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Social Security Administration

The United States Social Security Administration (SSA)[2] is an independent agency of the U.S. federal government that administers Social Security, a social insurance program consisting of retirement, disability and survivor benefits. To qualify for most of these benefits, most workers pay Social Security taxes on their earnings; the claimant's benefits are based on the wage earner's contributions. Otherwise benefits such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI) are given based on need.

Social Security Administration
Flag
Agency overview
FormedAugust 14, 1935; 88 years ago (1935-08-14)
JurisdictionFederal government of the United States
HeadquartersWoodlawn, Maryland, U.S.
Employees60,000
Annual budget$1.3 trillion (FY 2022)[1]
Agency executive
Websitewww.ssa.gov

The Social Security Administration was established by the Social Security Act of 1935 and is codified in 42 U.S.C. § 901 (49 Stat. 635). It was created in 1935 as the "Social Security Board", then assumed its present name in 1946. Its current leader is Martin O'Malley.

SSA offers its services to the public through 1,200 field offices, a website, and a national toll-free number. Field offices, which served 43 million individuals in 2019,[3] were reopened on April 7, 2022 after being closed for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

SSA is headquartered in Woodlawn, Maryland, just to the west of Baltimore, at what is known as Central Office. In addition to its 1,200 field offices, the agency includes 10 regional offices, 8 processing centers, and 37 Teleservice Centers. As of 2018, about 60,000 people were employed by SSA.[5] Headquarters non-supervisory employees of SSA are represented by American Federation of Government Employees Local 1923.

SSA operates the largest government program in the United States.[6] In fiscal year (FY) 2022, the agency expects to pay out $1.2 trillion in Social Security benefits to 66 million individuals.[1] In addition, SSA expects to pay $61 billion in SSI benefits to 7.5 million low-income individuals in FY 2022.

History edit

 
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act of 1935 (August 14, 1935)

The Social Security Act created a Social Security Board (SSB),[7] to oversee the administration of the new program. It was created as part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal with the signing of the Social Security Act of 1935 on August 14, 1935.[8] The Board consisted of three presidentially appointed executives, and started with no budget, no staff, and no furniture. It obtained a temporary budget from the Federal Emergency Relief Administration headed by Harry Hopkins.[7] The first counsel for the new agency was Thomas Elliott, one of Felix Frankfurter's "happy hot dogs".[9]

The first Social Security office opened in Austin, Texas, on October 14, 1936. [10] Social Security taxes were first collected in January 1937, along with the first one-time, lump-sum payments.[8] The first person to receive monthly retirement benefits was Ida May Fuller of Brattleboro, Vermont. Her first check, dated January 31, 1940, was in the amount of US$22.54.[11]

In 1939, the Social Security Board merged into a cabinet-level Federal Security Agency, which included the SSB, the U.S. Public Health Service, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and other agencies.[12] In January 1940, the first regular ongoing monthly benefits began.[8] In 1946, the SSB was renamed the Social Security Administration under President Harry S. Truman's Reorganization Plan.

In 1953, the Federal Security Agency was abolished and SSA was placed under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which became the Department of Health and Human Services in 1980. In 1994, Congress amended non-positive law 42 U.S.C. § 901 and returned SSA to the status of an independent agency in the executive branch of government. In 1972, Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs) were introduced into SSA programs to deal with the effects of inflation on fixed incomes.[13]

Historical leadership edit

SSB chairs edit

Source:[14]

Image Name Start End President
  John Winant August 23, 1935 September 30, 1936 Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1933–1945)
  Arthur Altmeyer September 30, 1936
Acting: September 30, 1936 – February 19, 1937
July 16, 1946
Harry S. Truman
(1945–1953)

SSA commissioners edit

Source:[15]

Image Name Start End President
  Arthur Altmeyer July 16, 1946 April 10, 1953 Harry S. Truman
(1945–1953)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1953–1961)
  William Mitchell
Acting
April 11, 1953 November 23, 1953
  John Tramburg November 24, 1953 July 31, 1954
  Charles Schottland August 23, 1954 December 31, 1958
  William Mitchell February 4, 1959 April 3, 1962
John F. Kennedy
(1961–1963)
  Bob Ball April 17, 1962 March 17, 1973
Lyndon B. Johnson
(1963–1969)
Richard Nixon
(1969–1974)
  Arthur Hess
Acting
March 18, 1973 October 24, 1973
  James Cardwell October 25, 1973 December 12, 1977
Gerald Ford
(1974–1977)
Jimmy Carter
(1977–1981)
  Don Wortman
Acting
December 13, 1977 October 4, 1978
  Stanford Ross October 5, 1978 December 31, 1979
  Herb Doggette
Acting
January 1, 1980 January 2, 1980
  William Driver January 3, 1980 January 19, 1981
  Herb Doggette
Acting
January 20, 1981 May 5, 1981 Ronald Reagan
(1981–1989)
  John Svahn May 6, 1981 September 12, 1983
  Martha McSteen
Acting
September 14, 1983 June 25, 1986
  Dorcas Hardy June 26, 1986 July 31, 1989
George H. W. Bush
(1989–1993)
  Gwendolyn King August 1, 1989 September 30, 1992
  Lou Enoff
Acting
October 1, 1992 July 18, 1993
Bill Clinton
(1993–2001)
  Lawrence Thompson
Acting
July 19, 1993 October 7, 1993
  Shirley Chater October 8, 1993 February 28, 1997
  John Callahan
Acting
March 1, 1997 September 28, 1997
  Ken Apfel September 29, 1997 January 20, 2001
  Bill Halter
Acting
January 21, 2001 March 28, 2001 George W. Bush
(2001–2009)
  Larry Massanari
Acting
March 29, 2001 November 9, 2001
  Jo Anne Barnhart November 9, 2001 January 19, 2007
  Linda McMahon
Acting
January 20, 2007 February 11, 2007
  Michael Astrue February 12, 2007 February 13, 2013
Barack Obama
(2009–2017)
  Carolyn Colvin
Acting
February 14, 2013 January 20, 2017
  Nancy Berryhill
Acting
January 21, 2017 June 17, 2019 Donald Trump
(2017–2021)
  Andrew Saul June 17, 2019 July 9, 2021
Joe Biden
(2021–present)
  Kilolo Kijakazi
Acting
July 9, 2021 December 20, 2023
  Martin O'Malley December 20, 2023 present

Headquarters edit

 
One part of SSA headquarters in Woodlawn, Maryland
 
Another view of SSA headquarters in Maryland

SSA was one of the first federal agencies to have its national headquarters outside of Washington, D.C., or its adjacent suburbs. It was located in Baltimore initially due to the need for a building that was capable of holding the unprecedented amount of paper records that would be needed. Nothing suitable was available in Washington in 1936, so the Social Security Board selected the Candler Building on Baltimore's harbor as a temporary location. Soon after locating there, construction began on a permanent building for SSA in Washington that would meet their requirements for record storage capacity. However, by the time the new building was completed, World War II had started, and the building was commandeered by the War Department. By the time the war ended, it was judged too disruptive to relocate the agency to Washington. The Agency remained in the Candler Building until 1960, when it relocated to its newly built headquarters in Woodlawn.[16]

The road on which the headquarters is located, built especially for SSA, is named Security Boulevard (Maryland Route 122) and has since become one of the major arteries connecting Baltimore with its western suburbs. Security Boulevard is also the name of SSA's exit from the nearby Baltimore Beltway (Interstate 695). A nearby shopping center has been named Security Square Mall, and Woodlawn is often referred to informally as "Security." Interstate 70, which runs for thousands of miles from Utah to Maryland, terminates in a park and ride lot that adjoins the SSA campus.

Due to space constraints and ongoing renovations, many headquarters employees work in leased space throughout the Woodlawn area. Other SSA components are located elsewhere. For example, the headquarters (also known as Central Office) of SSA's Office of Disability Adjudication and Review is located in Falls Church, Virginia.

Field offices edit

SSA has a network of more than 1,200 community-based field offices. In fiscal year 2019, 43 million individuals visited these field offices to apply for benefits, get an original or replacement Social Security card, or receive other services.[17] Field offices reopened in April 2022, after being closed for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

SSA provides a field office locator service, where members of the public can find office phone numbers and addresses.[18]

SSA also provides services through a national toll-free number (1-800-772-1213) and a website. Retirement and disability benefits can be applied for online.[19] For survivor benefits, however, members of the public must call or visit SSA in person to apply. In most states, individuals seeking a replacement Social Security card can apply for one online.[20]

Members of the public can also apply for Supplemental Security Income at SSA's field offices. Field office staff will also assist SSI applicants with an application for food assistance through the SNAP program.

Program Service Centers edit

 
The two buildings in the center, part of Lefrak City in Rego Park, Queens, housed the Northeastern Program Service Center until ...
 
... it was moved to the Joseph P. Addabbo Federal Building in Jamaica, Queens, in the late 1980s.
 
The Mid-America Program Service Center is housed in the Richard Bolling Federal Building in Kansas City, Missouri.

Much of the actual processing of initial benefits and subsequent adjustments to benefits is done in six large Program Service Centers located around the country.[21]

The two main positions in Program Service Centers have long been Claims Authorizers and Benefits Authorizers.[22][23] Claims Authorizers, now sometimes called claims specialists, establish initial benefits for program recipients.[24] Benefits Authorizers process complicated changes of entitlements to existing beneficiaries, including life events, overpayments, underpayments, and so forth.[24][23] The claims position is the higher-ranking of the two and initially required a college degree whereas the post-entitlement position did not.[23] For decades, post-entitlement actions have been processed through a system known as Manual Adjustment, Credit and Award Processes (MADCAP).[25]

The six service centers are:[21]

They have been located in these six cities going back to at least the early 1950s.[28] The origins of the payment centers date back to 1942, when they were known as Area Offices.[29] The first one was established in Philadelphia, with ones in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and New Orleans, Louisiana, soon following.[22]

In addition, there are specialized processing centers for the Office of Earnings and International Operations and the Office of Disability Operations, both located in Baltimore.[21]

 
Form SSA-101 was the central form used in Program Services Centers for indicating initial entitlement to benefits.
 
Form SSA-2795 was the central form used in Program Services Centers for changing entitlements to benefits.

Before the mid-1970s, the Program Service Centers were called Payment Centers.[30] By the late 1960s, the Payment Centers had acquired a reputation as sources of poor bureaucratic performance that people did not want to work in, and a reorganization under a modules system was undertaken during the 1970s in an effort to improve matters.[22] Each module would be assigned a certain block of social security numbers and it would process all aspects of a claim, from initial entitlement through various changes, notifications to beneficiaries, and so forth.[23] Decades later, the modules system was still seen as one of the great improvements in SSA processing.[23]

The centers have each employed around two thousand people or more, giving them a major local economic impact, and even relocations within the same metropolitan area have created political conflict. When in the early 1970s, SSA and the General Services Administration said it intended to move payment center operations out of San Francisco and across the East Bay to Richmond, the move was opposed by San Francisco-representing Congressman Phillip Burton.[31] Burton's efforts were in vain, however, as construction in a redevelopment area in Richmond commenced and the move was made around 1975.[27]

Similarly, in the late 1970s, SSA, the General Services Administration, and the Carter administration devised a plan to move the program service center from its main location, in two leased buildings on Horace Harding Expressway in Lefrak City in Rego Park, to a new federal building planned for a revitalization zone in the center of the Jamaica area of Queens.[32][33] The move was championed by Congressman Joseph P. Addabbo, who represented Jamaica and whose district would gain the over 2,000 federal workers involved, but was opposed by Congressman Benjamin Rosenthal, whose district would lose them.[34] According to Rosenthal, the potential negative impact of the move affected the Elmhurst and Corona neighborhoods most strongly.[35] The move was also supported by Representative Geraldine Ferraro, another powerful Queens figure, who sat on the House Public Works Committee.[32] The dispute was aired in Congressional hearings and embroiled Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan and developer Richard Lefrak, supporting and opposing the move respectively, as well.[36] In the event, the move went forward and the new, 11-story building in Jamaica – by then named the Joseph P. Addabbo Federal Building, as the congressman had died in the interim – opened in 1988.[37]

Coverage edit

 
The Mid-Atlantic Program Services Center in Philadelphia

Initially, only 56 percent of the jobs in the United States were covered by Social Security. Today, the system is nearly universal, with 94 percent of individuals in paid employment in the United States working in covered employment.[38]

State and local government workers are not required to participate in the Social Security program if they participate in a public retirement system through their employers. However, state and local governments, through agreements known as Section 218 agreements,[39] may elect to participate in the program. Of the 23.2 million state and local workers in the United States, about 6.6 million are not covered by Social Security. Other workers not covered by Social Security include federal employees hired before 1984, railroad workers, some family employees, some students, and some members of the clergy.[38]

If a job is not covered by Social Security, workers and employers do not pay Social Security payroll taxes. Social Security retirement and disability benefits are not payable unless individuals have sufficient work in Social Security covered employment. Individuals who work part of their careers in covered employment and part of their careers in non-covered employment and who receive pensions from non-covered employment may have their Social Security benefits reduced through the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP)[40] or the Government Pension Offset (GPO).[41]

Railroad workers were covered by the Railroad Retirement Board before Social Security was founded. Today, they still are, though a portion of each railroad pension is designated as "equivalent" to Social Security. Railroad workers also participate in Medicare. All state and local government employees hired since 1986, or whom are covered by Section 218 Agreements, participate in Medicare even if not covered for purposes of Social Security benefits.[42]

Old age, survivors and disability edit

SSA administers the retirement, survivors, and disabled social insurance programs, which can provide monthly benefits to aged or disabled workers, their spouses and children, and to the survivors of insured workers. In 2010, more than 54 million Americans received approximately $712 billion in Social Security benefits. The programs are primarily financed by taxes which employers, employees, and the self-insured pay annually. These revenues are placed into a special trust fund. These programs are collectively known as Retirement, Survivors, Disability Insurance (RSDI).

SSA administers its disability program partly through its Office of Disability Adjudication and Review (ODAR), which has regional offices and hearing offices across the United States. ODAR publishes a manual, called HALLEX, which contains instructions for its employees regarding how to implement its guiding principles and procedures.

The RSDI program is the primary benefits program administered by the U.S. federal government, and for some beneficiaries is the vital source of income. Increasing access to this benefit program for low-income or homeless individuals is one of SSA's goals. SSA is a member of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness[43] and works with other municipal, county, state, local and federal partners to increase access and approval for SSI/SSDI benefits who are eligible.

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) edit

 
An SSA field office in Ann Arbor, Michigan

SSA also administers the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program, which is needs-based, for the aged, blind, or disabled. Prior to the 1972 Amendments to the Social Security Act, low-income aged, blind, or disabled persons received benefits from state-run programs called Old-Age Assistance, Aid to the Blind, and Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled. These programs received federal funding, but varied in terms of eligibility requirements and benefit payments. The 1972 Amendments replaced these programs with the SSI program. SSA was assigned responsibility for the SSI program and began operations in 1974.[44] Federal benefit payments up to $914 for an SSI individual and $1,371 for an SSI couple are available from the program. SSI benefits are paid out of the general revenue of the United States of America. Some states supplement the federal amount.

Because SSI is needs-based, eligibility is restricted to persons with limited income and resources. In addition, eligibility is generally restricted to U.S. citizens, nationals, and some other groups (such as some refugees) who reside in one of the 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, or the Northern Mariana Islands.[45] U.S. citizens and nationals who reside in American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands are not eligible for SSI.[46] In 2019, 8 million individuals received SSI, including 1.1 million disabled children, 4.6 million disabled adults, and 2.3 million persons 65 or older.[47]

In some cases, individuals may be eligible for Social Security (RSDI) benefits and SSI benefits. For example, a disabled individual who worked in Social Security-covered employment and who has limited income and resources may receive a Social Security disability benefit (due to employment prior to disability) and a partial SSI benefit (due to limited income and resources). SSA refers to these beneficiaries as "concurrent" beneficiaries.

Medicare edit

The administration of the Medicare program is a responsibility of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, but SSA offices are used for determining initial eligibility, some processing of premium payments, and for limited public contact information. They also administer a financial needs-based program called Extra Help, which helps beneficiaries pay the premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance associated with prescription drug coverage under Part D of Medicare. Benefits under this program are estimated to be worth about $5,000 per year. Individuals may apply online for the Extra Help program or by calling SSA.[48]

Operations edit

To ensure consistent and efficient treatment of Social Security beneficiaries across its vast bureaucracy, SSA has compiled a giant book known as the Program Operations Manual System (POMS) which governs practically all aspects of SSA's internal operations. POMS describes, in excruciating detail, a huge variety of situations regularly encountered by SSA personnel, and the exact policies and procedures that apply to each situation.[49]

Automation edit

 
IBM tabulating machines in use at SSA circa 1936
 
A few of the hundreds of keypunch operators SSA employed throughout the late 1930s and into the 1950s

While the establishment of Social Security predated the invention of the modern digital computer, punched card data processing was a mature technology, and the Social Security system made extensive use of automated unit record equipment from the program's inception. This allowed the Social Security Administration to achieve a high level of efficiency. SSA expenses have always been a small fraction of benefits paid. As a percentage of assets, the administration costs are 0.39%.[50]

Adjudication edit

SSA operates its own administrative adjudication system, which has original jurisdiction when claims are denied in part or in full. SSA decisions are issued by Administrative Law Judges and Senior Attorney Adjudicators (supported by about 6,000 staff employees) at locations throughout the United States of the U.S. Office of Hearing Operations, formerly Office of Disability Adjudication and Review (ODAR), who hear and decide challenges to SSA decisions. Dissatisfied claimants can appeal to ODAR's Appeals Council, and if still dissatisfied can appeal to a U.S. District Court.

Over the years, OHO aka ODAR has developed its own procedural system, which is documented in the Hearings and Appeals Litigation Law Manual (HALLEX) (HALLEX). ODAR was formerly known as the Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) and, prior to the 1970s, the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals. The name was changed to ODAR in 2007 to reflect the fact that about 75% of the agency's docket consists of disability cases. OHO aka ODAR also adjudicates disputes relating to retirement claims and has jurisdiction when the paternity of a claimant or the validity of a marriage is at issue when a claim is filed for benefits under the earnings record of a spouse or parent. The agency also adjudicates a limited number of Medicare claim issues, which is a residual legacy from when SSA was part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Statistical publications edit

Each year, just before Mother's Day, SSA releases a list of the names most commonly given to newborn babies in the United States in the previous year, based on applications for Social Security cards. The report includes the 1,000 most common names for both genders. The Popular Baby Names page on the SSA website provides the complete list and allows searches for past years and particular names.[51] For privacy reasons, SSA does not publish data for names with fewer than five occurrences in any given year.[52]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Fiscal Year 2023 President's Budget" (PDF). www.ssa.gov.
  2. ^ (SSA Pub. No 25-1556 p. 7)
  3. ^ "Testimony by Grace Kim, Deputy Commissioner for Operations, Social Security Administration, before the Senate Committee on Finance, on Service Delivery". www.ssa.gov.
  4. ^ "Statement of Kilolo Kijakazi". www.ssa.gov.
  5. ^ SSA, How We're Organized, accessed 23 July 2018
  6. ^ "The Federal Budget in Fiscal Year 2020: An Infographic". www.cbo.gov.
  7. ^ a b Social Security Administration. "Brief Graphic Organizational History". U.S. Government. Retrieved 2007-05-24.
  8. ^ a b c (SSA Pub. No 25-1556 p. 15)
  9. ^ "Trenton Facts". The Courier-News of Bridgewater, NJ. 4 October 1935. p. 21. Retrieved 18 August 2017.; Henning, Arthur Sears (4 October 1935). "New 'Hot Boss' Fears High Courts: Laws So 'Learned' They Defeat Purpose". Chicago Tribune. p. 21. Retrieved 18 August 2017.; "Inferiority Complex". Review of Reviews: 29. 1936. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  10. ^ "Social Security History". www.ssa.gov.
  11. ^ Social Security Administration. "The First Social Security Beneficiary". U.S. Government. Retrieved 2007-05-24.
  12. ^ Social Security Administration. "Special Collections Chronology: 1930". U.S. Government. Retrieved 2007-05-24.
  13. ^ "Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) Information | Social Security Administration". www.ssa.gov. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  14. ^ "Social Security Board". www.ssa.gov.
  15. ^ "Social Security History - Social Security Commissioners". www.ssa.gov.
  16. ^ "The Candler Building". www.ssa.gov.
  17. ^ "Testimony by Grace Kim, Deputy Commissioner for Operations, Social Security Administration, before the Senate Committee on Finance, on Service Delivery". www.ssa.gov.
  18. ^ "Social Security Office Locator". www.ssa.gov.
  19. ^ "Online Services". www.ssa.gov.
  20. ^ "Request a Replacement Social Security Number (SSN) Card Online". www.ssa.gov.
  21. ^ a b c "GN 01050.051 Who reviews and services claims". Program Operations Manual System (POMS). Social Security Administration. May 25, 2018. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  22. ^ a b c Garcia, O. R. (January 18, 1974). "Historical Interview with Milton Freedman". Social Security History: Oral Histories. Social Security Administration.
  23. ^ a b c d e "Oral Histories: 'Pat' Caligiuri". Social Security History: Oral Histories. Social Security Administration. April 8, 2010.
  24. ^ a b "Positions Available at SSA". Social Security Administration. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  25. ^ "Payments Resulting from Disability Insurance Actions Processed Via Manual Adjustment, Credit and Award Processes". Social Security Administration. June 28, 2013. Retrieved June 29, 2019.
  26. ^ Queens, Proposed Federal Building: Environmental Impact Statement. Social Security Administration. 1981.
  27. ^ a b "Richmond To Dig S.F. Loss". The San Francisco Examiner. July 31, 1973. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  28. ^ Analysis of the Social Security System: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives, 83rd Congress, First Session, Parts 1-8. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1953. p. 570.
  29. ^ "Organizational History". Social Security History. Social Security Administration. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  30. ^ Supplemental Appropriation Bill for 1962: Hearings, Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, 87th Congress, First Session, H.R. 9169. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1961. p. 301.
  31. ^ "S.F. to Lose Big Payroll?". The San Francisco Examiner. December 7, 1972. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com.
  32. ^ a b Molotsky, Irvin (November 16, 1979). "Federal Building in Queens Urged to Aid Economy". The New York Times. p. B3.
  33. ^ Dallas, Gus (April 20, 1980). "A biz district is finding the road back". Daily News. New York. p. 3B XQL – via Newspapers.com.
  34. ^ Rainie, Harrison (December 14, 1979). "Site for fed office stirs row". Daily News. New York. p. XQ1 – via Newspapers.com.
  35. ^ Murray, Alice (February 4, 1980). "SS move called disaster". Daily News. New York. p. 3XQ – via Newspapers.com.
  36. ^ Hardy, David (April 20, 1980). "Battle's building up on fed office". Daily News. New York. pp. 1B, 3B XQL – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ Davila, Albert (November 11, 1988). "Jamaica on the march". Daily News. New York. p. XQ1 – via Newspapers.com.
  38. ^ a b "Social Security: Who Is Covered Under the Program?". Congressional Research Service.
  39. ^ "Social Security Coverage for State and Local Government Employees". Social Security Administration.
  40. ^ "Program Explainer: Windfall Elimination Provision". Social Security Administration.
  41. ^ "Program Explainer: Government Pension Offset" (PDF). Social Security Administration.
  42. ^ . Socialsecurity.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-05-11. Retrieved 2012-05-09.
  43. ^ . Usich.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-04-24. Retrieved 2012-05-09.
  44. ^ "History of the SSI program". www.ssa.gov.
  45. ^ "Understanding Supplemental Security Income SSI Eligibility Requirements -- 2021 Edition". www.ssa.gov.
  46. ^ "Chapter 3: Supplemental Security Income | Green Book. House Committee on Ways and Means". greenbook-waysandmeans.house.gov.
  47. ^ "SSI Recipients by State and County, 2019". www.ssa.gov.
  48. ^ "Extra Help with Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Costs". www.ssa.gov.
  49. ^ "SSA's Policy Information Site - POMS - About POMS". secure.ssa.gov.
  50. ^ Robert Genetski. "Administration Costs and the Relative Efficiency of Public and Private Social Security Systems". CATO Institute. Retrieved 2010-09-27.
  51. ^ Social Security Administration. "Popular Baby Names". U.S. Government. Retrieved 2007-05-24.
  52. ^ Social Security Administration. "Background information for popular names". U.S. Government. Retrieved 2021-06-04.

All Social Security Offices in USA

Further reading edit

  • Social Security Disability Advocate's Handbook, by David Traver, James Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-58012-033-4
  • Social Security Handbook 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, Germania Publishing, 2006.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Program Operations Manual System (POMS) – public online version of the procedure by which SSA employees process decisions about benefits
  • Historical Background And Development Of Social Security by Social Security Administration
  • Social Security Administration on USAspending.gov
  • Social Security Administration in the Federal Register
  • Works by Social Security Administration at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Social Security Administration at Internet Archive
  • Papers of Charles I. Schottland, former Commissioner of Social Security, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
  • Social Security Administration Office Locations 2020-10-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • SSA Pub. No 25-1556. Teleservice Representative Basic Training Curriculum Introduction Unit 1 Lessons 01-08 Student. pp. 7–15. Social Security Administration. April 2006.

social, security, administration, united, states, independent, agency, federal, government, that, administers, social, security, social, insurance, program, consisting, retirement, disability, survivor, benefits, qualify, most, these, benefits, most, workers, . The United States Social Security Administration SSA 2 is an independent agency of the U S federal government that administers Social Security a social insurance program consisting of retirement disability and survivor benefits To qualify for most of these benefits most workers pay Social Security taxes on their earnings the claimant s benefits are based on the wage earner s contributions Otherwise benefits such as Supplemental Security Income SSI are given based on need Social Security AdministrationSealFlagAgency overviewFormedAugust 14 1935 88 years ago 1935 08 14 JurisdictionFederal government of the United StatesHeadquartersWoodlawn Maryland U S Employees60 000Annual budget 1 3 trillion FY 2022 1 Agency executiveMartin O Malley CommissionerWebsitewww wbr ssa wbr gov The Social Security Administration was established by the Social Security Act of 1935 and is codified in 42 U S C 901 49 Stat 635 It was created in 1935 as the Social Security Board then assumed its present name in 1946 Its current leader is Martin O Malley SSA offers its services to the public through 1 200 field offices a website and a national toll free number Field offices which served 43 million individuals in 2019 3 were reopened on April 7 2022 after being closed for two years due to the COVID 19 pandemic 4 SSA is headquartered in Woodlawn Maryland just to the west of Baltimore at what is known as Central Office In addition to its 1 200 field offices the agency includes 10 regional offices 8 processing centers and 37 Teleservice Centers As of 2018 update about 60 000 people were employed by SSA 5 Headquarters non supervisory employees of SSA are represented by American Federation of Government Employees Local 1923 SSA operates the largest government program in the United States 6 In fiscal year FY 2022 the agency expects to pay out 1 2 trillion in Social Security benefits to 66 million individuals 1 In addition SSA expects to pay 61 billion in SSI benefits to 7 5 million low income individuals in FY 2022 Contents 1 History 2 Historical leadership 2 1 SSB chairs 2 2 SSA commissioners 3 Headquarters 4 Field offices 5 Program Service Centers 6 Coverage 6 1 Old age survivors and disability 6 2 Supplemental Security Income SSI 6 3 Medicare 7 Operations 7 1 Automation 7 2 Adjudication 7 3 Statistical publications 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp President Franklin D Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act of 1935 August 14 1935 The Social Security Act created a Social Security Board SSB 7 to oversee the administration of the new program It was created as part of President Franklin D Roosevelt s New Deal with the signing of the Social Security Act of 1935 on August 14 1935 8 The Board consisted of three presidentially appointed executives and started with no budget no staff and no furniture It obtained a temporary budget from the Federal Emergency Relief Administration headed by Harry Hopkins 7 The first counsel for the new agency was Thomas Elliott one of Felix Frankfurter s happy hot dogs 9 The first Social Security office opened in Austin Texas on October 14 1936 10 Social Security taxes were first collected in January 1937 along with the first one time lump sum payments 8 The first person to receive monthly retirement benefits was Ida May Fuller of Brattleboro Vermont Her first check dated January 31 1940 was in the amount of US 22 54 11 In 1939 the Social Security Board merged into a cabinet level Federal Security Agency which included the SSB the U S Public Health Service the Civilian Conservation Corps and other agencies 12 In January 1940 the first regular ongoing monthly benefits began 8 In 1946 the SSB was renamed the Social Security Administration under President Harry S Truman s Reorganization Plan In 1953 the Federal Security Agency was abolished and SSA was placed under the Department of Health Education and Welfare which became the Department of Health and Human Services in 1980 In 1994 Congress amended non positive law 42 U S C 901 and returned SSA to the status of an independent agency in the executive branch of government In 1972 Cost of Living Adjustments COLAs were introduced into SSA programs to deal with the effects of inflation on fixed incomes 13 Historical leadership editSSB chairs edit Source 14 Image Name Start End President nbsp John Winant August 23 1935 September 30 1936 Franklin D Roosevelt 1933 1945 nbsp Arthur Altmeyer September 30 1936 Acting September 30 1936 February 19 1937 July 16 1946 Harry S Truman 1945 1953 SSA commissioners edit Source 15 Image Name Start End President nbsp Arthur Altmeyer July 16 1946 April 10 1953 Harry S Truman 1945 1953 Dwight D Eisenhower 1953 1961 nbsp William Mitchell Acting April 11 1953 November 23 1953 nbsp John Tramburg November 24 1953 July 31 1954 nbsp Charles Schottland August 23 1954 December 31 1958 nbsp William Mitchell February 4 1959 April 3 1962 John F Kennedy 1961 1963 nbsp Bob Ball April 17 1962 March 17 1973 Lyndon B Johnson 1963 1969 Richard Nixon 1969 1974 nbsp Arthur Hess Acting March 18 1973 October 24 1973 nbsp James Cardwell October 25 1973 December 12 1977 Gerald Ford 1974 1977 Jimmy Carter 1977 1981 nbsp Don Wortman Acting December 13 1977 October 4 1978 nbsp Stanford Ross October 5 1978 December 31 1979 nbsp Herb Doggette Acting January 1 1980 January 2 1980 nbsp William Driver January 3 1980 January 19 1981 nbsp Herb Doggette Acting January 20 1981 May 5 1981 Ronald Reagan 1981 1989 nbsp John Svahn May 6 1981 September 12 1983 nbsp Martha McSteen Acting September 14 1983 June 25 1986 nbsp Dorcas Hardy June 26 1986 July 31 1989 George H W Bush 1989 1993 nbsp Gwendolyn King August 1 1989 September 30 1992 nbsp Lou Enoff Acting October 1 1992 July 18 1993 Bill Clinton 1993 2001 nbsp Lawrence Thompson Acting July 19 1993 October 7 1993 nbsp Shirley Chater October 8 1993 February 28 1997 nbsp John Callahan Acting March 1 1997 September 28 1997 nbsp Ken Apfel September 29 1997 January 20 2001 nbsp Bill Halter Acting January 21 2001 March 28 2001 George W Bush 2001 2009 nbsp Larry Massanari Acting March 29 2001 November 9 2001 nbsp Jo Anne Barnhart November 9 2001 January 19 2007 nbsp Linda McMahon Acting January 20 2007 February 11 2007 nbsp Michael Astrue February 12 2007 February 13 2013 Barack Obama 2009 2017 nbsp Carolyn Colvin Acting February 14 2013 January 20 2017 nbsp Nancy Berryhill Acting January 21 2017 June 17 2019 Donald Trump 2017 2021 nbsp Andrew Saul June 17 2019 July 9 2021 Joe Biden 2021 present nbsp Kilolo Kijakazi Acting July 9 2021 December 20 2023 nbsp Martin O Malley December 20 2023 presentHeadquarters edit nbsp One part of SSA headquarters in Woodlawn Maryland nbsp Another view of SSA headquarters in Maryland SSA was one of the first federal agencies to have its national headquarters outside of Washington D C or its adjacent suburbs It was located in Baltimore initially due to the need for a building that was capable of holding the unprecedented amount of paper records that would be needed Nothing suitable was available in Washington in 1936 so the Social Security Board selected the Candler Building on Baltimore s harbor as a temporary location Soon after locating there construction began on a permanent building for SSA in Washington that would meet their requirements for record storage capacity However by the time the new building was completed World War II had started and the building was commandeered by the War Department By the time the war ended it was judged too disruptive to relocate the agency to Washington The Agency remained in the Candler Building until 1960 when it relocated to its newly built headquarters in Woodlawn 16 The road on which the headquarters is located built especially for SSA is named Security Boulevard Maryland Route 122 and has since become one of the major arteries connecting Baltimore with its western suburbs Security Boulevard is also the name of SSA s exit from the nearby Baltimore Beltway Interstate 695 A nearby shopping center has been named Security Square Mall and Woodlawn is often referred to informally as Security Interstate 70 which runs for thousands of miles from Utah to Maryland terminates in a park and ride lot that adjoins the SSA campus Due to space constraints and ongoing renovations many headquarters employees work in leased space throughout the Woodlawn area Other SSA components are located elsewhere For example the headquarters also known as Central Office of SSA s Office of Disability Adjudication and Review is located in Falls Church Virginia Field offices editSSA has a network of more than 1 200 community based field offices In fiscal year 2019 43 million individuals visited these field offices to apply for benefits get an original or replacement Social Security card or receive other services 17 Field offices reopened in April 2022 after being closed for two years due to the COVID 19 pandemic SSA provides a field office locator service where members of the public can find office phone numbers and addresses 18 SSA also provides services through a national toll free number 1 800 772 1213 and a website Retirement and disability benefits can be applied for online 19 For survivor benefits however members of the public must call or visit SSA in person to apply In most states individuals seeking a replacement Social Security card can apply for one online 20 Members of the public can also apply for Supplemental Security Income at SSA s field offices Field office staff will also assist SSI applicants with an application for food assistance through the SNAP program Program Service Centers edit nbsp The two buildings in the center part of Lefrak City in Rego Park Queens housed the Northeastern Program Service Center until nbsp it was moved to the Joseph P Addabbo Federal Building in Jamaica Queens in the late 1980s nbsp The Mid America Program Service Center is housed in the Richard Bolling Federal Building in Kansas City Missouri Much of the actual processing of initial benefits and subsequent adjustments to benefits is done in six large Program Service Centers located around the country 21 The two main positions in Program Service Centers have long been Claims Authorizers and Benefits Authorizers 22 23 Claims Authorizers now sometimes called claims specialists establish initial benefits for program recipients 24 Benefits Authorizers process complicated changes of entitlements to existing beneficiaries including life events overpayments underpayments and so forth 24 23 The claims position is the higher ranking of the two and initially required a college degree whereas the post entitlement position did not 23 For decades post entitlement actions have been processed through a system known as Manual Adjustment Credit and Award Processes MADCAP 25 The six service centers are 21 Northeastern Program Service Center Jamaica Queens New York as of late 1980s previously in Rego Park Queens and College Point Queens 26 Mid Atlantic Program Service Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania Southeastern Program Service Center Birmingham Alabama Great Lakes Program Service Center Chicago Illinois Mid America Program Service Center Kansas City Missouri Western Program Service Center Richmond California as of mid 1970s previously in San Francisco 27 They have been located in these six cities going back to at least the early 1950s 28 The origins of the payment centers date back to 1942 when they were known as Area Offices 29 The first one was established in Philadelphia with ones in New York Chicago San Francisco and New Orleans Louisiana soon following 22 In addition there are specialized processing centers for the Office of Earnings and International Operations and the Office of Disability Operations both located in Baltimore 21 nbsp Form SSA 101 was the central form used in Program Services Centers for indicating initial entitlement to benefits nbsp Form SSA 2795 was the central form used in Program Services Centers for changing entitlements to benefits Before the mid 1970s the Program Service Centers were called Payment Centers 30 By the late 1960s the Payment Centers had acquired a reputation as sources of poor bureaucratic performance that people did not want to work in and a reorganization under a modules system was undertaken during the 1970s in an effort to improve matters 22 Each module would be assigned a certain block of social security numbers and it would process all aspects of a claim from initial entitlement through various changes notifications to beneficiaries and so forth 23 Decades later the modules system was still seen as one of the great improvements in SSA processing 23 The centers have each employed around two thousand people or more giving them a major local economic impact and even relocations within the same metropolitan area have created political conflict When in the early 1970s SSA and the General Services Administration said it intended to move payment center operations out of San Francisco and across the East Bay to Richmond the move was opposed by San Francisco representing Congressman Phillip Burton 31 Burton s efforts were in vain however as construction in a redevelopment area in Richmond commenced and the move was made around 1975 27 Similarly in the late 1970s SSA the General Services Administration and the Carter administration devised a plan to move the program service center from its main location in two leased buildings on Horace Harding Expressway in Lefrak City in Rego Park to a new federal building planned for a revitalization zone in the center of the Jamaica area of Queens 32 33 The move was championed by Congressman Joseph P Addabbo who represented Jamaica and whose district would gain the over 2 000 federal workers involved but was opposed by Congressman Benjamin Rosenthal whose district would lose them 34 According to Rosenthal the potential negative impact of the move affected the Elmhurst and Corona neighborhoods most strongly 35 The move was also supported by Representative Geraldine Ferraro another powerful Queens figure who sat on the House Public Works Committee 32 The dispute was aired in Congressional hearings and embroiled Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan and developer Richard Lefrak supporting and opposing the move respectively as well 36 In the event the move went forward and the new 11 story building in Jamaica by then named the Joseph P Addabbo Federal Building as the congressman had died in the interim opened in 1988 37 Coverage edit nbsp The Mid Atlantic Program Services Center in Philadelphia Initially only 56 percent of the jobs in the United States were covered by Social Security Today the system is nearly universal with 94 percent of individuals in paid employment in the United States working in covered employment 38 State and local government workers are not required to participate in the Social Security program if they participate in a public retirement system through their employers However state and local governments through agreements known as Section 218 agreements 39 may elect to participate in the program Of the 23 2 million state and local workers in the United States about 6 6 million are not covered by Social Security Other workers not covered by Social Security include federal employees hired before 1984 railroad workers some family employees some students and some members of the clergy 38 If a job is not covered by Social Security workers and employers do not pay Social Security payroll taxes Social Security retirement and disability benefits are not payable unless individuals have sufficient work in Social Security covered employment Individuals who work part of their careers in covered employment and part of their careers in non covered employment and who receive pensions from non covered employment may have their Social Security benefits reduced through the Windfall Elimination Provision WEP 40 or the Government Pension Offset GPO 41 Railroad workers were covered by the Railroad Retirement Board before Social Security was founded Today they still are though a portion of each railroad pension is designated as equivalent to Social Security Railroad workers also participate in Medicare All state and local government employees hired since 1986 or whom are covered by Section 218 Agreements participate in Medicare even if not covered for purposes of Social Security benefits 42 Old age survivors and disability edit SSA administers the retirement survivors and disabled social insurance programs which can provide monthly benefits to aged or disabled workers their spouses and children and to the survivors of insured workers In 2010 more than 54 million Americans received approximately 712 billion in Social Security benefits The programs are primarily financed by taxes which employers employees and the self insured pay annually These revenues are placed into a special trust fund These programs are collectively known as Retirement Survivors Disability Insurance RSDI SSA administers its disability program partly through its Office of Disability Adjudication and Review ODAR which has regional offices and hearing offices across the United States ODAR publishes a manual called HALLEX which contains instructions for its employees regarding how to implement its guiding principles and procedures The RSDI program is the primary benefits program administered by the U S federal government and for some beneficiaries is the vital source of income Increasing access to this benefit program for low income or homeless individuals is one of SSA s goals SSA is a member of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness 43 and works with other municipal county state local and federal partners to increase access and approval for SSI SSDI benefits who are eligible Supplemental Security Income SSI edit nbsp An SSA field office in Ann Arbor Michigan SSA also administers the Supplemental Security Income SSI program which is needs based for the aged blind or disabled Prior to the 1972 Amendments to the Social Security Act low income aged blind or disabled persons received benefits from state run programs called Old Age Assistance Aid to the Blind and Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled These programs received federal funding but varied in terms of eligibility requirements and benefit payments The 1972 Amendments replaced these programs with the SSI program SSA was assigned responsibility for the SSI program and began operations in 1974 44 Federal benefit payments up to 914 for an SSI individual and 1 371 for an SSI couple are available from the program SSI benefits are paid out of the general revenue of the United States of America Some states supplement the federal amount Because SSI is needs based eligibility is restricted to persons with limited income and resources In addition eligibility is generally restricted to U S citizens nationals and some other groups such as some refugees who reside in one of the 50 U S states the District of Columbia or the Northern Mariana Islands 45 U S citizens and nationals who reside in American Samoa Guam Puerto Rico and the U S Virgin Islands are not eligible for SSI 46 In 2019 8 million individuals received SSI including 1 1 million disabled children 4 6 million disabled adults and 2 3 million persons 65 or older 47 In some cases individuals may be eligible for Social Security RSDI benefits and SSI benefits For example a disabled individual who worked in Social Security covered employment and who has limited income and resources may receive a Social Security disability benefit due to employment prior to disability and a partial SSI benefit due to limited income and resources SSA refers to these beneficiaries as concurrent beneficiaries Medicare edit The administration of the Medicare program is a responsibility of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services but SSA offices are used for determining initial eligibility some processing of premium payments and for limited public contact information They also administer a financial needs based program called Extra Help which helps beneficiaries pay the premiums deductibles and coinsurance associated with prescription drug coverage under Part D of Medicare Benefits under this program are estimated to be worth about 5 000 per year Individuals may apply online for the Extra Help program or by calling SSA 48 Operations editTo ensure consistent and efficient treatment of Social Security beneficiaries across its vast bureaucracy SSA has compiled a giant book known as the Program Operations Manual System POMS which governs practically all aspects of SSA s internal operations POMS describes in excruciating detail a huge variety of situations regularly encountered by SSA personnel and the exact policies and procedures that apply to each situation 49 Automation edit nbsp IBM tabulating machines in use at SSA circa 1936 nbsp A few of the hundreds of keypunch operators SSA employed throughout the late 1930s and into the 1950s While the establishment of Social Security predated the invention of the modern digital computer punched card data processing was a mature technology and the Social Security system made extensive use of automated unit record equipment from the program s inception This allowed the Social Security Administration to achieve a high level of efficiency SSA expenses have always been a small fraction of benefits paid As a percentage of assets the administration costs are 0 39 50 Adjudication edit SSA operates its own administrative adjudication system which has original jurisdiction when claims are denied in part or in full SSA decisions are issued by Administrative Law Judges and Senior Attorney Adjudicators supported by about 6 000 staff employees at locations throughout the United States of the U S Office of Hearing Operations formerly Office of Disability Adjudication and Review ODAR who hear and decide challenges to SSA decisions Dissatisfied claimants can appeal to ODAR s Appeals Council and if still dissatisfied can appeal to a U S District Court Over the years OHO aka ODAR has developed its own procedural system which is documented in the Hearings and Appeals Litigation Law Manual HALLEX HALLEX ODAR was formerly known as the Office of Hearings and Appeals OHA and prior to the 1970s the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals The name was changed to ODAR in 2007 to reflect the fact that about 75 of the agency s docket consists of disability cases OHO aka ODAR also adjudicates disputes relating to retirement claims and has jurisdiction when the paternity of a claimant or the validity of a marriage is at issue when a claim is filed for benefits under the earnings record of a spouse or parent The agency also adjudicates a limited number of Medicare claim issues which is a residual legacy from when SSA was part of the U S Department of Health and Human Services Statistical publications edit Each year just before Mother s Day SSA releases a list of the names most commonly given to newborn babies in the United States in the previous year based on applications for Social Security cards The report includes the 1 000 most common names for both genders The Popular Baby Names page on the SSA website provides the complete list and allows searches for past years and particular names 51 For privacy reasons SSA does not publish data for names with fewer than five occurrences in any given year 52 See also editSocial programs in the United States Public finance Social Security Death Index Social Security Disability Insurance NOSSCR National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives Richardson v Perales Ticket to Work SSA s Ticket to Work Program Title 20 of the Code of Federal Regulations Data gov USAFacts SSA impersonation scamReferences edit a b Fiscal Year 2023 President s Budget PDF www ssa gov SSA Pub No 25 1556 p 7 Testimony by Grace Kim Deputy Commissioner for Operations Social Security Administration before the Senate Committee on Finance on Service Delivery www ssa gov Statement of Kilolo Kijakazi www ssa gov SSA How We re Organized accessed 23 July 2018 The Federal Budget in Fiscal Year 2020 An Infographic www cbo gov a b Social Security Administration Brief Graphic Organizational History U S Government Retrieved 2007 05 24 a b c SSA Pub No 25 1556 p 15 Trenton Facts The Courier News of Bridgewater NJ 4 October 1935 p 21 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Henning Arthur Sears 4 October 1935 New Hot Boss Fears High Courts Laws So Learned They Defeat Purpose Chicago Tribune p 21 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Inferiority Complex Review of Reviews 29 1936 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Social Security History www ssa gov Social Security Administration The First Social Security Beneficiary U S Government Retrieved 2007 05 24 Social Security Administration Special Collections Chronology 1930 U S Government Retrieved 2007 05 24 Cost of Living Adjustment COLA Information Social Security Administration www ssa gov Retrieved 2018 08 06 Social Security Board www ssa gov Social Security History Social Security Commissioners www ssa gov The Candler Building www ssa gov Testimony by Grace Kim Deputy Commissioner for Operations Social Security Administration before the Senate Committee on Finance on Service Delivery www ssa gov Social Security Office Locator www ssa gov Online Services www ssa gov Request a Replacement Social Security Number SSN Card Online www ssa gov a b c GN 01050 051 Who reviews and services claims Program Operations Manual System POMS Social Security Administration May 25 2018 Retrieved March 17 2019 a b c Garcia O R January 18 1974 Historical Interview with Milton Freedman Social Security History Oral Histories Social Security Administration a b c d e Oral Histories Pat Caligiuri Social Security History Oral Histories Social Security Administration April 8 2010 a b Positions Available at SSA Social Security Administration Retrieved March 17 2019 Payments Resulting from Disability Insurance Actions Processed Via Manual Adjustment Credit and Award Processes Social Security Administration June 28 2013 Retrieved June 29 2019 Queens Proposed Federal Building Environmental Impact Statement Social Security Administration 1981 a b Richmond To Dig S F Loss The San Francisco Examiner July 31 1973 p 3 via Newspapers com Analysis of the Social Security System Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Ways and Means House of Representatives 83rd Congress First Session Parts 1 8 U S Government Printing Office 1953 p 570 Organizational History Social Security History Social Security Administration Retrieved March 17 2019 Supplemental Appropriation Bill for 1962 Hearings Committee on Appropriations United States Senate 87th Congress First Session H R 9169 U S Government Printing Office 1961 p 301 S F to Lose Big Payroll The San Francisco Examiner December 7 1972 p 11 via Newspapers com a b Molotsky Irvin November 16 1979 Federal Building in Queens Urged to Aid Economy The New York Times p B3 Dallas Gus April 20 1980 A biz district is finding the road back Daily News New York p 3B XQL via Newspapers com Rainie Harrison December 14 1979 Site for fed office stirs row Daily News New York p XQ1 via Newspapers com Murray Alice February 4 1980 SS move called disaster Daily News New York p 3XQ via Newspapers com Hardy David April 20 1980 Battle s building up on fed office Daily News New York pp 1B 3B XQL via Newspapers com Davila Albert November 11 1988 Jamaica on the march Daily News New York p XQ1 via Newspapers com a b Social Security Who Is Covered Under the Program Congressional Research Service Social Security Coverage for State and Local Government Employees Social Security Administration Program Explainer Windfall Elimination Provision Social Security Administration Program Explainer Government Pension Offset PDF Social Security Administration Social Security Publications Socialsecurity gov Archived from the original on 2012 05 11 Retrieved 2012 05 09 Member Agency United States Interagency Council on Homelessness USICH Usich gov Archived from the original on 2012 04 24 Retrieved 2012 05 09 History of the SSI program www ssa gov Understanding Supplemental Security Income SSI Eligibility Requirements 2021 Edition www ssa gov Chapter 3 Supplemental Security Income Green Book House Committee on Ways and Means greenbook waysandmeans house gov SSI Recipients by State and County 2019 www ssa gov Extra Help with Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Costs www ssa gov SSA s Policy Information Site POMS About POMS secure ssa gov Robert Genetski Administration Costs and the Relative Efficiency of Public and Private Social Security Systems CATO Institute Retrieved 2010 09 27 Social Security Administration Popular Baby Names U S Government Retrieved 2007 05 24 Social Security Administration Background information for popular names U S Government Retrieved 2021 06 04 All Social Security Offices in USAFurther reading editSocial Security Disability Advocate s Handbook by David Traver James Publishing 2006 ISBN 1 58012 033 4 Social Security Handbook Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Germania Publishing 2006 External links editOfficial website nbsp Program Operations Manual System POMS public online version of the procedure by which SSA employees process decisions about benefits Historical Background And Development Of Social Security by Social Security Administration Social Security Administration on USAspending gov Social Security Administration in the Federal Register Works by Social Security Administration at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Social Security Administration at Internet Archive Papers of Charles I Schottland former Commissioner of Social Security Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library Social Security Administration Office Locations Archived 2020 10 23 at the Wayback Machine SSA Pub No 25 1556 Teleservice Representative Basic Training Curriculum Introduction Unit 1 Lessons 01 08 Student pp 7 15 Social Security Administration April 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social Security Administration amp oldid 1214386810, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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