Feb 13, 2026

ICE Will Be Given SSA Appointment Info

       From Wired:

Workers at the Social Security Administration (SSA) have been told to share information about in-person appointments with agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), WIRED has learned.

“If ICE comes in and asks if someone has an upcoming appointment, we will let them know the date and time,” an employee with direct knowledge of the directive says. They spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. …

Noncitizens are also required to appear in-person to review continued eligibility of benefits. …

     ICE arresting people outside Social Security offices with help from Social Security is highly disturbing. 

“Locking” Your Social Security Number Recommended

      From Kiplinger:

… Locking your SSN is a strategic move that shuts down the two most common avenues for fraud: illegal employment and unauthorized access to your government records. By understanding the tools available — from the E-Verify "Self Lock" to the SSA’s "Electronic Access Block" — you can effectively take your identity off the market. …

While you cannot "freeze" an SSN exactly like a credit report, you can achieve a similar result using two distinct government "locks." Here is the breakdown of how they work and how they differ. …

The E-Verify "Self Lock" (employment protection)

This lock specifically prevents scammers from using your SSN to get a job or pass an employment background check at any of the millions of employers that use the federal E-Verify system. …

How to use Self Lock- The Self Lock feature is only available to myE-Verify account holders. To lock your SSN, you must select and answer three challenge questions. Select questions you can easily answer, because you will need to answer them again to verify your identity if you receive an E-Verify Tentative Non-confirmation (mismatch) due to Self Lock. …

SSA "Block Electronic Access" (stops account takeover)

When you block electronic access to your account, this blocks everyone — including you — from accessing or changing your Social Security records online or via the SSA's automated phone system. … 

You must call the Social Security Administration at 1-800-772-1213 or visit a local SSA office to request an "Electronic Access Block." It blocks all automated telephone and internet access to your record. …


Feb 12, 2026

It’s A Harsh Program

      From an op ed in the Washington Post by A.P.D.G. Everett:

Social Security’s “disabled adult child” program has a simple rule: Someone who suffers a disability before age 22 can claim benefits on the basis of a parent’s earnings record, because they are not considered to have reached economic adulthood. But if the disability occurs after their 22nd birthday, they are on their own, even though young adults have not generally worked long enough to receive meaningful benefits.

That rule once made sense. It no longer does.

The age-22 cutoff reflects a mid-20th-century assumption about how adulthood unfolds — one in which education ended at 18, full-time work began immediately and economic independence was typically achieved by the early 20s. Disability before that point plausibly meant a person never had a realistic opportunity to enter the labor market. …

Today, undergraduate education routinely extends to age 22 or 23. Graduate, professional and credentialing pathways can delay stable employment well into the mid- to late 20s. Even among those who leave school earlier, insured status is often not available — because it now takes longer to accumulate sufficient earnings credits to qualify for meaningful coverage.

     The author, a graduate student in biomedical engineering at the University of Vermont, recommends a cutoff age of 26. Wait until he finds out about the marriage penalty for disabled adult child recipients.

Feb 11, 2026

A Plan To Help The Social Security Trust Funds

       From E&E News:

House Natural Resources subcommittee will take up several public lands bills during a hearing this week, including a contentious proposal to redirect revenues to shore up Social Security.

The “Land and Social Security Optimization (LASSO) Act,” H.R. 34, would redirect 10 percent of public land revenues into the Social Security Trust Fund.

The bill, from Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) and more than a dozen GOP co-sponsors, would not allow public land access prices to be raised in connection with the initiative. …

     Apparently, it’s only about $2 billion a year, which is not enough to make a significant dent in the problem, but it may be a sign of what’s ahead — plans to divert current federal revenue streams to the Social Security trust funds. Right wing groups don’t like the sound of this since they think they finally have Social Security cornered. They’re rubbing their hands in glee at the prospect of forcing major Social Security cuts such as means testing. I guess everyone has to have a dream even if it’s crapping on other people’s retirement so billionaires can get ever greater tax cuts.

Feb 10, 2026

Seven Year Sentence For Former Social Security Employee

      From Texas Border Business:

HOUSTON – A former Social Security employee has been ordered to federal prison for aggravated identity theft and conspiracy to steal government funds.

David Lam, 46, Pearland, pleaded guilty June 5, 2025.

U.S. District Judge Sim Lake has now ordered Lam to serve 84 months in federal prison to be immediately followed by three years of supervised release. At the hearing, the court heard about the complex nature of Lam’s scheme and how it involved dozens of fraudulent applications. Lam also used his access to personal data, which was necessary for his actual job duties, to facilitate his embezzlement and theft. Lam was further ordered to pay $3,346,280 in restitution.

Lam was an operations supervisor and claims specialist for the Social Security Administration office in Houston. …

Feb 9, 2026

Over 100 Million Online Accounts

      From a press release:

The Social Security Administration (SSA) is announcing that over 100 million Americans have created personal my Social Security accounts. This marks a major milestone in the agency’s digital-first transformation to increase accessibility, expand service, and improve the overall customer experience for the public. …

Feb 8, 2026

Who Could Argue?

       From Fortune:

For all the talk about Social Security being in crisis, what hasn’t been stressed enough is the leadership crisis. From December of 2023 to until the current leader’s Senate confirmation of May 6, a parade of four commissioners and acting commissioners cycled through the position. These chiefs departed fast in part because they got frequent hammerings in Congress over the agency’s poor phone and face-to-face service to beneficiaries. 

Enter Frank Bisignano. The Jamie Dimon protegee had a storied career in banking, and was appointed to lead SSA last spring (he has since added the job of IRS CEO to his resume, which you can read about here.) 

But the changes he has quickly enacted at SSA—drawing heavily on his time in the private sector—are real, and they’re impressing even the Administration’s fiercest critics.  … 

No matter what your political party, few could argue that an agency in need of efficiency finally has a leader at the top who is moving the needle. 

Feb 7, 2026

What Happened?

      From Money.com:

It seemed too good to be true. A $60,000 deposit from the Social SecurityAdministration landed in a woman's bank account with no explanation, as if she had won the lottery without buying a ticket.

But is this a real windfall, or has she been caught up in a grand mistake? And more importantly, what should she do with the money? …

The woman who received the money is unemployed and receives Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), her 22-year-old child explained in the post. About three months prior, the mother's monthly SSDI payment doubled. The family was already waiting for an explanation of that increase before the $60,000 deposit arrived. …

"They said that every six months they were supposed to review her account and adjust if needed but never did that in the 23 years she was on disability," the post reads, adding that the representative also mentioned a back payment for an issue related to dependents. …

This highlights a long-standing problem at Social Security — the money usually arrives well before the explanation of the money. Sometimes no award certificate ever arrives.