Trump's Social Security Catch-22
By Kathleen Romig, Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities
The Trump Administration is making it harder for eligible Social Security beneficiaries to access their benefits by eliminating phone services, forcing millions more people to seek in-person help even as it cuts thousands of Social Security Administration (SSA) staff. At the same time, increasingly frequent website outages are making it harder to seek service online. These abrupt and unjustified changes will worsen customer service delays and strain capacity at local field offices throughout the country.
Trump has repeatedly promised not to cut Social
Security benefits — but his Administration’s actions will effectively do just
that, by making it harder or even impossible for people to access their earned
benefits.
Starting April 14, phone service will no longer be an option
for retirees and survivors applying for benefits, or for beneficiaries making
direct deposit changes. Instead, these services will only be available in
person at an SSA field office — a 45-mile trip for some 6 million seniors
nationwide, a new CBPP analysis finds — or online, if an online application
exists and if a person is able to access SSA’s online tools. Many seniors and
people with disabilities lack internet service, computers or smartphones, or
the technological savvy to navigate a multi-step, multi-factor online
verification process. Even as SSA is encouraging people to do business online,
the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is making changes to online
identity authentication that are triggering system outages and access problems.[1]
SSA
itself says this will lead to “longer wait times and processing time” and
“increased challenges for vulnerable populations” as the demand for office
appointments rises. And it comes when SSA is reportedly pursuing other[5] policies
that will increase the number of weekly field office visits by thousands. This
will compound wait times and competition for an already limited number of
appointments, which are required for most in-person services.
Reasons Not to Cut Phone Service Are Measured in Miles
For many applicants, the only way to apply
for Social Security benefits will soon be by visiting an SSA field office.
There is no online application for Social Security survivors benefits, so
grieving family members must visit offices soon after the deaths of their loved
ones to apply. Children cannot have online Social Security accounts, so their
parents must visit offices to apply for benefits on their behalf after a parent
dies, becomes disabled, or retires.
Telephone services are critical for seniors and people with
disabilities, who may struggle to access online portals and may face barriers
to traveling to field offices (if one even exists in their area). Many Social
Security beneficiaries don’t drive while others have mobility issues that make
getting to in-person appointments difficult or burdensome, even if they do not
live great distances away. Nationally, it’s estimated that over 6 million
seniors don’t drive, and nearly 8 million seniors report a medical condition or
disability that makes it difficult to travel outside the home.
The difficulty this can all pose is especially daunting in
rural areas. For example in Alaska, an estimated 60,000 people lack access to
broadband, some residents live hundreds of miles from their nearest field
office — there are only three statewide — and some communities are not
connected to SSA field offices by roads.[6] And
in North Dakota, 13,000 seniors live more than 180 miles roundtrip from their
nearest field office, according to CBPP analysis.[7]
Appointments Are Required, and Scarce
Forcing millions more people to seek in-person service for
tasks they previously did by phone will create significant burdens on top of
those they already face due to years of constrained funding at SSA.[8] As
of this year, SSA requires appointments for most in-person services.[9] To
make an appointment, people must call the agency’s 800 number, where the wait
time for a call back averages 2.5 hours and most callers do not reach an agent.[10] Then
over 60 percent of people must wait over 28 days for an appointment — if
they’re lucky.[11] In
fact, “field office calendars are often booked out the full 40 business days
that the system allows,” so getting an appointment may require another lengthy
phone call.[12]
These waits will only worsen as millions more people seek appointments from a dwindling staff. The Washington Post reported April 4 that 7,000 staff have already been eliminated, and that DOGE is now seeking even deeper staff cuts, with “reductions in force” starting as soon as the week of April 7.[13] SSA announced that 3,000 staff have taken buyouts, which require them to leave by April 19 — just as the phone service changes are taking effect.[14] Most of the staff who took buyouts — nearly 2,000 — work in field offices, and in dozens of those offices, the staff cuts are more than 25 percent.
Rushed Announcement Paves Way for the Fraud It Claims — Without Evidence — to Combat
These changes are not justified by compelling evidence.
Though SSA claims that the direct deposit change is intended to reduce fraud,
the agency’s own figures show that direct deposit fraud is a very small
problem, and in the rare cases it does happen, most are not initiated by phone.[15] This
is a far cry from DOGE and Vice President Vance’s false claims that a sizable
percentage of calls to SSA are for the purpose of fraud.
Less than one one-hundredth of a percent of the $1.5
trillion the agency paid out in benefits last year was lost to direct deposit
fraud; likewise, less than one one-hundredth of a percent of SSA’s 70 million
beneficiaries had their direct deposits redirected in 2023. [16] [17]
And SSA’s Inspector General reported that even in the very
rare cases that benefits are misdirected, SSA is often able to recover them.[18] Additionally,
in recent months SSA had moved to deploy tools designed to limit fraudsters’
ability to impersonate recipients over the phone.
The rushed announcement that SSA would begin implementing
these new restrictions on phone services has led to confusion that “a wave of
scammers” is exploiting to target retirees for identity theft, creating
opportunities for fraud that the proposal was purportedly intended to curb.[19]
Abruptly eliminating SSA’s phone services for most
applications and for direct deposit changes is the opposite of improving
government efficiency. It will be more costly, cause longer delays, and create
more burdens for the people who depend on Social Security. SSA should rescind
this harmful policy.