AARP Hearing Center
The Social Security Administration (SSA) announced plans this week for a “massive” restructuring of its operations that “will include significant workforce reductions” affecting thousands of jobs.
In a Feb. 28 statementthe agency set a target of cutting its workforce from about 57,000 employees to 50,000a 12 percent cut.
A message shared with all SSA employees the day before details buyout and early retirement offers for staff and says those who remain could be reassigned to “mission-critical positions” in field officesteleservice centers and payment processing.
AARP is calling on the agency to clarify what it’s doing to protect services for those who rely on Social Security. More than 68 million Americans receive Social Security and 183 million workers pay into it. Social Security is the primary source of income for most older adults and nearly 1 on 5 rely on Social Security for almost all their income.
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“AARP is hearing from thousands of older Americans confused and concerned about their Social Security paymentsthe status of Social Security field officesand inexcusably long wait times on the phone to get their questions answered,” said Nancy LeaMondAARP’s chief advocacy and engagement officerin a Feb. 28 statement.
“We are urging Social Security to be clear on how they are going to improve customer servicemake sure the phones are being answered by fully trained representatives who can accurately answer Americans' questions,” she said.
Reductions underway
The SSA says it expects to hit the target of 7,000 job cuts largely through retirementsresignations and “voluntary incentive separation payments” but added that there could also be “reduction-in-force actions that could include abolishment of organizations and positions.”
The agency had already announced it was closing two internal units: the Office of Civil Rights and Equal Opportunitywhich handled discrimination complaintsdisability accommodations and other equal employment opportunity issues; and the Office of Transformationwhich coordinated agency-wide strategic initiatives and customer-service projects such as modernizing the SSA website. Their employees were placed on administrative leave.