable in my golden years, but the golden years don't exist," said Patricia Carter.RICHARD HARBUS/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

"My check is already not enough to pay my expenses. I worked my entire life to be comfortable in my golden years, but the golden years don't exist," said Patricia Carter.

Wheelchair-bound Harlem retiree Patricia Carter was already three months behind on her rent when she heard the news Tuesday that her Social Security benefits aren't increasing next year.
"I cried," the 67-year-old former paralegal said as she waited at a bus stop on Amsterdam Ave. on her way to a food pantry.
"My check is already not enough to pay my expenses. I worked my entire life to be comfortable in my golden years, but the golden years don't exist."
Carter is one of roughly 65 million Americans affected by the decision to keep benefits flat for the third time in six years.
Patricia Carter,67, is upset how Social Security is not giving her a raise next year.RICHARD HARBUS/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Patricia Carter,67, is upset how Social Security is not giving her a raise next year.

The government’s rationale — a decline in inflation due to low gas prices — was met with disgust by Social Security-dependent New Yorkers who say they have been grappling with spiraling food costs and skyrocketing rents.
"There's nothing cheap here. Everything's very expensive," said Claudia Nunez, 73, of Harlem, who lives off a monthly $792 Social Security check. "I always say — the poor ones are the ones that always suffer."
Marion Graves, 72, a retired postal worker from Washington Heights, counts himself lucky — he receives social security benefits and a pension.
"I have the pension, thank god," Graves said. "But a lot of people around here are on a fixed 

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