The Social Security Administration (SSA) on March 19 announced a plan to reduce costs and enhance security measures following stakeholder feedback and a recent audit by the Government Accountability Office (GAO).
The savings measure will focus on the Electronic Consent Based Social Security Number Verification (eCBSV) service, which will be streamlined for better “addressing the needs of customers, including the financial industry and various governmental bodies.”
Annual fees charged to participating entities related to the service will be reduced by approximately 25 percent, said the agency.
The Social Security Administration spent $62 million to develop eCBSV, with a 2018 law requiring that the agency recoup these costs from users, according to the report.
“However, low participation and other challenges have made it hard for SSA to recover costs—and SSA still needs to recover about $37 million,” GAO said. “SSA has not met its projections for fee collections due to lower-than-expected industry participation.”
In the recent statement, the Social Security Administration said the GAO report highlighted areas of improvement for eCBSV, “including cost estimation, user participation, and service limitations.”
“In response, SSA has committed to implementing several recommendations to enhance the service’s effectiveness in combating synthetic identity fraud.”
Service enhancement efforts include improving the “no-match results” provided by eCBSV when verifying identities and expanding the user base, among other measures.
According to the Social Security Administration, the new policies are aimed at ensuring the “continued viability” of eCBSV.
Cost Issues, Savings Measures
According to the GAO report, the Social Security Administration must collect roughly $14 million per year to meet its goal of recovering all costs incurred in the eCBSV program by the end of fiscal year 2027.The report questioned SSA’s ability to meet this goal without boosting its user base or raising fees.
An analysis by GAO of subscription data through December 2023 showed that the service “has not significantly increased users since enrollment opened in FY 2022.” Moreover, after the SSA raised fees charged to users in July 2023, fee collection declined.
“SSA officials told GAO they did not plan to take significant steps to increase use of the service. Industry participants GAO interviewed cited several factors limiting their use, such as difficult-to-interpret verification results.”
“SSA also had not established performance measures and goals for the service’s use and benefit,” the report said.
GAO recommended that the Social Security Administration take steps such as implementing appropriate control over IT investments, developing strategies to expand the use of eCBSV, and updating cost estimate guidance.
Under the Trump administration, the SSA has taken various actions to cut costs and save funds.
The savings were identified in areas such as “payroll, information technology, contracts and grants, and space savings (i.e., real property), and other savings through new, common-sense approaches to printing, travel, and purchase card policies,” the agency said.
“By eliminating waste, bloat, and insularity, my administration will empower American families, workers, taxpayers, and our system of government itself,” the order said.