Wednesday, March 11, 2015

SSN IMMORTALITY

SSN Immortality


From Valhalla, New York to Silicon Valley

It seems some Americans plan

forever on this earth to dally 

or at to  least  live as long as they can.


To others nothing could be dumber--

since  old age often brings forgetfulness and pain rather than bliss

though apparently neither ill  affects  one's Social Security Number

so perhaps we  should just all  settle for this---

rather than take 150 supplements a day *

which could make a considerable dent in one's pay

and  be hard to remember to do  anyway.




For if we simply   rely on  humdrum bureaucratic negligence

rather  than bio-technology or a rarely  benign Providence,

our number may  live on like that of some Babe Ruthian hero**

 even if our own individual accomplishments have been zero.

hzl
3/11/15


  1. *Ray Kurzweil searches for immortality | Calvin College Chimes

    www.calvin.edu/.../ray-kurzweil-searches-for-immortality/

    Calvin College
    Feb 20, 2014 - Raymond Kurzweil, chief of engineering at Google, is hopeful that humans will have pushed back human mortality before he grows much older.
  2. **


  3. Yankees Retired Numbers | yankees.com: History

    newyork.yankees.mlb.com/nyy/.../retired_numbers.js...

    New York Yankees
    In 1956, Mantle had one of the greatest seasons ever at the plate. He hit 52 homers with 130 RBI and a .353 average to win the Triple Crown. Mantle was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1974. Beginning with Lou Gehrig's number 4 in 1939, the Yankees have retired 15 uniform numbers to honor 16 players and managers.

IG Audit: 6.5 Million People With Active Social Security Numbers Are 112 or Older

March 9, 2015 - 10:39 AM


SSN
An IG audit of the Social Security Administration found that the nation’s database of active Social Security numbers includes more than six and a half million people who are older than 112 years of age.
(CNSNews.com) - Many people are living longer, but not to age 112 or beyond -- except in the records of the Social Security Administration.
The SSA's inspector general has identified 6.5 million number-holders age 112 -- or older -- for whom no death date has been entered in the main electronic file, called Numident.
The audit, dated March 4, 2015, concluded that SSA lacks the controls necessary to annote death information on the records of number-holders who exceed "maximum reasonable life expectancies."
"We obtained Numident data that identified approximately 6.5 million numberholders born before June 16, 1901 who did not have a date of death on their record," the report states.
Some of the numbers assigned to long-dead people were used fraudulently to open bank accounts.
And thousands of those numbers apparently were used by illegal immigrants to apply for work:
"During Calendar Years 2008 through 2011, SSA received 4,024 E-Verify inquiries using the SSNs of 3,873 numberholders born before June 16, 1901," the report said. "These inquiries indicate individuals' attempts to use the SSNs to apply for work."
“It is incredible that the Social Security Administration in 2015 does not have the technical sophistication to ensure that people they know to be deceased are actually noted as dead,” said Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
“Tens of thousands of these numbers are currently being used to report wages to the Social Security Administration and to the IRS. People are fraudulently, but successfully, applying for jobs and benefits with these numbers. Making sure Social Security cleans up its death master file to prevent future errors and fraud is a good government reform we can all agree on,” Johnson said.
Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), the committee's ranking member, called the findings a "major problem" that wastes taxpayers' money, exposes citizens to identity theft and undermines confidence in government:
"It is simply unacceptable that our nation’s database of Social Security numbers of supposedly living people includes more than six and a half million people who are older than 112 years of age, with a few thousand having birth dates from  before the Civil War. Preventing agency errors by keeping track of who has died is a relatively simple problem that the government should pursue as a high priority."
According to the IG, the Social Security Administration matches death reports received from various sources against its payment records, then records the date of a number-holder's death in its Numerical Identification System, or Numident.
Information from Numident is then used to create SSA's "Death Master File," which is used by financial institutions and various government entities to prevent identity fraud. If a death is not recorded on the Numident, it will not appear in the DMF.
The IG made four recommendations for resolving the discrepancies and improving the accuracy of the Death Master File to "prevent future misuse of these SSNs."

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