From the New York Times:
Top Democrats are warning that the problems afflicting the United States Postal Service pose a threat to more than voting rights — a slowdown in services, they say, will also hurt seniors who rely on letter carriers for Social Security checks, medications and other critical mail. ...
Over the past two decades, the Social Security Administration has shifted to electronic payment for most beneficiaries, but that doesn’t mean the agency’s operations are not vulnerable to delays in mail service.
The agency currently pays 99 percent of Social Security beneficiaries via direct deposit to a checking or savings account, or a government-issued debit card. But nearly 850,000 paper checks still are mailed each month to recipients of retirement, disability and Supplemental Security Income benefits. Social Security also sends and receives millions of pieces of mail every year, including notifications, requests for information, Medicare enrollment forms and replacement Social Security cards. More isolated, rural parts of the country are particularly vulnerable to problems within the postal system.
Moreover, the shutdown since March of Social Security’s national network of field offices because of the pandemic means that more business is being transacted through the Postal Service that normally would be handled through in-person visits. ...
Nowadays, Social Security sends 350 million pieces of mail annually to support its programs, according to an agency report last year. ...
850,000 paper checks that shouldn't be sent for the most part. The exceptions to direct deposit and direct express are very limited.
ReplyDeleteI would think that disability reviews would be severely impacted by slow mail, but apparently it’s not a problem.
ReplyDeleteAre any DDS experiencing mail slow downs?
ReplyDelete