Press Releases

WASHINGTON – U.S. Sens. Mark R. Warner and Tim Kaine (both D-VA) applaud the congressional passage of legislation to fund our country’s defense, security, health, education, transportation, and housing programs. This package supports a number of Warner and Kaine priorities, including affordable housing, safer airways, improved infrastructure, medical research, servicemember pay, and shipbuilding. These five bipartisan bills fund Defense; Financial Services and General Government; Labor, Health and Human Services (HHS), Education, and related agencies; National Security, Department of State, and related programs; and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and related agencies for Fiscal Year 2026.

“I’m proud to provide over $93 million to 78 critical community projects across Virginia that support affordable housing, expanded health care access, transportation safety and modernization, and job entry and development programs,” said Sen. Warner. “This bill is far from perfect, but we were able to make headway on important national priorities including supporting Ukraine, lowering health care and prescription drug costs, boosting medical research, and funding public housing.”

“I’m glad that we passed legislation to fund important priorities like pay for military servicemembers, and reauthorize my bipartisan legislation—named in honor of Charlottesville native and physician Dr. Lorna Breen—to support the mental health of the health care workforce,” said Sen. Kaine. “I’m also thrilled that it includes over $93 million in federal funding that Senator Warner and I secured to expand access to health care, make critical infrastructure improvements, and more. I look forward to getting on the road to celebrate these investments in our communities.”

As part of the Fiscal Year 2026 appropriations process, members of Congress are able to work with the communities they represent to request funding for local community projects, otherwise known as congressionally directed spending, in a manner that promotes transparency and accountability. This process allows Congress to dedicate federal funding for specific projects in Virginia. This package contains $93.267 million for 78 specific projects in Virginia.

Through strong advocacy, the senators secured funding in the relevant spending bills for the following Virginia projects: 

  1. For projects in Central Virginia, click here.
  2. For projects in Hampton Roads and the Eastern Shore, click here.
  3. For projects in Northern Virginia, click here.
  4. For projects in the Shenandoah Valley and the Highlands, click here.
  5. For projects in Southwest Virginia and Southside, click here.
  6. For statewide projects, click here.

This funding is in addition to the $112.14 million in federal funding that Sens. Warner and Kaine previously secured for projects in Central Virginia, Hampton Roads and the Eastern Shore, Northern Virginia, Shenandoah Valley and the Highlands, Southwest Virginia and Southside, and across Virginia as part of other government funding legislation.

In addition to community-specific projects, this legislation includes funding for the following Warner and Kaine priorities: 

Supporting public housing: Provides $48.4 billion to the Office of Public and Indian Housing, including $38.4 billion for tenant based rental assistance; $8.3 billion for the Public Housing Fund; $206.4 million to help families get good paying jobs; and $1.4 billion to support housing in Tribal and Native Hawaiian communities.

Supporting community investment, affordable housing, and homelessness prevention: Provides $13.3 billion for the Office of Community Planning and Development, including $3.3 billion for the Community Development Block program to give Virginia cities and counties reliable funding for housing repairs, neighborhood revitalization, and community development; $4.4 billion for Homeless Assistance Grants to expand permanent supportive housing, rapid rehousing, and prevention efforts; $1.25 billion for the HOME Investment Partnerships program to help states and cities build and preserve affordable housing; $65 million for the Self-Help and Assisted-Homeownership Opportunity program to help low-income families build or buy their first home; and $30 million for the SUPPORT for Patients and Community Recovery Housing Program to fund housing for people recovering from substance use disorders.

Improving access to housing: Provides $19.9 billion to the Office of Housing, including $18.5 billion to keep rents affordable in privately owned apartment buildings for low-income tenants; $1 billion for Housing for the Elderly; and $287 million for Housing for Persons with Disabilities.

Improving air safety: Provides $22.2 billion to the Federal Aviation Administration, including funds to support the addition of new air traffic controllers and the prioritization of modernizing outdated systems in the National Airspace. Also provides $2 million for an independent study on the airspace in the National Capital Region and the coordination between the FAA and Department of Defense in response to the tragic Flight 5342 accident in January 2025.

Supporting regional airports: Provides $514 million for the Essential Air Service program, which provides critical support for passenger service for Shenandoah Valley Regional Airport.

Improving roads and highways: Provides $64.3 billion to the Federal Highway Administration, including $350 million for bridge repair and $200 million for the Tribal Transportation program.

Improving rail travel: Provides $2.9 billion for the Federal Railroad Administration, including $137 million for Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Improvements grants; $1.6 billion for Amtrak’s National Network grants for State-Supported routes and Long-Distance routes; and $850 million for Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor.

Boosting capital transit: Provides $16.5 billion to the Federal Transit Administration, including $1.7 billion for the Capital Investment Grants program.

Supporting medical research: Provides $48.7 billion for biomedical research, including $3.9 billion for Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia research as well as a $10 million increase for diabetes research.

Investing in child care and early learning: Provides $8.8 billion for the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG), an $85 million increase, which will help families in Virginia and across the country find and afford child care. Also provides $12.36 billion for Head Start, an $85 million increase, which will support Head Start teachers and staff throughout the country. Sen. Kaine has championed efforts in Congress to increase funding for the CCDBG program.

Boosting education: Provides $70.9 billion for the Department of Education, including $18.4 billion for Title I schools and $15.19 billion for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Both received a $20 million increase.

Improving social security: Provides $15 billion for the Social Security Administration’s administrative expenses, a $554 million increase from the prior year. The legislation includes instructions for SSA to utilize the funding to take steps to avoid field office closures, reduced office hours, and delays for appointments at field offices.  

Increasing servicemember pay: Provides a 3.8% across-the-board pay raise for servicemembers. Also funds a 1% pay raise for civilians.

Supporting defense communities: Provides $70 million for Impact Aid programs, which provide federal assistance to local school districts that face financial disadvantages due to federal land ownership or high enrollment of federally connected children. Also provides $30 million for the Defense Community Infrastructure Program, which addresses deficiencies in community infrastructure that can or does support a military installation’s readiness and lethality.

Supporting environmental mitigation: Provides $159 million above the President’s request for PFAS cleanup, which removes “forever chemicals” from water and soil. Also provides $20 million above the President’s request for the Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration program, which preserves military missions by supporting cost-sharing to avoid land use conflicts near military installations, address environmental restrictions that limit military activities, and increase military installation resilience.

Supporting international partnerships: Provides $400 million to support Ukraine; reaffirms Congress’s support for NATO; provides $1 billion for the Taiwan Security Cooperation Initiative; makes available $3.3 billion to support the United Nations and other international organizations, rejecting the President’s request to eliminate support; includes $343 million to support regional partners in countering ISIS; and provides $1.1 billion for drug interdiction and counter-drug activities.

Providing humanitarian and global health assistance: Provides $9.4 billion for global health programs to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and polio; $5.5 billion for humanitarian assistance to meet most urgent needs around the globe; and $15 million for rigorous impact evaluations to ensure humanitarian programs are efficient and delivering results for vulnerable communities.

Supporting shipbuilding: Provides $27.15 billion to support shipbuilding, including a $5.9 billion increase for Columbia- and Virginia-class submarine programs; $1.676 billion for the completion of last year’s shipbuilding programs; and an additional $1.75 billion for DDG-51 destroyers advance procurement and industrial base support.

Boosting military capacity: Provides $2.947 billion in additional munitions and industrial capacity across the military services, including $500 million to develop and procure additional solid rocket motors.

Expanding telehealth: Extends Medicare telehealth flexibilities for two years; requires HHS to issue guidance with best practices on providing telehealth services accessibly; continues for four years virtual access to the Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program; allows cardiopulmonary rehabilitation services to be provided by telehealth in Medicare in 2026 and 2027; and directs HHS to help health care providers learn how to screen for medication-induced movement disorders over telehealth.

Lowering drug costs by reining in PBM middlemen: Reforms Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) to lower drug costs for Americans and protect access to local pharmacies. Also includes two of Sen. Warner’s bills, the PBM Reporting Transparency Act and the Patients Before Middlemen (PBM) Act.

Protecting rural health labor and delivery services: Includes a provision of Sen. Warner’s Keeping Obstetrics Local Act to require State Medicaid programs to conduct studies on the costs of providing maternity, labor, and delivery services in rural hospitals and hospitals that serve a high proportion of Medicaid beneficiaries, and submit a report detailing the results of this study to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Improving mental health: Includes the Dr. Lorna Breen Health Care Provider Protection Reauthorization Act, legislation sponsored by Sen. Kaine and cosponsored by Sen. Warner, that reauthorizes programs that support efforts to improve the mental health of health care providers.

Addressing pediatric cancer: Provides $12.6 million to fund childhood cancer research through the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, named after a child from Loudoun County who died from brain cancer in 2013. 

Supporting individuals with Long COVID: Provides $10 million to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to continue its work to support multidisciplinary Long COVID clinics to address comprehensive, coordinated, person-centered care for people living with Long COVID.

Modernizing public health infrastructure: Provides $185 million to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to modernize America’s public health data systems.

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* High-quality photographs of Sen. Mark R. Warner are available for download here *

Photos may be used online and in print, and can be attributed to ‘The Office of Sen. Mark R. Warner’

WASHINGTON U.S. Sens. Mark R. Warner, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, and Tim Kaine, a member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, (both D-VA) and 27 of their Democratic colleagues introduced the Keep Billionaires Out of Social Security Act, legislation that would reverse the disastrous actions the Trump Administration is taking at the Social Security Administration (SSA). The bill would prevent Social Security field offices from shutting down, make it easier for seniors and people with disabilities to apply for benefits, and provide proper resources to the SSA so it can approve benefits quicker.

“Donald Trump lied when he said he would not hurt Social Security. At a time when it should be all hands on deck to strengthen this program for future generations, he is working overtime to undermine it by firing workers and preparing to close field offices that help ensure that Americans get their benefits,” said the senators. “We’re proud to introduce this legislation to help undo the damage he’s causing.”

The bill is introduced on the 90th anniversary of the signing of the Social Security Act into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. For nearly a century, Social Security has been the most successful government program–paying out every benefit owed to eligible Americans on time and without delay. The program has helped millions of seniors, widows, children, and people with disabilities to live with dignity, and in 2023 alone, Social Security lifted 27.6 million Americans out of poverty.  Without it, nearly 40 percent of people over age 65 would be living in poverty

Despite the program’s success, the Trump Administration has pushed out more than 7,000 SSA employees, begun requiring in-person office visits to receive benefits, limited access to a live operator when Americans call the 1-800 number for Social Security benefits to make it easier to access benefits, and issued false statements designed to undermine the confidence that the American people have in this crucial program.

To counter these dangerous actions, the Keep Billionaires Out of Social Security Act would:

  • Protect and improve Americans’ access to Social Security offices by prohibiting closures, relocations, and service reductions, preventing more employees from being pushed out, and ensuring Americans can speak to real people to get their benefits;
  • Increase funding by $5 billion to improve customer service, modernize technology, and reduce backlogs;
  • Restore assistance for vulnerable and disabled people to access their benefits;
  • Safeguard Americans’ data and stop Trump’s politicization of Social Security; and
  • Remove DOGE’s authority and call for an independent investigation into DOGE’s actions at SSA.

In addition to Warner and Kaine, the bill is cosponsored by U.S. Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Tina Smith (D-MN), Jack Reed (D-RI), Andy Kim (D-NJ), Ed Markey (D-MA), Peter Welch (D-VT), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Chris Coons (D-DE), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Dick Durbin (D-IL), John Hickenlooper (D-CO), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Ruben Gallego (D-NM), Michael Bennet (D-CO), Patty Murray (D-WA), Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Angus King (I-ME), Alex Padilla (D-CA), and Chris Van Hollen (D-MD).

Full text of the Senate bill is available here. A one-pager of the bill is available here.

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Committee Democrats to Crapo: “We have a responsibility to ensure SSA protects Americans’ data and provides quality customer service to the over 72 million Americans who rely on these benefits.”

Text of the Letter (PDF)

WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) joined Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Finance Committee Democrats in calling for an immediate hearing to investigate the customer service issues at the Social Security Administration (SSA) – including exposing millions of Americans’ personal information that could have resulted in the largest data breach in modern history.

“As one of the nation’s most popular and effective programs, Social Security provides a foundation of income on which workers can build for their retirement, as well as valuable insurance protection against unexpected hardship. Failing to investigate SSA and hold Commissioner Bisignano accountable for keeping his promise to protect America’s data and improve SSA is an abdication of our oversight responsibility and a disservice to our constituents who sent us to Congress to protect this bedrock program,” the senators wrote to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-ID).  

In March, the senators demanded a committee hearing in light of reports that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had unfettered access to sensitive information, slashed its workforce, among other drastic changes that impede Americans’ ability to access their hard earned benefits. Since Social Security Administration Commissioner Frank Bisignano took office, the senators have raised the alarm as the agency has made the following changes:

  1. Giving DOGE the greenlight to transfer Americans’ Social Security information into an unsecure cloud server that could be compromised anytime by foreign agents or hackers. According to a SSA whistleblower, the agency repeatedly ignored or even violated federal privacy laws at the whims of pleasing DOGE.
  2. Weaponizing SSA data to serve Donald Trump’s dangerous political agenda, including falsely declaring more than 6,3000 immigrants as dead to make them self deport. The agency has unconstitutionally manipulated and undermined its data to attack a small population’s earned Social Security benefits.
  3. Injecting chaos into SSA phone systems by slashing its workforce and diverting 2,000 field office staff from their responsibility of answering calls to provide quality customer service. Many applicants are already waiting over a month just to get an appointment in their local field office, and now they have to wait even longer for their benefit claims to be processed.
  4. Misleading the American people on SSA’s performance to falsely promote Trump and Bisignano’s narrative that customer service has never been better. SSA is cherry-picking misleading performance metrics every month to prop up the Trump administration’s dangerous agenda.

The text of the letter can be found here.

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WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) has joined Sens. John Kennedy (R-LA) and Gary Peters (D-MI) in sponsoring the Ending Improper Payments to Deceased People Act to save billions of federal dollars by curbing erroneous payments to individuals who have passed away. The legislation would make permanent the provisions from the Stopping Improper Payments to Deceased People Act, a law previously sponsored by Warner, Kennedy and Peters to stop unlawful payments to the deceased by allowing the Social Security Administration to share the Death Master File, a record of deceased individuals, with the Treasury Department’s Do Not Pay system, for a period of three years. 

The Treasury Department announced last month that it recovered $31 million in fraud and improper payments during the first five months of the bill’s implementation. The new bill would make the temporary provisions permanent, reining in the government’s ability to make improper payments to deceased people in the future. 

“Despite the antics we’ve seen from Elon Musk in recent weeks, there are real, serious ways to improve government efficiency. And where issues are actually identified, Congress should step in and act. That’s the right way to actually stop waste, fraud and abuse of government resources – not with chaotic firings and illegal spending cuts,” said Sen. Warner. “I look forward to working with my colleagues to get this commonsense measure passed into law.”

The bill would also allow Treasury’s Do Not Pay working system to compare death information from the Social Security Administration with personal information from other federal entities and to share this information with any paying or administering agency that is authorized to use the Do Not Pay system.

A former business executive, Warner has a long and successful record of working in Congress to improve government efficiency, accountability and transparency. The DATA Act, which required the government to standardize federal spending data and post it on a single website so Americans can track how their tax dollars are being spent, established usaspending.gov. It was hailed as the single most significant open-government initiative since the Freedom of Information Act of 1966. Warner also passed into law the Government Performance and Results Modernization Act, which requires federal agencies to report results quarterly on their highest priority programs, and to designate a performance improvement officer for each agency.

WASHINGTON – Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) joined 16 senators in calling on the Social Security Administration (SSA) to provide an update on its efforts to improve field office services for beneficiaries amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“SSA has a responsibility and a duty to provide timely and quality service to the public, whether it is provided online, via telephone, or in-person,” the senators wrote. “COVID-19 has amplified and exacerbated gaps in service for all. We write to request an update on the Social Security Administration’s efforts to improve service delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic, and efforts to modernize its business processes going forward.” 

In the letter, sent to Acting Commissioner Kilolo Kijakazi, the senators called on the agency to outline the steps it is taking to ensure those who need in-person service are able to receive it, including details on the appointment system and drop boxes for original documents that need to be reviewed. Last week, SSA announced an agreement with labor unions representing the agency’s workforce about a reentry plan beginning as early as March 30th.

The letter also noted the substantial dip in applications for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI), and asked the agency how they are working to address this shortfall.

Sen. Warner has pushed the SSA to continue assisting beneficiaries in an effective manner since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. In an April 2021 Senate Finance Committee hearing, Sen. Warner highlighted the need for SSA to conduct outreach to vulnerable populations to ensure they are being served in the midst of the pandemic.

In addition to Sen. Warner, the letter was signed by Sens. Ron Wyden (D-OR), Bob Casey (D-PA) Michael Bennet (D-CO), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Ben Cardin (D-MD), Tom Carper (D-DE), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Bob Menendez (D-NJ), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV).

A copy of the letter is available here and below.

Dear Acting Commissioner Kijakazi:

We write to request an update on the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) efforts to improve service delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic, and efforts to modernize its business processes going forward.

In March 2020, SSA took the unprecedented—and necessary—step to close its 1,230 field offices and shift the agency’s operations to a nearly 100 percent remote environment. Since then, your employees have done a tremendous job quickly adapting to the new environment and continuing to serve the public and should be commended.

With COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations soaring to their highest recorded levels due to the Omicron variant, we support the agency’s efforts to prioritize the safety and well-being of the public and the Agency’s staff, especially those who are immunocompromised, as it finalizes the phased reentry plan. That said, SSA has a responsibility and a duty to provide timely and quality service to the public, whether it is provided online, via telephone, or in-person.

As you know, nearly 70 million people rely on Social Security and Supplemental Security Income benefits to pay for rent, groceries, medical bills, and other essential expenses. Additionally, over 45 million people visit SSA’s 1,230 field offices every year to file for benefits, make changes to their earnings record, and get guidance from SSA’s experienced staff. An incorrect denial of benefits or inaccurate payment can be the difference between a beneficiary having a home or being evicted, or whether or not they can afford their prescription drugs. A recent Washington Post article illuminated the devastating impacts that poor service delivery can have on vulnerable populations. Further, a November 2021 SSA Inspector General report found that nearly half of the 151 million callers to field offices and the national 800-number went unanswered, including 16.4 million callers who gave up while waiting in the queue. Many of these service issues have persisted long before the pandemic, but COVID-19 has amplified and exasperated these gaps in service for all, particularly for those whose sole source of income is Social Security, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), or both.

When you started the job as Acting Commissioner six months ago, your goals were ensuring everyone who is eligible for benefits should receive them and that SSA must treat employees fairly and equitably. Both the Finance Committee and Special Committee on Aging have been concerned about access to Agency services and want to support responsive, effective and accurate information about Agency programs. The April 2021 Finance Committee hearing highlighted many of the challenges our constituents encounter when interacting with Social Security, and discussed possibilities to rethink SSA’s application process and other services.

Chairman Wyden noted at the outset of the hearing, “making smart improvements to Social Security based on the experience of COVID-19 can pay off big in the future.”

With that in mind, we request a response to the following questions about SSA’s efforts to improve service delivery, no later than February 17, 2022:

Field Office Service Delivery

1. How will you ensure people who need in-person assistance receive service? Is SSA tracking the number of requests for in-person appointments and what percentage of those requests have been granted; if so, what are the results and how do they vary across regions and field offices? What challenges does SSA face in providing face-to-face services and how will you overcome those challenges?

2. As noted in SSA’s COVID-19 Workplace Safety Plan , field office access is restricted to the public by appointment only “for critical services that [SSA] cannot handle remotely.” However, SSA’s procedures for an individual to secure an in-person appointment appears to favor those who have reliable telephone or Internet access, leaving out at-risk groups. What is SSA doing to ensuring equitable access to in-person appointments?

3. The recent Washington Post article reported that one field office limited drop box hours to just one hour per day. Are such limited hours for drop boxes a common practice at field offices and, if so, what steps are being taken to increase available hours in those field offices? Further, individuals who need to drop off original documents at SSA have to call the field office to find out the office’s drop box hours. Are there plans to publish field offices’ drop box hours online or on its automated messaging system so individuals do not have to wait on hold to find out a relatively simple request, and SSA does not have to divert resources to respond to each call?

4. How is SSA reducing the need for hands-on review of documents (e.g., driver’s licenses, immigration documents, birth certificates, and passports), such as adding features to my Social Security and data sharing with other state and federal agencies?

SSDI and SSI Benefits

5. SSDI and SSI benefit applications dipped substantially during the pandemic. State Disability Determination Services received nearly 16 percent fewer SSDI and SSI initial claims during the COVID-19 pandemic than the prior year. What new efforts are SSA using to increase outreach to eligible groups, including homeless individuals, seniors, children with disabilities, and adults with disabilities?

6. At the Finance Committee hearing, Members and witnesses noted the length and the complexity of the SSI application, stretching over 30 pages. At the request of Chairman Wyden, SSA submitted a plan to simplify the SSI application process and make it more accessible. Please provide an update on SSA’s progress on simplifying the application and creating an online version of it (or an online option to express intent to file and protect the filing date).

7. We are deeply concerned about the large and growing backlog of cases at the initial and reconsideration levels pending at state agencies, and increased delays in applications and appeals being sent from field offices and Workload Support Units to state agencies. What are SSA’s plans to ensure timely and accurate decisions are provided to disability claimants?

8. Is SSA tracking the time to effectuate disability decisions (from favorable decision until retroactive and continuing benefits are provided to claimants)? If so, what trends have you witnessed in recent years, what types of cases are the most challenging to effectuate, and what goals do you have for improving the effectuation process? If not, why, and does SSA have any plans to study this metric?

Improving Service Delivery Going Forward

9. Advocacy groups, non-profit organizations, and claimant representatives are a valuable resource to communicate policy and process changes, as well as provide a “front line” perspective to help develop strategies to improve customer service. What is SSA doing to keep them apprised of policy or process changes? How is SSA leveraging their knowledge and expertise to improve service?

10. Under the previous Administration, SSA implemented Executive Orders to reduce the influence of employee unions and labor-management relations suffered. What steps have you taken to restore the relationship between the agency and the unions? What efforts have you made to work with the unions to return employees to the office?

We look forward to working with you to meet the needs of Social Security beneficiaries, SSI recipients, and all those who use SSA’s services.

Sincerely,

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WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) participated in a virtual Senate Finance Committee hearing about the effects of the COVID-19 crisis on the Social Security Administration (SSA). On March 17, 2020, the U.S. Social Security Administration closed its field offices in an effort to ensure social distancing and other safety measures. Since then, the administration has seen a number of service delivery challenges, as well as a dramatic decline in disability applications and benefits awarded to at-risk populations. In the hearing, Sen. Warner questioned the SSA’s Deputy Commissioner for Operations about the administration’s plans to reopen field offices as vaccines become more widely available, and asked about its ability to serve vulnerable populations going forward. 

As part of his opening remarks, Sen. Warner highlighted the struggles of one Virginia mom, who reached out to the Senator’s office because she needed to request a copy of her son’s social security card in order to file her taxes, but was unable to do so, due to the severe limitations on in-person appointments. 

“I'm getting inundated with constituents who’ve got really heartbreaking stories. I had a constituent named Marie, who had a young son – literally a one-year-old son – who had his social security number stolen. She didn't know his social security number… so she was told she had to send in all this paperwork, including the original copy of her driver's license, which is just baffling to me, because if she knew that if she sent her driver's license in and she had to still drive to work… she was going to get fined,” said Sen. Warner. “When she finally got a response, she was told, ‘well, you can file an extension on your taxes.’ This is causing some real consternation and I really do hope you will be working within OMB restrictions to get more of these in-person appointments scheduled.”

In the hearing, Sen. Warner acknowledged the restrictions placed on SSA by an Office of Management and Budget (OMB) guidance that can limit agencies from bringing more than 25 percent of personnel back to field offices. Despite this, Sen. Warner highlighted the need for SSA to make more in-person appointments available for more Americans.

Sen. Warner concluded his remarks by emphasizing that SSA must conduct outreach to vulnerable populations to ensure they are made aware of the benefits they qualify for – especially given the past year’s steep decline in applications for Supplemental Security Income benefits.

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