This summer has marks the 49th anniversary of the enactment of Medicare and Medicaid, and the 79th anniversary of Social Security. All of these programs are all of a piece, and together comprise the bedrock of our nation’s ever-evolving and expanding historic social contract, which most recently added the Affordable Care Act to its scope. In terms of advocacy, when we support any one of these programs, we support them all, as they are intricately linked to each other, particularly in the minds of the public and voters.
With that in mind, health care advocates are joining with senior citizens, disability rights advocates, and union retirees to celebrate the 79th anniversary signing of the Social Security Act by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This coming Thursday, August 14, we’ll all be gathering that morning at 11 a.m. outside the NYC District office of the Social Security Administration (SSA), located in Jamaica, Queens, the busiest Social Security office in the country, located at 155-10 Jamaica Avenue (at Parsons Ave.) (See our action alert invite here, with all the details.)
We’ll be talking about what Social Security means for New York. About 3.5 million New Yorkers and their families receive benefits from Social Security, including 1.1 million in New York City. Statewide, beneficiaries include 2.3 million retirees, 520,000 people with disabilities, 421,000 surviving spouses, and 258,000 children. The program also pumps over $50 billion annually into New York’s economy, and together with Medicare, keeps 1.2 million New Yorkers out of poverty. (You can read the latest report from Social Security Works about all the ways New Yorkers benefit from it.)
We’ll also be refuting some of the BIG LIES that opponents of government social programs like to tell. Social Security is NOT going broke! In fact, it is fully solvent for another 20 years. Also, Social Security has not contributed one penny to the federal budget deficit. It has its own Trust Fund that is funded by a dedicated tax from contributions taken out of every workers’ paycheck.
We’ll be calling on Congress to rectify the crisis of recent local Social Security office closures and in-person service cutbacks resulting from budget cuts. Since 2011, seven local Social Security Administration offices across New York City have been closed because of budget cutbacks, including in Astoria, Chinatown, East New York, Glendale, Midtown Manhattan, South Bronx, and Williamsburg. Meanwhile, the number of people on Social Security will double in the next 20 years. In addition, the Social Security Administration is shifting some services solely to online modalities, creating barriers to necessary services for New Yorkers who are not internet literate or do not have regular internet access. New York’s Senator Charles Schumer has recently introduced a bill to address this problem (S.2742), and a similar bill (H.R.3997) has been introduced in the House by Rep. Brian Higgins of Buffalo.
There are also bills in Congress to improve and expand Social Security:
- The “Strengthen Social Security Act” (S.567, H.R.3118), introduced by Sen. Tom Harkin and Rep. Linda Sanchez would raise the minimum base benefit, remove the cap on income subject to FICA taxes so that the wealthy pay their fair share just like the rest of us, and change the basis of the formula used to calculate the annual cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA) to more accurately reflect the spending needs of older people and people with disabilities, particularly when it comes to health care. (You can read the ARA fact sheet here.)
- The Retirement and Income Security Enhancement (RAISE) Act (S.2455), introduced by Senators Mark Begich and Patty Murray, would enhance Social Security benefits for widow(er)s and divorced spouses while extending benefit eligibility for children of retired, disabled, and deceased workers. (You can read the ARA Fact Sheet here.)
We are collaborating on this event with the Alliance for Retired Americans (ARA), and Local 3369 of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) which represents SSA workers at that office. AFGE’s “Save Our Social Security” campaign is encouraging their members to resist office closures and in-person service cutbacks.
Our event here in NYC will be part of several similar events taking place across New York State being organized by the Restore the American Promise (RAP) campaign. Additional events will be taking place across the country, coordinated by ARA, AFGE, and Social Security Works. We’ll be having party hats and cupcakes, and have invited some local members of Congress from the Queens too. Please join us!