Posted on 07/21/2020 10:24:23 AM PDT by spintreebob
Executive Summary
The Social Security Administration serves as the primary steward of death records at the federal level. Despite federal agencies need for accurate death information, accurate death data are not universally available to federal agencies, including those with payment functions. Improvements to federal payment integrity could include legislative changes that would ensure accurate death information is more widely available to federal agencies. Introduction
Perhaps the most conspicuous element of the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic fallout has been economic impact payments (EIPs) or stimulus checks, sent to nearly 160 million Americans, and totaling $267 billion. It should come as no surprise that some of these payments were erroneous, or that some of those improper payments ended up being sent to the dead. Indeed, a recent accounting shows that on the order of 1 million payments, totaling about $1.4 billion, were sent to decedents.
The federal government, happily, does not keep quite such close track of Americas 300 million population that it can know with exacting precision at any given time who is alive and who is dead. But federal administration does require a working understanding of who is alive and who is not. In the United States, the Social Security Administration (SSA), and its registry of persons with Social Security numbers, figures prominently in this function. This primer examines the system by which the federal government keeps track of deaths in the United States, and more specifically, how the federal government uses this information in its administration of federal programs and payments.
The Death File
The SSA maintains a master registry containing identifying information of all holders of assigned Social Security numbers (SSNs), known as the Numerical Index File, or Numident. When an individual dies, that fact is denoted in their Numident record with a date of death and a death indicator to facilitate a stoppage in paid benefits. SSA collects death information from states which have the primary responsibility for recording deaths in the United States funeral homes, family members, and other sources, to ensure Social Security benefits are stopped. The Social Security Act requires that this information be shared, through cooperative and reimbursable arrangement, with benefit-paying agencies.
The SSA receives on the order of 3 million death reports each year. According to the SSA, the accuracy of these reports has improved with the increasing adoption of the Electronic Death Registration System (EDRS) among the United States 57 Vital Records Jurisdictions.[1] EDRS is state-sponsored and includes automated safeguards to ensure accuracy in reporting deaths to SSA. According to a 2017 audit of the EDR system, 43 (86 percent) of the 50 states and 45 (79 percent) of the 57 VRJs had implemented EDRS.[2] For the purposes of SSA and other federal agencies directly paying benefits, improved death record collection from the states improves the integrity of federal payment systems.[3]
Privacy and Data Restrictions
Two peculiar features of SSAs role sharing death information introduce additional complexity. First, the Social Security Act prohibits using death data it obtains from states for any reason other than those set forth in the Act. Note that the Act does allow the sharing of state-collected data with federal benefit-paying agencies.
Second, in 1978 a Federal Postal Service official realized that the Service risked spending millions on pension benefits to deceased postal workers. These federal payments, however, are distinct from federal benefit payment such as Social Security.[4] The official successfully sued the SSA for access to the death data under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in part on the basis that the dead do not enjoy privacy protection under FOIA. In 1980, pursuant to a consent decree, the SSA made its death file available to the public, releasing names, SSNs, and other information on millions of deceased Americans. This FOIA obligation persists to this day, and SSA makes this information available to the public and other government agencies. This Numident extract, however, must not include any data collected by the states, consistent with the limitations imposed by the Social Security Act. It is this file that is known as the Death Master File (DMF), though because it does not include state-supplied death data, is necessarily more limited than SSAs full death file.[5]
Yet as SSA increasingly relies on the EDRS, the complete death file and the DMF will diverge, meaning that the relative accuracy of the data provided to agencies that do not qualify for the full death file will decline.
Perhaps the most conspicuous federal entity that does not have access to the full death file is the U.S. Department of the Treasury. While the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), a bureau within the Treasury, has access to the full file, the Treasury generally, and the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, which is responsible for the execution of federal payments, does not. The enactment of the Improper Payments Elimination and Recovery Improvement Act of 2012 established the Do Not Pay Portal (DNP), which is to supposed to serve as a federal one-stop-shop for agencies to verify the eligibility of beneficiaries and for helping agencies recover inaccurate payments.[6] SSA has determined, however, that it does not have the authority to share the full death file with the Treasury.
Improvements in Death Data-Sharing
Expanding the availability of SSAs full death records would require amending the Social Security Act. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has regularly recommended that Congress consider this change.[7] Indeed, in a recent report the GAO noted that neither Treasury nor the IRS consulted the death file to verify eligibility for the EIPs in the first three batches of payments it issued, believing the enabling legislation did not provide authority to stop payments to decedents even if they were so identified.[8] Beginning with the 4th batch of payments, the IRS did provide the Bureau of the Fiscal Service with temporary access to the full death file until the IRS was able to set up its own internal process for doing so thereafter.
While the budgetary effects of expanding the availability of the death data should not be overstated indeed the Congressional Budget Office noted that enabling legislation would result in insignificant savings such a change would nevertheless improve payment integrity.[9] The Social Security Advisory Board, the independent federal panel that advises Congress and the executive branch on the Social Security program, has advocated a more dramatic reform that would shift the collection and dissemination of death data to the Treasurys DNP and excise the function from the SSA.
Conclusion
When a person dies, someone must eventually let Uncle Sam know. Nevertheless, the process by which Americans deaths are registered with the federal government is somewhat uneven and replete with administrative challenges. That over 1 million deceased Americans received EIP checks underscores the imperfections in the system. It is important to note, however, that these imperfections are also borne out of the necessary tension between Americans privacy and the need to govern a nation of 300 million people.
Dead People do more than just vote.
So, what they’re saying is: no dead people are ever allowed to vote in elections, and we shouldn’t worry or look too closely at the November results?
There are probably a hundred thousand dead people currently renting rent-control apartments in NYC alone...
Funny, not my experience. My mother died in late April and her SSN checks stopped immediately. Seemed pretty efficient to me!
My Mother died at age 86 1/2 on January 28th, 2020. Her February check was direct deposited on Feb 1, 2020 and then automatically withdrawn from her account on Feb 5th, by the SSA.
I thought they were very efficient. Not sure if they got the information from the Hospice service or the funeral home. But they sure withdrew it promptly.
Funeral home automatically notified Soc. Security Admin. in the case of my mother and father. I called myself just to make sure but they already knew.
A more pertinent question may be how will we know when Uncle Sam dies?
[[[Funeral home automatically notified Soc. Security Admin. in the case of my mother and father. I called myself just to make sure but they already knew.]]]
My mom passed on April 1st, 2012 at 3:40 AM. Completely in keeping with her sense of humor.
RIP mom.
Year one --- IRS questions it
Year two --- IRS sends out questionaire to dead person
Year three --- IRS, with no response sends questions to nearest relative.
Year four --- if no response, file lawsuit against dead person for back taxes
Year five --- person doesn't show up for court
Year six --- send marshalls out to arrest dead, deadbeat tax evasion person.
Year Seven --- Marshall unsuccessful in finding dead person
.....
.....
.....
Year eight —— dead person registers to vote as a democrat
You silly guys! Somewhere in every government account for a recipient of a government payment or voter status is coding or cross reference checks for independent or republican status.
They’re knocked off all the rolls very efficiently.
The Dims stay on for years and years without lifting a finger.
It’d be a day’s work to collate all dead “independents” with donations to the Dim party to keep them on the “active” lists.
That’s my theory and I’m sticking to it. ;-)
Here’s a blast from not long ago; millions of active social security numbers for individuals who (based on their reported birth dates) are at least 112:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/mar/10/65m-people-with-active-social-security-numbers-are/
As far as I can tell, Social Security has done almost nothing to fix this problem.
Consider a FOIA in your state for the number of people in your state who are older than the oldest person in your state and are on Food Stamps, Medicaid, or other government program.
A state has a Department of the Aging that recognizes and celebrates the oldest person in the state. So there is a benchmark for other state agencies.
I believe that the county/town clerk that registers the death updates Social Security.
Bkmk
Usually the funeral director.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.