In March, newly installed Social Security chief Martin OâMalley criticized that âshock our shared sense of equity and good conscience as Americans.â
He promised to overhaul the Social Security Administrationâs often heavy-handed efforts to claw back money that millions of recipients â including people who are living in poverty, are elderly, or have disabilities â were allegedly overpaid, as described by a Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News and Cox Media Group investigation last year.
âInnocent people can be badly hurt,â OâMalley said at the time.
Nearly eight months since he appeared before Congress and announced a series of policy changes, and with days left before he leaves the job, OâMalleyâs effort to fix the system has made inroads but remains a work in progress.
For instance, one change, moving away from withholding 100% of peopleâs monthly Social Security benefits to recover alleged overpayments, has been a major improvement, say advocates for beneficiaries.
âIt is a tremendous change,â said Kate Lang of Justice in Aging, who called it âlife-changing for many people.â
The number of people from whom the Social Security Administration was withholding full monthly benefits to recoup money declined sharply â from about 46,000 in January to about 7,000 in September, the agency said.
Asked to clarify whether those numbers and others provided for this article covered all programs administered by the agency, the SSA press office did not respond.
Another potentially significant change â relieving beneficiaries of having to prove that an overpayment was not their fault â has not been implemented. The agency said it is working on that.
Meanwhile, the agency seems to be looking to Congress to take the lead on a change some observers see as crucial: limiting how far back the government can reach to recover an alleged overpayment.
Barbara Hubbell of Watkins Glen, New York, called the absence of a statute of limitations âdespicable.â Hubbell said her mother was held liable for $43,000 because of an SSA error going back 19 years.
âIn what universe is that even legal?â Hubbell said. Paying down the overpayment balance left her mother âessentially penniless,â she added.
In response to questions for this article, Social Security spokesperson Mark Hinkle said legislation is âthe best and fastest wayâ to set a time limit.
Establishing a statute of limitations was not among the policy changes OâMalley announced in his March congressional testimony. In an interview at the time, he said he expected an announcement on it âwithin the next couple few months.â It could probably be done by regulation, without an act of Congress, he said.
Speaking generally, Hinkle said the agency has âmade substantial progress on overpayments,â reducing the hardship they cause, and âcontinues to work diligentlyâ to update policies.
The agency is underfunded, he added, is at a near 50-year low in staffing, and could do better with more employees. The SSA did not respond to requests for an interview with OâMalley.
OâMalley announced the policy changes after Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News and Cox Media Group jointly published and broadcast investigative reporting on the damage overpayments and clawbacks have done to millions of beneficiaries.
When OâMalley, a former Democratic governor of Maryland, presented his plans to three congressional committees in March, lawmakers greeted him with rare bipartisan praise. But the past several months have shown how hard it can be to turn around a federal bureaucracy that is massive, complex, deeply dysfunctional, and, as it says, understaffed.
Now OâMalleyâs time is almost up. After this article was published Monday, and with two months left in his term, that he was of the Democratic National Committee.
Social Security spokesperson Nicole Tiggemann said OâMalley sent President Joe Biden a letter of resignation effective Nov. 29.
Lang of Justice in Aging, among the advocacy groups that have been meeting with OâMalley and other Social Security officials, said she appreciates how much the commissioner has achieved in a short time. But she added that OâMalley has ânot been interested in hearing about our feelings that things have fallen short.â
One long-standing policy OâMalley set out to change involves the burden of proof. When the Social Security Administration alleges someone has been overpaid and demands the money back, the burden is on the beneficiary to prove they were not at fault.
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Cecilia Malone, 24, a beneficiary in Lithonia, Georgia, said she and her parents spent hundreds of hours trying to get errors corrected. âWhy is the burden on us to âproveâ we werenât overpaid?â Malone said.
It can be exceedingly difficult for beneficiaries to appeal a decision. The alleged overpayments, which can reach tens of thousands of dollars or more, often span years. And people struggling just to survive may have extra difficulty producing financial records from long ago.
Whatâs more, in letters demanding repayment, the government does not typically spell out its case against the beneficiary â making it hard to mount a defense.
Testifying before House and Senate committees in March, OâMalley promised to shift the burden of proof.
âThat should be on the agency,â he said.
The agency expects to finalize âguidanceâ on the subject âin the coming months,â Hinkle said.
The agency points to reduced wait times and other improvements in a phone system known to leave beneficiaries on hold. âIn September, we answered calls to our national 800 number in an average of 11 minutes â a tremendous improvement from 42 minutes one year ago,â Hinkle said.
Still, in response to a nonrepresentative survey by Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News and Cox Media Group focused on overpayments, about half of respondents who said they contacted the agency by phone since April rated that experience as âpoor,â and few rated it âgoodâ or âexcellent.â
The survey was sent to about 600 people who had contacted Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News to since September 2023. Almost 200 people answered the survey in September and October of this year.
Most of those who said they contacted the agency by mail since April rated their experience as âpoor.â
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Jennifer Campbell, 60, a beneficiary in Nelsonville, Ohio, said in late October that she was still waiting for someone at the agency to follow up as described during a phone call in May.
âVERY POOR customer service!!!!!â Campbell wrote.
âNearly impossible to get a hold of someone,â wrote Kathryn Duff of Colorado Springs, Colorado, who has been helping a disabled family member.
Letters from SSA have left Duff mystified. One was postmarked July 9, 2024, but dated more than two years earlier. Another, dated Aug. 18, 2024, said her family member was overpaid $31,635.80 in benefits from the Supplemental Security Income program, which provides money to people with or other resources who are disabled, blind, or at least 65. But Duff said her relative never received SSI benefits.
Whatâs more, for the dates in question, payments listed in the letter to back up the agencyâs math didnât come close to $31,635.80; they totaled about a quarter of that amount.
Regarding the 100% clawbacks, OâMalley in March said itâs âunconscionable that someone would find themselves facing homelessness or unable to pay bills, because Social Security withheld their entire payment for recovery of an overpayment.â
He said that, starting March 25, if a beneficiary doesnât respond to a new overpayment notice, the agency would default to withholding 10%. The agency warned of âa short transition period.â
That change wasnât automated until June 25, Hinkle said.
The number of people newly placed in full withholding plummeted from 6,771 in February to 51 in September, according to data the agency provided.
SSA said it would notify recipients they could request reduced withholding if it was already clawing back more than 10% of their monthly checks.
Nonetheless, dozens of beneficiaries or their family members told Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News and Cox Media Group they hadnât heard they could request reduced withholding. Among those who did ask, roughly half said their requests were approved.
According to the SSA, there has been almost a 20% decline in the number of people facing clawbacks of more than 10% but less than 100% of their monthly checks â from 141,316 as of March 8 to 114,950 as of Oct. 25, agency spokesperson Tiggemann said.
Meanwhile, the number of people from whom the agency was withholding exactly 10% soared more than fortyfold â from just over 5,000 to well over 200,000. And the number of beneficiaries having any partial benefits withheld to recover an overpayment increased from almost 600,000 to almost 785,000, according to data Tiggemann provided.

Lorraine Anne Davis, 72, of Houston, said she hasnât received her monthly Social Security payment since June due to an alleged overpayment. Her Medicare premium was being deducted from her monthly benefit, so sheâs been left to pay that out-of-pocket.
Davis said sheâs going to need a kidney transplant and had been trying to save money for when sheâd be unable to work.
A letter from the SSA dated April 8, 2024, two weeks after the new 10% withholding policy was slated to take effect, said it had overpaid her $13,538 and demanded she pay it back within 30 days.
Apparently, the SSA hadnât accounted for a pension Davis receives from overseas; Davis said she disclosed it when she filed for benefits.
In a letter to her dated June 29, the agency said that, under its new policy, it would change the withholding to only 10% if she asked.
Davis said she asked by phone repeatedly, and to no avail.
âNobody seems to know whatâs going onâ and âno one seems to be able to help you,â Davis said. âYouâre just held captive.â
In October, the agency said sheâd receive a payment â in March 2025.
Marley Presiado, a research assistant on the Public Opinion and Survey Research team at KFF, contributed to this report.
Do you have an experience with Social Security overpayments youâd like to share? to contact our reporting team.
[Update: This article was last revised at 4:45 p.m. ET on Nov. 18, 2024, to reflect that Social Security Administration Commissioner Martin OâMalley has turned in his resignation. Also, the word âpartialâ was added to this sentence: âAnd the number of beneficiaries having any partial benefits withheld to recover an overpayment increased from almost 600,000 to almost 785,000, according to data Tiggemann provided.â]
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