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Social Security Checks Going Paperless

Aarp Social Security

STEPHEN OHLEMACHER   04/15/12 11:52 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — Starting next year, the check will no longer be in the mail for millions of people who receive Social Security and other government benefits.

The federal government, which issues 73 million payments a month, is phasing out paper checks for all benefit programs, requiring people to get payments electronically, either through direct deposit or a debit card for those without a bank account.

The changes will affect people who get Social Security, veterans' benefits, railroad pensions and federal disability payments. Tax refunds are exempt, but the Internal Revenue Service encourages taxpayers to get refunds electronically by processing those refunds faster than paper checks.

About 90 percent of people who receive federal benefits already get their payments electronically, the Treasury Department says. New beneficiaries were required to get payments electronically starting last year, and with a few exceptions, the rest will have to make the switch by March 2013.

"It's just that natural progression of moving to how people are used to receiving their funds," said Walt Henderson, director of the Treasury Department's electronic funds transfer division.

Henderson said electronic payments are safer and more efficient than paper checks; in 2010, more than 540,000 federal benefit checks were reported lost or stolen. The switch will save the government about $120 million a year. Social Security will save $1 billion over the next decade, according to the Treasury Department.

"You think of that paper check floating out there in the delivery system, with personal information on it, it's much more susceptible to fraud versus an electronic payment," Henderson said.

Advocates for seniors say they understand the government's desire to cut costs and take advantage of technologies that most workers already use. The food stamp program switched from paper coupons to debit cards in 2004.

But they have raised concerns about requiring the switch for older retirees who may not be used to electronic payments.

"This will affect some very frail elderly people who are living by themselves, many of them, and doing well, but usually within the context of that old paper check that they deposit in the bank," said Web Phillips, a senior policy advisor for the National Committee to Protect Social Security and Medicare.

"The change has to be handled carefully and with a lot of sensitivity so that there aren't people who lose track of a payment or don't understand that they have a card that came in the mail that's the source of their payment," Phillips said. "That's our concern."

The switch is mandated by a Treasury rule issued in December 2010. Since then, the department has worked to educate the public. The government has created a website, and a toll-free phone number, 1-800-333-1795, people can call for assistance. www.GoDirect.org

"Treasury acknowledges they have a lot of education to do for people about how these things work," said David Certner, legislative policy director for AARP. "We're a bit concerned about how easy it's going to be to provide education, particularly for some in this older population who are not familiar with debit cards and don't have bank accounts."

Certner said AARP wants the government to make it easier to get an exemption. Under the Treasury rule, current beneficiaries who are 90 and older won't be required to make the switch. People can get a waiver if using a debit card would impose a hardship, but the Treasury Department says those would be "extreme, rare circumstances."

These waivers are not well publicized on the government's website.

"There are several million people who receive paper checks today," Certner said. "Some of them do it because they have worked out arrangements for them that work."

AARP also has concerns about fees associated with the debit cards. The Direct Express cards are issued by Comerica Bank, Treasury's financial agent. Each month, benefit payments are added to the cards, which can be used to make purchases or withdraw cash from ATMs.

There are no fees for using the debit card to make purchases. They can be used at any retailer that accepts MasterCard debit cards. If a card is lost or stolen, the beneficiary is protected from unauthorized use as long as the missing card is reported promptly.

Cardholders can make one free ATM withdrawal each time a payment is registered in the card. Subsequent withdrawals will cost 90 cents each, and all withdrawals may be subject to fees by the owner of the ATM.

The government's switch to electronic payments also comes with a side effect: less business for the U.S. Postal Service, an agency that is already facing big budget problems with the rise of email and electronic bill paying.

The private sector has been migrating to electronic payments for years, costing the Postal Service millions of customers, said Alan Robinson, editor of the Postal Journal, a trade publication.

"Normally, these things happen one customer at a time," Robinson said. "In terms of payments, this is probably one of the largest."

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WASHINGTON — Starting next year, the check will no longer be in the mail for millions of people who receive Social Security and other government benefits. The federal government, which issues 7...
WASHINGTON — Starting next year, the check will no longer be in the mail for millions of people who receive Social Security and other government benefits. The federal government, which issues 7...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:15 AM on 04/17/2012
Personally, I think this is a great idea. It's a system the country as a whole has been moving towards and that alot of other countries have already moved to.

I think the transition period is going to be rocky for alot of seniors, a good time for the younger generations to pay back some of that education we have gotten from the older generation. :)

Although it does not bode well for the US Postal Service. Not at all.
10:19 AM on 04/16/2012
I agree with the idea but I know it will be extremely stressful for some folks like my "strong-willed" mom. She is one of those folks that still requests copies of her cancelled checks every month and has them neatly saved in boxes. She is going to have a fit when she finds this out because when I suggested direct deposit about a year ago when we moved her back to her home town.....she threw a major fit....she wants that check in her hand where she can take it right to the bank. Sheez.....this is gonna be fun getting her convinced that this is good for her. Instead of the cutoff of 90 years old, wish they would have chosen 80.
09:16 AM on 04/16/2012
This is an idea that is long overdue.

States have already been using the debit card for Welfare recipients for years without a problem.

Well, they have had SOME problems.

They are finding that Welfare recipients have been using the cards to buy alcohol, lottery tickets, even for cash withdrawls at casinos.

Moving from the food stamp booklets to the EBS cards have taken away the stigma of being on foodstamps and increased the opportunity for fraud.

Tell me this isn't a gov't operation...
09:25 AM on 04/16/2012
Here in the Netherlands we don\t have FOOD STAMPS. If you are on unemployment or welfare all monies are deposited into your current account like any other salary,. How you spend it is up to you,. If you blow in on drugs or booze, that is YOUR problem. Makes people become a bit more disciplined.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TeeSC
12:18 PM on 04/16/2012
You think it makes them MORE disciplined?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wilray
50,000 Screaming Fans (Ignore that other number)
12:43 PM on 04/16/2012
I had an economics professor say exactly that. Well not exactly, this was before the age of direct deposit. However, he did say that, if the government were to give people money, they should just go ahead and give them the money. He thought food stamps (when they actually gave people stamps) was the dumbest thing. You pretty much had this alternative currency which had to cost more than the regular currency, since the stamps had to be printed and were used once. Eventually, that was replace by EBT cards which are still called food stamps.
09:02 AM on 04/16/2012
If Obama gets reelected a $1.00 fee per transaction is projected for any bank transaction invioving a withdrawl of funds. More like a tax without a tax. This only hurts the poorer percentage of Americans who still use cash.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SilverShrimp0
10:11 AM on 04/16/2012
Source?
09:02 AM on 04/16/2012
Millions fewer pieces of mail going out every month.

Another nail in the coffin for the U.S. Postal Service.

It is already running at a loss of BILLIONS per year.

Time to close a number of facilities and lay off a large number of the workforce that is simply no longer needed.
09:26 AM on 04/16/2012
Just open more burger joints.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Black Misfit
Just a metalhead who loves politics.
08:58 AM on 04/16/2012
That could be problematic with u.s. postal service. One less source of revenue, they count on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elaygee
08:42 AM on 04/16/2012
About time. No more paper checks. You can buy most of Europe with your cell phone, this paper money/check business is outdated like buggy whips.
09:03 AM on 04/16/2012
America is far behind the rest of the modern world. but most folks think its always number one.

Not even close.
08:28 AM on 04/16/2012
There are no bigger crooks and scammers on the face of the earth than people in the credit card industry.
09:03 AM on 04/16/2012
True. But is IS a self-inflicted wound.

If people would card shop, read the fine print, and actually LIVE WITHIN THEIR BUDGET, this problem would be much much smaller.
09:04 AM on 04/16/2012
I agree, that is why I use my debit card for travelling and purchasess, MY ABN-AMRO World Pass debit card can be used for EVERYTHING , and its MY money I am using.
08:28 AM on 04/16/2012
Can you imagine the outcry on the right when they understand a blackman is telling them they have to direct deposit their SS check?
This maybe bigger than the health care reform!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:10 AM on 04/17/2012
My mouth actually dropped open when I read your comment...

If there is any reason for an outrcy it's the elderly having a system that works for them, that is radically changed. Alot of these people are depression era and having it in hand reassures them. When your that age and have been reliant on a system to live, changes can be terrifying.

I'm surprised and dissapointed in your comment.
08:24 AM on 04/16/2012
A couple of days ago I read that you had to sign up for paperless by a certain date.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
08:42 AM on 04/16/2012
That date should have been sometime in the 1960s
09:04 AM on 04/16/2012
Wait for pat robertson to go on TV and start crying the mark of the beast. Like they did in the 1960s!!!
08:23 AM on 04/16/2012
"There are no fees for using the debit cards". Ask a merchant that question.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
mikey09
Living off the grid.
08:27 AM on 04/16/2012
Yep....and the merchant passes those costs back to the consumers.
09:05 AM on 04/16/2012
not noticeable here in Europe. Also sales taxes (VAT) built in here so you pay the price on the package. PERIOD.

Food is cheaper here (and better) than in the USA. Wife and I eat like kings on 100 euros a week.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
08:21 AM on 04/16/2012
A debt card that gets loaded at the beginning of each and every month. Am I the only one who thinks this could become a problem?
08:30 AM on 04/16/2012
As soon as they do this there won't be any more dollars as we know it.
It will all be credits! You can go barter your credits and pay the extra the merchants will charge when they are charged for taking the debit card!
09:06 AM on 04/16/2012
there isn't any more dollars anyway ,. its all debt and numbers in a computer.
09:04 AM on 04/16/2012
Scores of states already do this for their Welfare recipients.

Didn't you see the article the other day where a person arrested on drug charges tries to post bond using his EBT card?
08:18 AM on 04/16/2012
This means seniors will have less to spend out of their money,due to bank fees,transaction fee,out of their already fixed income,something has to be done about all of these fees.when they got a paper check they didn't have to worry about that.that 20 dollars a month fees could make a difference in their prescriptions drugs,
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
08:45 AM on 04/16/2012
Most banks waive fees for customers having direct deposit and many banks waive ATM fees for the same reason. Think of all the money saved by not having to purchase checks. I used to spend well over $100/year on them alone and now have not written more than three in the last three years.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dallas Dunlap
08:11 AM on 04/16/2012
One more step toward ensuring that all transactions everywhere will make money for banks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TMS3100
Tea Party has run off with his light saber.
08:22 AM on 04/16/2012
It's really about saving money for the SSA.
08:32 AM on 04/16/2012
The only reason they allow us to exist is to make money for the banks!
08:25 AM on 04/16/2012
The shoeple just don't see it Dallas Dunlap. The elite have been pushing this no cash society for years and years. Fanned
08:34 AM on 04/16/2012
Just like they pushed free trade. You see where that got us.

For working people the economy has been in recession since 1973.
The GOP and the rich corporatra¬tists have made a mess of everything¬.
1. Before 1973, The inflation Adjusted Median Income rose at 2.5% per year:

1953 = $22,648
1973 = $34,762

2. From 1973 to 2009, Inflation Adjusted Median Income fell by $2,578.

1973 = $34,762
2009 = $32,184

http://www¬.census.go¬v/hhes/www¬/income/da¬ta/histori¬cal/people¬/P05AR_200¬9.xls

3. The same thing shows up in Weekly Earnings.

All earners:

1979 = $339
2008 = $339

No Change over 30 years

Men:

1979 = $412
2010 = $389

DECREASE of $23/week

http://dat¬a.bls.gov/¬cgi-bin/su¬rveymost?l¬e

4. While per capita GPD has doubled:

1969 = $21,021
2010 = $42,517

http://www¬.ers.usda.¬gov/data/m¬acroeconom¬ics/Data/H¬istorical¬RealPerCa¬p¬itaIncom¬eV¬alues.x¬ls

5. This is accomplish by shifting the income distributi¬on:

Share Of Aggregate Income by Quintile:

BOTTOM 20% - 1967: 4.0% 2009: 3.4% Change: -0.6%
LOWER MIDDLE - 1967: 10.8% 2009: 8.6% Change: -2.2%
MIDDLE CLASS - 1967: 17.3% 2009: 14.6% Change: -2.7%
UPPER MIDDLE - 1967: 24.2% 2009: 23.2% Change: -1.0%
UPPER CLASS - 1967: 43.6% 2009: 50.3% Change: +6.7%

http://www¬.census.go¬v/hhes/www¬/income/da¬ta/histori¬cal/inequa¬lity/H02AR¬_2009.xls

Bottom line message: WORK MORE, PRODUCE MORE, BUT GET LESS”
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charleyvldm9
He thinks outside the box.
08:06 AM on 04/16/2012
Its the sign of the times ,people, we will get with the program.