95-15301. Evidence Required for Duplicate Social Security Number Card  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 120 (Thursday, June 22, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 32444-32446]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-15301]
    
    
    
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    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
    
    20 CFR Part 422
    
    RIN 0960-AE18
    
    
    Evidence Required for Duplicate Social Security Number Card
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration (SSA).
    
    ACTION: Interim rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: We intend to conduct a pilot project in as many as 100 social 
    security offices throughout the country and in as many as 10 
    teleservice centers to encourage people who need a duplicate social 
    security number (SSN) card to contact us by phone to request the 
    duplicate card. We are, therefore, providing an exception to our rule 
    in 20 CFR 422.107(c) on the corroborative evidence of identity a person 
    must submit when he or she applies for a duplicate SSN card.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This regulation is effective on June 22, 1995. Since 
    this rule grants a limited exemption from certain requirements for 
    issuing duplicate SSN cards, the 30-day delay in effectuating rules, as 
    provided by 5 U.S.C. 553(d), does not apply. We will consider any 
    comments we receive by August 21, 1995 and will publish a revised final 
    regulation if public comments warrant it.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments on this rule should be submitted in writing to the 
    Commissioner of Social Security, P.O. Box 1585, Baltimore, MD 21235, 
    sent by telefax to (410) 966-2830, sent by E-mail to 
    regulations@ssa.gov,'' or delivered to the Division of Regulations 
    and Rulings, Social Security Administration, 3-B-1 Operations Building, 
    6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21235, between 8:00 a.m. and 
    4:30 p.m. on regular business days. Comments received may be inspected 
    during these same hours by making arrangements with the contact person 
    shown below.
        Organizations and individuals desiring to submit comments on the 
    information collection requirements under the ``Paperwork Reduction 
    Act'' should submit them to the Office of Management and Budget, Office 
    of Information and Regulatory Affairs, New Executive Office Building, 
    Room 3208, Washington, D.C. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for SSA.
        The electronic file of this document is available on the Federal 
    Bulletin Board (FBB) at 9 a.m. on the date of publication in the 
    Federal Register. To download the file, modem dial (202) 512-1387. The 
    FBB instructions will explain how to download the file and the fee. 
    This file is in Wordperfect and will remain on the FBB during the 
    comment period.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jack Schanberger, Room 3-B-1 
    Operations Building, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21235, 
    (410) 965-8471.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 205(c)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act provides 
    that an applicant for an SSN must submit such evidence as may be 
    necessary for the Commissioner of Social Security (the Commissioner) to 
    establish the applicant's age, citizenship or alien status, and true 
    identity. Under this provision, the applicant must also provide 
    evidence that the Commissioner may need to determine which (if any) 
    social security account number has previously been assigned to the 
    applicant. This provision was added to the Act in 1972 (Pub. L. 92-603) 
    to provide instructions for assigning SSNs. In addition, Pub. L. 92-603 
    amended section 208 of the Act to provide penalties for anyone who 
    knowingly, willfully, and with intent to deceive uses an SSN that was 
    obtained with false information. See S. Rep. No. 92-1230 and H.R. Rep. 
    No. 92-1605, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. (1972).
        The amendments were in response to the expanding use of the SSN and 
    a concern about its misuse. To implement the amendments, we increased 
    the security of the procedures we used for assigning an SSN. We also 
    published regulations at 20 CFR 422.107(c) which, among other things, 
    require that each applicant for an original, duplicate, or corrected 
    SSN card must submit documentary evidence of identity. The primary 
    purposes for requiring an applicant for a duplicate SSN card to furnish 
    this evidence are to avoid assigning more than one SSN to a person and 
    to ensure that the card is issued to the correct person. 
    [[Page 32445]] 
        A recent report by SSA's Inspector General (IG), entitled ``SSA 
    Field Office Visitor Workload,'' indicates that approximately one-third 
    of the many people who visit Social Security offices each day are there 
    to request a new or duplicate social security number card. The IG 
    report suggested that individuals could request duplicate cards by 
    telephone or by mail, thereby significantly reducing the volume of 
    people (approximately 8 million per year) who visit social security 
    offices to apply for original or duplicate SSN cards.
        In a continuing attempt to furnish better service to the public, we 
    will conduct a pilot project which will enable certain individuals to 
    apply by phone for a duplicate SSN card without having to complete and 
    sign an application and take or mail their identity documents to a 
    social security office. We plan to conduct the pilot project in as many 
    as 100 social security field offices throughout the country and in as 
    many as 10 teleservice centers.
        We are modifying the evidentiary requirements for identity in 20 
    CFR 422.107(c) for this project. This will enable us to forgo 
    requesting the corroborative documentary evidence of identity for some 
    applicants who request a duplicate SSN card. The pilot project will 
    apply to U.S. citizens born in the U.S. and to U.S. citizens born 
    outside the U.S. who have previously presented to us evidence of U.S. 
    citizenship. The applicant must be the number holder or a parent 
    applying on behalf of his or her minor child number holder.
        Because of our enhanced ability to screen by electronic means an 
    applicant requesting a duplicate SSN card, we believe that we may be 
    able to eliminate or at least modify our current requirement that all 
    persons applying for a duplicate SSN card must submit a signed 
    application and corroborative documentary evidence of identity. If we 
    find that this evidence and the signed application are no longer needed 
    in some kinds of cases, we should be able to provide more efficient, 
    more economical, and more convenient service to the public, while at 
    the same time reducing the need for many people to apply in person at 
    social security offices for duplicate SSN cards. We will also be 
    helping businesses with their wage reporting obligations by ensuring 
    that their employees have their correct social security numbers.
        With our current electronic systems capability, we believe that 
    under the interim rule we will be able to comply with the evidentiary 
    requirements of the Act. We can compare the information the number 
    holder gives when requesting a duplicate card with the information 
    already available in our electronic records. The true number holder 
    should know the information contained in these electronic records. 
    Therefore, we believe it is reasonable to treat the conforming 
    information provided by the person requesting a duplicate SSN card as 
    acceptable evidence of his or her identity within the meaning of 
    section 205(c)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act. If our records do not confirm the 
    information provided by the applicant, we will require that he or she 
    submit corroborative evidence of identity and a signed application 
    either by mail or in person to an SSA office.
        If we decide to discontinue this project concerning duplicate SSN 
    cards, we will rescind this interim rule. If we decide to expand this 
    project, we will publish a notice in the Federal Register. If we decide 
    to implement the procedures nationally, a regulation reflecting this 
    decision will be promulgated. However, before deciding to expand the 
    test or implement nationally, we will conduct a study to determine 
    whether the pilot procedures provide sufficient safeguards against 
    fraud.
        These special pilot procedures for issuance of duplicate SSN cards 
    will not apply to aliens who request such duplicate cards, because 
    pursuant to 20 CFR 422.107(e), aliens must also furnish proof of alien 
    status as well as identity. Under section 205(c)(2)(B)(i)(I) of the 
    Act, the Commissioner must take affirmative measures to assure that 
    SSNs are assigned to certain aliens. Aliens are assigned SSNs when they 
    are lawfully admitted to the U.S. as permanent residents, when they are 
    admitted to the U.S. for a temporary period of time with authorization 
    to work, or when they receive authorization to work subsequent to entry 
    into the United States. The Immigration and Naturalization Service 
    issues to aliens documentation of their lawful admission and requires 
    that an alien keep that documentation on his or her person at all 
    times. Generally, aliens are required to submit that documentation to 
    us as proof of alien status. Therefore, aliens will need to take their 
    INS documents to SSA to apply for a duplicate SSN card.
        These special procedures also do not apply to requests for 
    corrected SSN cards because the corrected information cannot be 
    verified on our records. Additionally, these procedures do not apply to 
    (1) foreign-born U.S. citizens who have not already submitted evidence 
    of citizenship; (2) a person applying on behalf of another if the 
    applicant is not a parent applying on behalf of his or her minor child; 
    and (3) people whose address is an in-care-of address, a post office 
    box, general delivery, or a suite.
    
    Regulatory Procedures
    
    Justification for Interim Rule Without Proposed Rule
    
        We are publishing this amendment to the regulations as an interim 
    rule instead of a proposed rule. The Social Security Administration 
    follows the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) notice of proposed 
    rulemaking and public comment procedures specified in 5 U.S.C. 553 in 
    the development of its regulations. The APA provides exceptions to its 
    notice and public comment procedures when an agency finds that there is 
    good cause for dispensing with such procedures on the basis that they 
    are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. We 
    have determined that, under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), good cause exists for 
    waiver of notice of proposed rulemaking and public comment procedures 
    in this instance because the use of such procedures to provide a very 
    limited exception to the evidentiary requirements that must be met when 
    a person requests a duplicate SSN card notice is unnecessary. This is a 
    minor rule of limited applicability that should be of little interest 
    to the general public. We do not believe that there is significant 
    public interest in whether persons in areas where this pilot project 
    will be conducted who request duplicate SSN cards must supply signed 
    applications and supportive documentary evidence of their identities 
    when they request duplicate SSN cards.
    
    Executive Order (E.O.) 12866
    
        We have consulted with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    and determined that this rule does not meet the criteria for a 
    significant regulatory action under E.O. 12866. Thus, it was not 
    subject to OMB review.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        We certify that this regulation will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because it 
    affects only the issuing of duplicate SSN cards to individuals. 
    Therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis as provided in Pub. L. 96-
    354, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, is not required.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This regulation contains a new reporting burden in section 422.107. 
    As required by section 3507 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980, we 
    [[Page 32446]] will submit a copy to the Office of Management and 
    Budget for its review.
        Public reporting burden for this collection of information is 
    estimated to average 2 minutes per response. This includes the time it 
    will take to read the instructions, gather the necessary facts, and 
    provide the information. If you have any comments or suggestions on 
    this estimate, write to the Social Security Administration, ATTN: 
    Reports Clearance Officer, 1-A-21 Operations Building, Baltimore, MD 
    21235.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Nos. 96.001 Social 
    Security--Disability Insurance; 96.002 Social Security--Retirement 
    Insurance; 96.004 Social Security--Survivors Insurance; 96.006 
    Supplemental Security Income)
    
    List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 422
    
        Administrative practice and procedure; Freedom of information; 
    Organization and functions (Government agencies); Social Security.
    
        Dated: June 14, 1995.
    Shirley S. Chater,
    Commissioner of Social Security.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, Subpart B of Part 422 of 
    20 CFR Chapter III is amended as follows:
    
    PART 422--ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURES
    
        1. The authority citation for Subpart B is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 205, 702, and 1143 of the Social Security Act; 
    42 U.S.C. 405, 902, and 1320b-13.
    
        2. Section 422.107 is amended by adding language at the end of 
    paragraph (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 422.107  Evidence requirements.
    
        (c) Evidence of identity. * * * An applicant for a duplicate social 
    security number card who is a U.S. citizen and who resides in an area 
    where the Social Security Administration is conducting a pilot project 
    on the issuance of duplicate cards will not be required to submit a 
    signed application or corroborative documentary evidence of identity if 
    the Social Security Administration is able to compare information 
    provided by the applicant with information already in its records and, 
    on the basis of this comparison, decides that corroborative documentary 
    evidence is not needed to establish the applicant's identity. These 
    special procedures do not apply to foreign-born U.S. citizens who have 
    not already submitted evidence of citizenship to us; to a person 
    applying on behalf of another if the applicant is not a parent applying 
    on behalf of his or her minor child; and to people whose address is an 
    in-care-of address, a post office box, general delivery, or a suite.
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 95-15301 Filed 6-21-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4190-29-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/22/1995
Published:
06/22/1995
Department:
Social Security Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim rule.
Document Number:
95-15301
Dates:
This regulation is effective on June 22, 1995. Since this rule grants a limited exemption from certain requirements for issuing duplicate SSN cards, the 30-day delay in effectuating rules, as provided by 5 U.S.C. 553(d), does not apply. We will consider any comments we receive by August 21, 1995 and will publish a revised final regulation if public comments warrant it.
Pages:
32444-32446 (3 pages)
RINs:
0960-AE18: Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance Benefits; Replacing Social Security Number Cards (543F)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0960-AE18/old-age-survivors-and-disability-insurance-benefits-replacing-social-security-number-cards-543f-
PDF File:
95-15301.pdf
CFR: (1)
20 CFR 422.107