Rhode Island
How Government Shutdown Could Impact Social Security Benefits In Rhode Island
The ongoing federal government shutdown is affecting how Rhode Island’s 236,877 Social Security recipients do business with the agency.
Benefits are considered mandatory spending and will continue uninterrupted through the shutdown. However, thousands of Social Security Administration employees — about 12% of the staff — have been furloughed and services not directly related to paying benefits may be halted.
See also: ‘No Kings’ Protests Planned This Weekend Across RI: What To Know
Below are some things to know:
Will October Payments Be On Time?
Rhode Island beneficiaries shouldn’t see a change in when Social Security benefits are paid, according to the agency’s payment calendar:
- Beneficiaries born between the first and 10th day of their birth month received their payment on Wednesday, Oct. 8.
- Beneficiaries born between the 11th and 20th day of their birth month will receive their payment on Wednesday, Oct. 15.
- Beneficiaries born between the 21st and 31st day of their birth month will receive their payment on Wednesday, Oct. 22.
Because Nov. 1 falls on a Saturday, Supplemental Security Income recipients will receive their November payment early, on Friday, Oct. 31.
See also: Federal Government Shuts Down: What To Know In RI
What Services Are Available?
Local Social Security offices remain open during the shutdown. According to the agency’s website, they will accommodate those:
- Applying for benefits
- Requesting an appeal
- Changing address or direct deposit information
- Accepting reports of death
- Verifying or changing citizenship status
- Replacing a lost or missing Social Security payment
- Issuing a critical payment
- Changing a representative payee
- Processing a change in living arrangement or income (SSI recipients only)
- Issuing new or replacement Social Security cards
What Services Will Be Delayed?
Local offices won’t replace Medicare cards, issue a proof of income letter, or update or correct an earnings record.