After the Social Security Administration denies a disability claim, and the first law firm a person hired has already walked away, where do they turn? American Disability Action Group answers that question directly on its homepage. Operating under the legal name Skelton and Stevens Legal Group, the Bryant, Arkansas firm handles only Social Security disability work and says openly that it will look at cases other firms have already turned down or lost. That last point is unusual enough to pause on: a lot of disability practices quietly avoid second-chance clients whose paperwork is already complicated.

The practice draws a tight boundary around its focus. American Disability Action Group handles Social Security Disability Insurance and Supplemental Security Income, and nothing else. There is no personal injury sideline, no family law, no general litigation. A visitor reading the site is dealing with a firm that chose to be narrow on purpose, and the page reflects that through the cases it walks through: initial SSDI applications, denials that need appealing, the administrative hearing stage before a judge, and SSI claims for people whose work history does not qualify them for SSDI. There is also a mention of Medicare benefits guidance for clients already receiving SSDI, which is a sensible adjacent service since those two programs interlock in ways most claimants find baffling.

One promise on the site stands apart from the usual disability-firm language. American Disability Action Group says a single attorney stays with a client from the first filing through any hearing, rather than passing the file between intake staff, paralegals, and a rotating cast of lawyers. Anyone who has dealt with a high-volume disability mill knows how rare that continuity is in practice, and how consequential it becomes when an appeal turns on details buried in a medical record from two years earlier. Whether American Disability Action Group delivers on it is something only a client can confirm, but stating it plainly puts a marker down that the rest of the work can be measured against.

Where it works and who it serves

The geographic reach is spelled out concretely. The core service area covers Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee, a band of states across the South and lower Midwest. Beyond that cluster, the site claims nationwide representation and backs the claim with a state-by-state section, which gives the assertion some structure instead of leaving it as a throwaway line. Social Security disability hearings are federal and increasingly handled by phone or video, so a firm representing clients outside its home region is plausible in a way it would not be for a local traffic-court practice.

The audience is specific: people who cannot work, who are often months or years into a slow federal process, and who in many cases have already been told no. That framing shapes the whole site. It reads less like a pitch to win every passerby and more like a resource aimed at someone in a particular bind. The blog reinforces that, giving American Disability Action Group a place to walk through process questions that claimants tend to search for on their own the night before a hearing.

American Disability Action Group also keeps a dedicated Reviews page on its own site. A firm that points visitors toward its reviews rather than hoping nobody checks is usually one that expects the feedback to stand up to scrutiny. Listing the firm in a business directory is one form of public accountability; maintaining a separate reviews page on the firm's own domain is another, and American Disability Action Group does both.

On outside reputation, the record is solid. American Disability Action Group carries a Birdeye profile with 91 reviews and a 4.8-star average, a sample large enough that the rating is not riding on two or three happy clients. A Yelp profile exists as well, though the review count there was not something this research could pin down with certainty, so it is fair to treat Yelp as present but unverified in volume. There is also a Facebook presence under the Skelton and Stevens Legal Group name, which lines up with the firm's stated legal identity and gives the dual-name setup a coherent paper trail instead of leaving a visitor wondering whether two different businesses are involved.

Contact information is handled well. The homepage and a separate contact page both carry the details: two phone numbers, a working email address, and a full street address in Bryant, complete with a suite number. A physical office with a published number removes most of the doubt that hangs over disability outfits run entirely out of a call center in another state. For a practice asking people to trust it with a benefits claim that may be their main source of income, that level of openness counts for a great deal.

The dual identity deserves a brief word, even though everything about it checks out. A potential client searching the name will find American Disability Action Group as the public brand and Skelton and Stevens Legal Group as the formal entity, and someone who does not read carefully might wonder whether the two names signal something off. They do not. American Disability Action Group is upfront about the relationship, the Facebook page uses the legal name, and the address ties both together. It looks confusing for about thirty seconds and then resolves into a standard trade-name arrangement.

If there is a limit to what the listing tells you, it is the one that applies to any disability practice: outcomes in this field depend heavily on the strength of a claimant's medical evidence, and no firm controls that. The site is honest enough not to promise results, which is the correct posture and one that less careful competitors in this space tend to skip. What American Disability Action Group offers is focus, a single attorney through the full process, a real office with a published address, and a review record that supports the claims on the page. That combination is concrete enough to evaluate, and American Disability Action Group clears the bar on every count.

Weighed against a national operation like Binder and Binder, the contrast is instructive. The large advertised disability brands run on volume and name recognition, and a client there often becomes a case number passed along an assembly line. American Disability Action Group is betting on the opposite: the same attorney from filing to hearing, a known address in Arkansas, and a regional footprint it can actually cover. A claimant who values knowing exactly who is handling their file, and who may have already been burned by a firm that dropped them mid-process, will find the case for American Disability Action Group persuasive on the published evidence alone.


Business address
American Disability Action Group
2615 N Prickett Rd, Suite 2,
Bryant,
AR
72022
United States

Contact details
Phone: 501-481-8923