Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records, 55228-55232 [2018-23941]
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55228
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 213 / Friday, November 2, 2018 / Notices
groups. We keep paper records in
cabinets within secure areas, with
access limited to only those employees
who have an official need for access in
order to perform their duties.
We annually provide our employees
and contractors with appropriate
security awareness training that
includes reminders about the need to
protect PII and the criminal penalties
that apply to unauthorized access to, or
disclosure of, PII (5 U.S.C. 552a(i)(1)).
Furthermore, employees and contractors
with access to databases maintaining PII
must sign a sanctions document
annually acknowledging their
accountability for inappropriately
accessing or disclosing such
information.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures.
Individuals should also reasonably
identify the record, specify the
information they are contesting, and
state the corrective action sought and
the reasons for the correction with
supporting justification showing how
the record is incomplete, untimely,
inaccurate, or irrelevant. These
17:57 Nov 01, 2018
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures.
These procedures are in accordance
with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.40
and 401.45.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
71 FR 1800, Assignment and
Correspondence Tracking (ACT)
System.
[FR Doc. 2018–23943 Filed 11–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Individuals may submit requests for
information about whether this system
contains a record about them by
submitting a written request to the
system manager at the above address,
which includes their name or other
information that may be in this system
of records that will identify them.
Individuals requesting notification of, or
access to, a record by mail must include:
(1) A notarized statement to us to verify
their identity; or (2) must certify in the
request that they are the individual they
claim to be and that they understand
that the knowing and willful request for,
or acquisition of, a record pertaining to
another individual under false pretenses
is a criminal offense.
Individuals requesting notification of,
or access to, records in person must
provide their name or other information
that may be in this system of records
that will identify them, as well as
provide an identity document,
preferably with a photograph, such as a
driver’s license. Individuals lacking
identification documents sufficient to
establish their identity must certify in
writing that they are the individual they
claim to be and that they understand
that the knowing and willful request for,
or acquisition of, a record pertaining to
another individual under false pretenses
is a criminal offense.
These procedures are in accordance
with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.40
and 401.45.
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procedures are in accordance with our
regulations at 20 CFR 401.65(a).
Jkt 247001
[Docket No. SSA–2018–0060]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records
Office of Retirement and
Disability Policy, Office of Income
Security Programs, Social Security
Administration (SSA).
ACTION: Notice of a modified system of
records.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Privacy Act, we are issuing public
notice of our intent to modify an
existing system of records, entitled
Master Representative Payee File (60–
0222), last published in full on April 22,
2013. This notice publishes details of
the modified system as set forth under
the caption, SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
SUMMARY:
The system of records notice
(SORN) is applicable upon its
publication in today’s Federal Register,
with the exception of the new routine
uses, which are effective December 3,
2018. We invite public comment on the
routine uses or other aspects of this
SORN. In accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552a(e)(4) and (e)(11), the public is
given a 30-day period in which to
submit comments. Therefore, please
submit any comments by December 3,
2018.
DATES:
The public, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), and
Congress may comment on this
publication by writing to the Executive
Director, Office of Privacy and
Disclosure, Office of the General
Counsel, SSA, Room G–401 West High
Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235–6401, or
through the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal
at https://www.regulations.gov, please
reference docket number SSA–2018–
ADDRESSES:
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0060. All comments we receive will be
available for public inspection at the
above address and we will post them to
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrea Huseth, Government
Information Specialist, Disclosure and
Data Support Division, Office of Privacy
and Disclosure, Office of the General
Counsel, SSA, Room G–401 West High
Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235–6401,
telephone: (410) 965–6868, email:
andrea.huseth@ssa.gov and Tristin
Dorsey, Government Information
Specialist, Privacy Implementation
Division, Office of Privacy and
Disclosure, Office of the General
Counsel, SSA, Room G–401 West High
Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235–6401,
telephone: (410) 965–2950, email:
tristin.dorsey@ssa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Social
Security’s representative payee program
provides financial management for
Social Security beneficiaries,
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
recipients, and Special Veterans
Benefits recipients who are incapable of
managing their benefits or payments.
The representative payee’s primary
responsibility is to use the beneficiary’s
benefits or recipient’s payments for the
beneficiary’s or recipient’s current and
foreseeable needs. The Strengthening
Protections for Social Security
Beneficiaries Act of 2018 (H.R. 4547,
Pub. L. 115–165, hereafter referred to as
Pub. L. 115–165) directs SSA to conduct
background investigations on certain
representative payees at least once every
five years. Routine use #19 currently
allows for the disclosure of
representative payee information to
third parties to obtain criminal history
information. As of 2013, SSA’s policy
was to make such disclosures via
routine use #19 at the time a
representative payee applied to become
a representative payee. We are notifying
all current representative payees and
future representative payee applicants
(with some exceptions, discussed
below) that SSA will begin, in
accordance with Public Law 115–165,
making such disclosures under routine
use #19 both at the time of application
and on a continuing basis at least once
every five years. Beginning in 2019 for
all current representative payees, SSA
will make disclosures under routine use
#19, and will do so at least once every
five years. We may, however, exempt
certain close family members serving as
representative payees (including but not
limited to the custodial parent of a
minor beneficiary/recipient, spouse of a
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beneficiary/recipient, and custodial
court appointed guardian of a
beneficiary/recipient) from the
background investigation process. Any
representative payee who does not want
his or her information disclosed to a
third party for background investigation
purposes should terminate his or her
representative payee appointment in
accordance with agency policy.
We are modifying the authority for
maintenance of the system to include
Public Law 115–165. We are revising
the category of records to specify that
we will maintain records in support of
representative payee reviews, including
educational visits, in this system and to
clarify that criminal history information
may include records addressing
inaccuracies (e.g., records a
representative payee provides to
disprove criminal background
information obtained from a third
party). We are clarifying when and on
whom we will conduct background
checks and that we may retrieve records
by beneficiary, recipient, or claimant
personally identifying information (PII),
in addition to, that of the representative
payee. We are expanding the record
source categories to include grantees, as
a result of Public Law 115–165, and to
local and state government agencies. We
are also adding new routine use #24 to
permit disclosures to other Federal
agencies and entities, for the purpose of
assisting in breach responses. Lastly, we
are modifying the notice throughout to
correct miscellaneous stylistic
formatting and typographical errors of
the previously published notice, and to
ensure the language reads consistently
across multiple systems. The entire
notice is being republished for ease of
reference.
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r),
we provided a report to OMB and
Congress on this revised system of
records.
Dated: October 24, 2018.
Mary Zimmerman,
Acting Executive Director, Office of Privacy
and Disclosure, Office of the General Counsel.
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER
Master Representative Payee File, 60–
0222.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Social Security Administration,
Deputy Commissioner for the Office of
Retirement and Disability Policy, 6401
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21235, DCRDP.Controls@ssa.gov.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Sections 205(a), 205(j), 208, 807, 811,
1631(a), and 1632 of the Social Security
Act, as amended, the Social Security
Protection Act of 2004 (Pub. L. 108–
203), and the Strengthening Protections
for Social Security Beneficiaries Act of
2018 (Pub. L. 115–165).
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
We will use the information in this
system to assist us in the selection
process of a representative payee by
enabling Social Security field offices to
better screen applicants to determine
their suitability to become and remain
representative payees. We will also use
the data for management information
and workload projection purposes, and
to prepare annual reports to Congress on
representative payee activities.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
This system maintains information
about all representative payees and
representative payee applicants,
including persons whose certifications
as representative payees have been
revoked or terminated on or after
January 1, 1991; persons who have been
convicted of a violation of sections 208,
811, and 1632 of the Social Security
Act, as amended; persons convicted
under other statutes in connection with
services as a representative payee, and
others whose certification as a
representative payee SSA has revoked
due to misuse of funds paid under Title
II, Title VIII, and Title XVI of the Social
Security Act; persons who are acting or
have acted as representative payees;
representative payee applicants who
were not selected to serve as
representative payees; representative
payee applicants who have been
convicted of an offense resulting in
more than one (1) year imprisonment;
representative payees and representative
payee applicants who have an
outstanding felony warrant;
organizational payees who have been
authorized to collect a fee for their
service; and beneficiaries, recipients, or
claimants who are or may be served by
representative payees.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Social Security Administration, Office
of Retirement and Disability Policy,
6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21235.
This system maintains records that
consist of the following:
1. Names and Social Security
numbers (SSNs) (or employer
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identification numbers (EINs)) of
representative payees whose
certifications for payment of benefits as
representative payees have been
revoked or terminated on or after
January 1, 1991, because of misuse of
benefits under Title II, Title VIII, or Title
XVI of the Social Security Act;
2. Names and SSNs (or EINs) of all
persons convicted of violations of
sections 208, 811, and 1632 of the Social
Security Act, as amended;
3. Names, addresses, and SSNs (or
EINs) of persons convicted of violations
of statutes other than sections 208, 811,
and 1632 of the Social Security Act,
when such violations were committed
in connection with the individual’s
service as a Social Security
representative payee;
4. Names, addresses, SSNs, and
information about representative payee
or representative payee applicant selfreported crimes, outstanding felony
warrants, or imprisonment for a period
exceeding one (1) year (an indicator will
be used in the system to identify
persons identified as having an
outstanding felony warrant);
5. Names, addresses, and SSNs (or
EINs) of representative payees who are
receiving benefit payments pursuant to
sections 205(j), 807, or 1631(a)(2) of the
Social Security Act;
6. Names, addresses, and SSNs of
persons for whom representative payees
are reported to be providing
representative payee services under
sections 205(j), 807, or 1631(a)(2) of the
Social Security Act;
7. Names, addresses, and SSNs of
representative payee applicants who
were not selected as representative
payees;
8. Names, addresses, and SSNs of
persons who were terminated as
representative payees for reasons other
than misuse of benefits paid to them on
behalf of beneficiaries or recipients;
9. Information concerning the
representative payee’s relationship to
the beneficiaries or recipients they
serve;
10. Names, addresses, EINs, and
qualifying information of organizations
authorized to charge a fee for providing
representative payee services;
11. Codes which indicate the
relationship (other than familial)
between the beneficiaries or recipients
and the persons who have custody of
the beneficiaries or recipients;
12. Dates and reasons for
representative payee terminations (e.g.,
performance not acceptable, death of
payee, beneficiary in direct payment,
etc.) and revocations;
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13. Codes indicating whether
representative payee applicants were
selected or not selected;
14. Dates and reasons representative
payee applicants were not selected to
serve as payees, dates and reasons for
changes of payees (e.g., beneficiary in
direct payment, a criminal history etc.);
15. Amount of benefits misused;
16. Identification number assigned to
the claim on which the misuse
occurred;
17. Date of the determination of
misuse;
18. Information about a felony
conviction reported by the
representative payee;
19. Criminal history information
obtained from SSA databases,
representative payees, third parties,
contractors, and other Federal agencies,
including records that dispute criminal
history information provided by third
parties;
20. Annual payee accounting reports;
and,
21. Records of representative payee
reviews, including educational visits.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
We obtain information in this system
from representative payee applicants
and representative payees; third parties,
contractors, grantees and local, state,
and Federal government agencies; the
SSA Office of Inspector General; and
existing SSA systems of records such as
the Master Files of SSN Holders and
SSN Applications, 60–0058; Claims
Folders System, 60–0089; Master
Beneficiary Record, 60–0090; SSI
Record and Special Veterans Benefits,
60–0103; Recovery of Overpayments,
Accounting and Reporting/Debt
Management System, 60–0094; and
Prisoner Update Processing System, 60–
0269.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
We will disclose records pursuant to
the following routine uses; however, we
will not disclose any information
defined as ‘‘return or return
information’’ under 26 U.S.C. 6103 of
the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), unless
authorized by statute, the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS), or IRS
regulations.
1. To the Department of Justice (DOJ),
a court or other tribunal, or another
party before such court or tribunal,
when:
(a) The Social Security
Administration (SSA), or any
component thereof; or
(b) any SSA employee in his or her
official capacity; or
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17:57 Nov 01, 2018
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(c) any SSA employee in his or her
individual capacity where DOJ (or SSA,
where it is authorized to do so) has
agreed to represent the employee; or
(d) the United States or any agency
thereof where SSA determines that the
litigation is likely to affect SSA or any
of its components, is a party to litigation
or has an interest in such litigation, and
SSA determines that the use of such
records by DOJ, a court or other
tribunal, or another party before the
tribunal, is relevant and necessary to the
litigation, provided, however, that in
each case, SSA determines that such
disclosure is compatible with the
purpose for which the records were
collected.
2. To a congressional office in
response to an inquiry from that office
made on behalf of, and at the request of,
the subject of the record or third party
acting on the subject’s behalf.
3. To the National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA) under
44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
4. To the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA), Regional Office, Manila,
Philippines, for the administration of
the Social Security Act in the
Philippines and other parts of the AsiaPacific region through services and
facilities of that agency.
5. To the Department of State, for
administration of the Social Security
Act in foreign countries rough services
and facilities of that agency.
6. To the American Institute, a private
corporation under contract to the
Department of State, for administering
the Social Security Act in Taiwan
through facilities and services of that
agency.
7. To DOJ for:
(a) Investigating and prosecuting
violations of the Social Security Act to
which criminal penalties attach;
(b) representing the Commissioner of
Social Security; and,
(c) investigating issues of fraud or
violations of civil rights by officers or
employees of the SSA.
8. To the Office of the President in
response to an inquiry from that office
made on behalf of, and at the request of,
the subject of the record or a third party
acting on the subject’s behalf.
9. To the VA, for the shared
administration of the VA’s and SSA’s
representative payee programs.
10. To contractors and other Federal
Agencies, as necessary, for the purpose
of assisting the SSA in the efficient
administration of its programs. We will
disclose information under this routine
use only in situations in which SSA
may enter into a contractual or similar
agreement to obtain assistance in
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accomplishing an SSA function relating
to this system of records.
11. To a third party such as a
physician, social worker, or community
service worker, who has, or is expected
to have, information, which is needed to
evaluate one or both of the following:
(a) The claimant’s capability to
manage or direct the management of his
or her benefits; or
(b) any case in which disclosure aids
investigation of suspected misuse of
benefits, abuse or fraud, or is necessary
for program integrity, or quality
appraisal activities.
12. To a third party, where necessary,
information pertaining to the identity of
a representative payee or representative
payee applicant, the fact of the person’s
application for or service as a
representative payee, and, as necessary,
the identity of the beneficiary, to obtain
information on employment, sources of
income, criminal justice records,
stability of residence, and other
information relating to the qualifications
and suitability of representative payees
or representative payee applicants to
serve as representative payees, or their
use of the benefits paid to them under
sections 205(j), 807, or 1631(a) of the
Social Security Act.
13. To a claimant, or other individual
authorized to act on his or her behalf,
information concerning the status of his
or her representative payee or the status
of the application of a person applying
to be his or her representative payee,
and information pertaining to the
address of a representative payee
applicant or a selected representative
payee, when this information is needed
to pursue a claim for recovery of
misapplied or misused benefits.
14. To the Railroad Retirement Board
(RRB), for the administration of RRB’s
representative payment program.
15. To student volunteers, individuals
working under a personal services
contract, and other workers who
technically do not have the status of
Federal employees, when they are
performing work for SSA, as authorized
by law, and they need access to PII in
SSA records in order to perform their
assigned agency functions.
16. To the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM), for the
administration of OPM’s representative
payee programs.
17. To the Secretary of Health and
Human Services or to any State, any
record or information requested in
writing by the Secretary for the purpose
of administering any program
administered by the Secretary, if records
or information of such type were so
disclosed under applicable rules,
regulations and procedures in effect
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before the date of enactment of the
Social Security Independence and
Program Improvements Act of 1994.
18. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons when:
(a) SSA suspects or has confirmed
that there has been a breach of the
system of records;
(b) SSA has determined that as a
result of the suspected or confirmed
breach, there is a risk of harm to
individuals, SSA (including its
information systems, programs, and
operations), the Federal Government, or
national security; and
(c) the disclosure made to such
agencies, entities, and persons is
reasonably necessary to assist in
connections with SSA’s efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed
breach or to prevent, minimize, or
remedy such harm.
19. To third parties, contractors, or
other Federal agencies, as necessary, to
conduct criminal background checks
and to obtain criminal history
information on representative payees
and representative payee applicants.
20. To Federal, State, and local law
enforcement agencies and private
security contractors, as appropriate,
information necessary:
(a) To enable them to protect the
safety of SSA employees and customers,
the security of the SSA workplace and
the operation of SSA facilities; or
(b) to assist investigations or
prosecutions with respect to activities
that affect such safety and security, or
activities that disrupt the operation of
SSA facilities.
21. To agencies or entities who have
a written agreement with SSA, to
perform representative payee reviews
for SSA and to provide training,
administrative oversight, technical
assistance, and other support for those
reviews.
22. To state protection and advocacy
systems, that have a written agreement
with SSA to conduct reviews of
representative payees, for the purpose of
conducting additional reviews that the
protection and advocacy systems have
reason to believe are warranted.
23. To agencies or entities with
responsibility for investigating or
addressing possible financial
exploitation of, an immediate health or
safety threat to, or other serious risk to
the well-being of the beneficiary, for
referral, when these issues are identified
during a representative payee review
24. To another Federal agency or
Federal entity, when SSA determines
that information from this system of
records is reasonably necessary to assist
the recipient agency or entity in:
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(a) Responding to a suspected or
confirmed breach; or
(b) preventing, minimizing, or
remedying the risk of harm to
individuals, the recipient agency or
entity (including its information
systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national
security, resulting from a suspected or
confirmed breach.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF
RECORDS:
We maintain records in this system in
paper and electronic form.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF
RECORDS:
We will retrieve records by the
representative payee’s, beneficiary’s,
recipient’s, or claimant’s SSN, EIN or
name.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND
DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
In accordance with NARA rules
codified at 36 CFR 1225.16, we maintain
records in accordance with the NARA
approved Agency-Specific Records
Schedules N1–47–09–04 and N1–47–
09–5.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL
SAFEGUARDS:
We retain electronic and paper files
containing personal identifiers in secure
areas and systems accessible only by our
authorized employees who have a need
for the information when performing
their official duties. Security measures
include, but are not limited to, the use
of codes and profiles, personal
identification number and password,
and personal identification verification
cards. We restrict access to specific
correspondence within the system based
on assigned roles and authorized users.
We maintain electronic files with
personal identifiers in secure storage
areas. We will use audit mechanisms to
record sensitive transactions as an
additional measure to protect
information from unauthorized
disclosure or modification. We keep
paper records in cabinets within secure
areas, with access limited to only those
employees who have an official need for
access in order to perform their duties.
We require agencies and entities
performing work for SSA who require
access to information from this system
to impose equivalent safeguards.
We annually provide our employees,
contractors, and others performing work
for us with appropriate security
awareness training that includes
reminders about the need to protect PII
and the criminal penalties that apply to
unauthorized access to, or disclosure of
PII. See 5 U.S.C. 552a(i)(1).
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55231
Furthermore, those with access to
databases maintaining PII are informed
of the penalties for improper access and
disclosure of PII.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals may submit requests for
information about whether this system
contains a record about them by
submitting a written request to the
system manager at the above address,
which includes their name, SSN, or
other information that may be in this
system of records that will identify
them. Individuals requesting
notification of, or access to, a record by
mail must include: (1) A notarized
statement to us to verify their identity;
or (2) must certify in the request that
they are the individual they claim to be
and that they understand that the
knowing and willful request for, or
acquisition of, a record pertaining to
another individual under false pretenses
is a criminal offense.
Individuals requesting notification of,
or access to, records in person must
provide their name, SSN, or other
information that may be in this system
of records that will identify them, as
well as provide an identity document,
preferably with a photograph, such as a
driver’s license. Individuals lacking
identification documents sufficient to
establish their identity must certify in
writing that they are the individual they
claim to be and that they understand
that the knowing and willful request for,
or acquisition of, a record pertaining to
another individual under false pretenses
is a criminal offense. These procedures
are in accordance with our regulations
at 20 CFR 401.40 and 401.45.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures.
Individuals should also reasonably
identify the record, specify the
information they are contesting, and
state the corrective action sought and
the reasons for the correction with
supporting justification showing how
the record is incomplete, untimely,
inaccurate, or irrelevant. These
procedures are in accordance with our
regulations at 20 CFR 401.65(a).
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures.
These procedures are in accordance
with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.40
and 401.45.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
78 FR 23811, Master Representative
Payee File.
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83 FR 31250, Master Representative
Payee File.
83 FR 31251, Master Representative
Payee File.
[FR Doc. 2018–23941 Filed 11–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Delegation of Authority 374–1:
Authority to Accept Volunteer Services
From Students
By virtue of the authority vested in
the Secretary of State by the laws of the
United States, including 22 U.S.C.
2651a and 5 U.S.C. 3111 (‘‘Section
3111’’), and delegated by Delegation of
Authority 198, dated September 16,
1992, to the extent authorized by law
and pursuant to subsection (b) of
Section 3111, I hereby delegate the
authority of the Secretary to accept
voluntary services for the United States
to the Director of the Office of Civil
Rights (S/OCR).
This authority is limited to the
acceptance of voluntary services
provided by law students who are filling
legal extern and intern positions.
Any official action within the scope of
this delegation taken prior to the
effective date of this delegation by the
Director of S/OCR are hereby ratified
and continued in effect, according to
their terms, until modified, revoked, or
superseded by authorized action.
Notwithstanding this delegation of
authority, the Secretary, the Deputy
Secretary, and the Under Secretary of
State for Management may at any time
exercise the authority herein delegated.
This delegation of authority does not
amend or supersede any other valid
delegation of authority.
This delegation of authority will be
published in the Federal Register.
Dated: October 12, 2018.
William E. Todd,
Deputy Under Secretary of State for
Management.
[FR Doc. 2018–24028 Filed 11–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–10–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. AB 55 (Sub-No. 784X)]
CSX Transportation, Inc.—
Abandonment Exemption—in Cobb
County, Ga.
CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT), has
filed a verified notice of exemption
under 49 CFR pt. 1152 subpart F–
Exempt Abandonments to abandon an
approximately 2.3-mile rail line on its
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:57 Nov 01, 2018
Jkt 247001
Atlanta Terminal Subdivision, Atlanta
Division, between milepost SG 579.29
near Plant Atkinson Road and milepost
SG 581.61 just west of East-West
Connector, in Cobb County, Ga. (the
Line). The Line traverses United States
Postal Zip Codes 30080 and 30082 and
includes one station at Edna (FSAC
23500).
CSXT has certified that: (1) no local
rail traffic has moved over the Line
during the past two years; (2) any
overhead traffic on the Line can be
rerouted over other lines; (3) no formal
complaint filed by a user of a rail
service on the Line (or by a state or local
government entity acting on behalf of
such user) regarding cessation of service
over the Line is either pending with the
Surface Transportation Board (Board) or
with any U.S. District Court or had been
decided in favor of a complainant
within the two-year period; and (4) the
requirements at 49 CFR 1105.11
(transmittal letter), 49 CFR 1105.12
(newspaper publication), and 49 CFR
1152.50(d)(1) (notice to governmental
agencies) have been met.
As a condition to this exemption, any
employee adversely affected by the
abandonment of service shall be
protected under Oregon Short Line
Railroad—Abandonment Portion
Goshen Branch Between Firth &
Ammon, in Bingham & Bonneville
Counties, Idaho, 360 I.C.C. 91 (1979). To
address whether this condition
adequately protects affected employees,
a petition for partial revocation under
49 U.S.C. 10502(d) must be filed.
Provided no formal expression of
intent to file an offer of financial
assistance (OFA) has been received,1
this exemption will be effective on
December 2, 2018, unless stayed
pending reconsideration. Petitions to
stay that do not involve environmental
issues,2 formal expressions of intent to
file an OFA under 49 CFR
1152.27(c)(2),3 and trail use/rail banking
1 The Board modified its OFA procedures
effective July 29, 2017. Among other things, the
OFA process now requires potential offerors, in
their formal expression of intent, to make a
preliminary financial responsibility showing based
on a calculation using information contained in the
carrier’s filing and publicly available information.
See Offers of Financial Assistance, EP 729 (STB
served June 29, 2017); 82 FR 30997 (July 5, 2017).
2 The Board will grant a stay if an informed
decision on environmental issues (whether raised
by a party or by the Board’s Office of Environmental
Analysis (OEA) in its independent investigation)
cannot be made before the exemption’s effective
date. See Exemption of Out-of-Serv. Rail Lines, 5
I.C.C.2d 377 (1989). Any request for a stay should
be filed as soon as possible so that the Board may
take appropriate action before the exemption’s
effective date.
3 Each OFA must be accompanied by the filing
fee, which is currently set at $1,800. See
Regulations Governing Fees for Servs. Performed in
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
requests under 49 CFR 152.29 must be
filed by November 9, 2018.4 Petitions to
reopen or requests for public use
conditions under 49 CFR 1152.28 must
be filed by November 23, 2018, with the
Surface Transportation Board, 395 E
Street, SW, Washington, DC 20423–
0001.
A copy of any petition filed with the
Board should be sent to CSXT’s
representative, Louis E. Gitomer, Law
Offices of Louis E. Gitomer, LLC, 600
Baltimore Avenue, Suite 301, Towson,
MD 21204.
If the verified notice contains false or
misleading information, the exemption
is void ab initio.
CSXT has filed a combined
environmental and historic report that
addresses the effects, if any, of the
abandonment on the environment and
historic resources. OEA will issue an
environmental assessment (EA) by
November 9, 2018. Interested persons
may obtain a copy of the EA by writing
to OEA (Room 1100, Surface
Transportation Board, Washington, DC
20423–0001) or by calling OEA at (202)
245–0305. Assistance for the hearing
impaired is available through the
Federal Information Relay Service at
(800) 877–8339. Comments on
environmental and historic preservation
matters must be filed within 15 days
after the EA becomes available to the
public.
Environmental, historic preservation,
public use, or trail use/rail banking
conditions will be imposed, where
appropriate, in a subsequent decision.
Pursuant to the provisions of 49 CFR
1152.29(e)(2), CSXT shall file a notice of
consummation with the Board to signify
that it has exercised the authority
granted and fully abandoned the Line. If
consummation has not been effected by
CSXT’s filing of a notice of
consummation by November 2, 2019,
and there are no legal or regulatory
barriers to consummation, the authority
to abandon will automatically expire.
Board decisions and notices are
available on our website at www.stb.gov.
Decided: October 30, 2018.
By the Board, Scott M. Zimmerman, Acting
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Tammy Lowery,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2018–24034 Filed 11–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
Connection with Licensing & Related Servs.—2017
Update, EP 542 (Sub-No. 25), slip op. App. B at 13
(STB served Aug. 8, 2018).
4 CSXT states that it is working on an agreement
with the State of Georgia to transfer the corridor and
convert the Line to a trail under a notice of interim
trail use or abandonment (NITU) agreement
contingent on Board approval for authority to
abandon.
E:\FR\FM\02NON1.SGM
02NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 213 (Friday, November 2, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55228-55232]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-23941]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
[Docket No. SSA-2018-0060]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records
AGENCY: Office of Retirement and Disability Policy, Office of Income
Security Programs, Social Security Administration (SSA).
ACTION: Notice of a modified system of records.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the Privacy Act, we are issuing public
notice of our intent to modify an existing system of records, entitled
Master Representative Payee File (60-0222), last published in full on
April 22, 2013. This notice publishes details of the modified system as
set forth under the caption, SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
DATES: The system of records notice (SORN) is applicable upon its
publication in today's Federal Register, with the exception of the new
routine uses, which are effective December 3, 2018. We invite public
comment on the routine uses or other aspects of this SORN. In
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4) and (e)(11), the public is given a
30-day period in which to submit comments. Therefore, please submit any
comments by December 3, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The public, Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and
Congress may comment on this publication by writing to the Executive
Director, Office of Privacy and Disclosure, Office of the General
Counsel, SSA, Room G-401 West High Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401, or through the Federal e-Rulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, please reference docket number
SSA-2018-0060. All comments we receive will be available for public
inspection at the above address and we will post them to https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andrea Huseth, Government Information
Specialist, Disclosure and Data Support Division, Office of Privacy and
Disclosure, Office of the General Counsel, SSA, Room G-401 West High
Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401,
telephone: (410) 965-6868, email: [email protected] and Tristin
Dorsey, Government Information Specialist, Privacy Implementation
Division, Office of Privacy and Disclosure, Office of the General
Counsel, SSA, Room G-401 West High Rise, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401, telephone: (410) 965-2950, email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Social Security's representative payee
program provides financial management for Social Security
beneficiaries, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients, and
Special Veterans Benefits recipients who are incapable of managing
their benefits or payments. The representative payee's primary
responsibility is to use the beneficiary's benefits or recipient's
payments for the beneficiary's or recipient's current and foreseeable
needs. The Strengthening Protections for Social Security Beneficiaries
Act of 2018 (H.R. 4547, Pub. L. 115-165, hereafter referred to as Pub.
L. 115-165) directs SSA to conduct background investigations on certain
representative payees at least once every five years. Routine use #19
currently allows for the disclosure of representative payee information
to third parties to obtain criminal history information. As of 2013,
SSA's policy was to make such disclosures via routine use #19 at the
time a representative payee applied to become a representative payee.
We are notifying all current representative payees and future
representative payee applicants (with some exceptions, discussed below)
that SSA will begin, in accordance with Public Law 115-165, making such
disclosures under routine use #19 both at the time of application and
on a continuing basis at least once every five years. Beginning in 2019
for all current representative payees, SSA will make disclosures under
routine use #19, and will do so at least once every five years. We may,
however, exempt certain close family members serving as representative
payees (including but not limited to the custodial parent of a minor
beneficiary/recipient, spouse of a
[[Page 55229]]
beneficiary/recipient, and custodial court appointed guardian of a
beneficiary/recipient) from the background investigation process. Any
representative payee who does not want his or her information disclosed
to a third party for background investigation purposes should terminate
his or her representative payee appointment in accordance with agency
policy.
We are modifying the authority for maintenance of the system to
include Public Law 115-165. We are revising the category of records to
specify that we will maintain records in support of representative
payee reviews, including educational visits, in this system and to
clarify that criminal history information may include records
addressing inaccuracies (e.g., records a representative payee provides
to disprove criminal background information obtained from a third
party). We are clarifying when and on whom we will conduct background
checks and that we may retrieve records by beneficiary, recipient, or
claimant personally identifying information (PII), in addition to, that
of the representative payee. We are expanding the record source
categories to include grantees, as a result of Public Law 115-165, and
to local and state government agencies. We are also adding new routine
use #24 to permit disclosures to other Federal agencies and entities,
for the purpose of assisting in breach responses. Lastly, we are
modifying the notice throughout to correct miscellaneous stylistic
formatting and typographical errors of the previously published notice,
and to ensure the language reads consistently across multiple systems.
The entire notice is being republished for ease of reference.
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r), we provided a report to OMB
and Congress on this revised system of records.
Dated: October 24, 2018.
Mary Zimmerman,
Acting Executive Director, Office of Privacy and Disclosure, Office of
the General Counsel.
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER
Master Representative Payee File, 60-0222.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Social Security Administration, Office of Retirement and Disability
Policy, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21235.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Social Security Administration, Deputy Commissioner for the Office
of Retirement and Disability Policy, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21235, [email protected].
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Sections 205(a), 205(j), 208, 807, 811, 1631(a), and 1632 of the
Social Security Act, as amended, the Social Security Protection Act of
2004 (Pub. L. 108-203), and the Strengthening Protections for Social
Security Beneficiaries Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-165).
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
We will use the information in this system to assist us in the
selection process of a representative payee by enabling Social Security
field offices to better screen applicants to determine their
suitability to become and remain representative payees. We will also
use the data for management information and workload projection
purposes, and to prepare annual reports to Congress on representative
payee activities.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
This system maintains information about all representative payees
and representative payee applicants, including persons whose
certifications as representative payees have been revoked or terminated
on or after January 1, 1991; persons who have been convicted of a
violation of sections 208, 811, and 1632 of the Social Security Act, as
amended; persons convicted under other statutes in connection with
services as a representative payee, and others whose certification as a
representative payee SSA has revoked due to misuse of funds paid under
Title II, Title VIII, and Title XVI of the Social Security Act; persons
who are acting or have acted as representative payees; representative
payee applicants who were not selected to serve as representative
payees; representative payee applicants who have been convicted of an
offense resulting in more than one (1) year imprisonment;
representative payees and representative payee applicants who have an
outstanding felony warrant; organizational payees who have been
authorized to collect a fee for their service; and beneficiaries,
recipients, or claimants who are or may be served by representative
payees.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
This system maintains records that consist of the following:
1. Names and Social Security numbers (SSNs) (or employer
identification numbers (EINs)) of representative payees whose
certifications for payment of benefits as representative payees have
been revoked or terminated on or after January 1, 1991, because of
misuse of benefits under Title II, Title VIII, or Title XVI of the
Social Security Act;
2. Names and SSNs (or EINs) of all persons convicted of violations
of sections 208, 811, and 1632 of the Social Security Act, as amended;
3. Names, addresses, and SSNs (or EINs) of persons convicted of
violations of statutes other than sections 208, 811, and 1632 of the
Social Security Act, when such violations were committed in connection
with the individual's service as a Social Security representative
payee;
4. Names, addresses, SSNs, and information about representative
payee or representative payee applicant self-reported crimes,
outstanding felony warrants, or imprisonment for a period exceeding one
(1) year (an indicator will be used in the system to identify persons
identified as having an outstanding felony warrant);
5. Names, addresses, and SSNs (or EINs) of representative payees
who are receiving benefit payments pursuant to sections 205(j), 807, or
1631(a)(2) of the Social Security Act;
6. Names, addresses, and SSNs of persons for whom representative
payees are reported to be providing representative payee services under
sections 205(j), 807, or 1631(a)(2) of the Social Security Act;
7. Names, addresses, and SSNs of representative payee applicants
who were not selected as representative payees;
8. Names, addresses, and SSNs of persons who were terminated as
representative payees for reasons other than misuse of benefits paid to
them on behalf of beneficiaries or recipients;
9. Information concerning the representative payee's relationship
to the beneficiaries or recipients they serve;
10. Names, addresses, EINs, and qualifying information of
organizations authorized to charge a fee for providing representative
payee services;
11. Codes which indicate the relationship (other than familial)
between the beneficiaries or recipients and the persons who have
custody of the beneficiaries or recipients;
12. Dates and reasons for representative payee terminations (e.g.,
performance not acceptable, death of payee, beneficiary in direct
payment, etc.) and revocations;
[[Page 55230]]
13. Codes indicating whether representative payee applicants were
selected or not selected;
14. Dates and reasons representative payee applicants were not
selected to serve as payees, dates and reasons for changes of payees
(e.g., beneficiary in direct payment, a criminal history etc.);
15. Amount of benefits misused;
16. Identification number assigned to the claim on which the misuse
occurred;
17. Date of the determination of misuse;
18. Information about a felony conviction reported by the
representative payee;
19. Criminal history information obtained from SSA databases,
representative payees, third parties, contractors, and other Federal
agencies, including records that dispute criminal history information
provided by third parties;
20. Annual payee accounting reports; and,
21. Records of representative payee reviews, including educational
visits.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
We obtain information in this system from representative payee
applicants and representative payees; third parties, contractors,
grantees and local, state, and Federal government agencies; the SSA
Office of Inspector General; and existing SSA systems of records such
as the Master Files of SSN Holders and SSN Applications, 60-0058;
Claims Folders System, 60-0089; Master Beneficiary Record, 60-0090; SSI
Record and Special Veterans Benefits, 60-0103; Recovery of
Overpayments, Accounting and Reporting/Debt Management System, 60-0094;
and Prisoner Update Processing System, 60-0269.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
We will disclose records pursuant to the following routine uses;
however, we will not disclose any information defined as ``return or
return information'' under 26 U.S.C. 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code
(IRC), unless authorized by statute, the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS), or IRS regulations.
1. To the Department of Justice (DOJ), a court or other tribunal,
or another party before such court or tribunal, when:
(a) The Social Security Administration (SSA), or any component
thereof; or
(b) any SSA employee in his or her official capacity; or
(c) any SSA employee in his or her individual capacity where DOJ
(or SSA, where it is authorized to do so) has agreed to represent the
employee; or
(d) the United States or any agency thereof where SSA determines
that the litigation is likely to affect SSA or any of its components,
is a party to litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and SSA
determines that the use of such records by DOJ, a court or other
tribunal, or another party before the tribunal, is relevant and
necessary to the litigation, provided, however, that in each case, SSA
determines that such disclosure is compatible with the purpose for
which the records were collected.
2. To a congressional office in response to an inquiry from that
office made on behalf of, and at the request of, the subject of the
record or third party acting on the subject's behalf.
3. To the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) under
44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
4. To the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Regional Office,
Manila, Philippines, for the administration of the Social Security Act
in the Philippines and other parts of the Asia-Pacific region through
services and facilities of that agency.
5. To the Department of State, for administration of the Social
Security Act in foreign countries rough services and facilities of that
agency.
6. To the American Institute, a private corporation under contract
to the Department of State, for administering the Social Security Act
in Taiwan through facilities and services of that agency.
7. To DOJ for:
(a) Investigating and prosecuting violations of the Social Security
Act to which criminal penalties attach;
(b) representing the Commissioner of Social Security; and,
(c) investigating issues of fraud or violations of civil rights by
officers or employees of the SSA.
8. To the Office of the President in response to an inquiry from
that office made on behalf of, and at the request of, the subject of
the record or a third party acting on the subject's behalf.
9. To the VA, for the shared administration of the VA's and SSA's
representative payee programs.
10. To contractors and other Federal Agencies, as necessary, for
the purpose of assisting the SSA in the efficient administration of its
programs. We will disclose information under this routine use only in
situations in which SSA may enter into a contractual or similar
agreement to obtain assistance in accomplishing an SSA function
relating to this system of records.
11. To a third party such as a physician, social worker, or
community service worker, who has, or is expected to have, information,
which is needed to evaluate one or both of the following:
(a) The claimant's capability to manage or direct the management of
his or her benefits; or
(b) any case in which disclosure aids investigation of suspected
misuse of benefits, abuse or fraud, or is necessary for program
integrity, or quality appraisal activities.
12. To a third party, where necessary, information pertaining to
the identity of a representative payee or representative payee
applicant, the fact of the person's application for or service as a
representative payee, and, as necessary, the identity of the
beneficiary, to obtain information on employment, sources of income,
criminal justice records, stability of residence, and other information
relating to the qualifications and suitability of representative payees
or representative payee applicants to serve as representative payees,
or their use of the benefits paid to them under sections 205(j), 807,
or 1631(a) of the Social Security Act.
13. To a claimant, or other individual authorized to act on his or
her behalf, information concerning the status of his or her
representative payee or the status of the application of a person
applying to be his or her representative payee, and information
pertaining to the address of a representative payee applicant or a
selected representative payee, when this information is needed to
pursue a claim for recovery of misapplied or misused benefits.
14. To the Railroad Retirement Board (RRB), for the administration
of RRB's representative payment program.
15. To student volunteers, individuals working under a personal
services contract, and other workers who technically do not have the
status of Federal employees, when they are performing work for SSA, as
authorized by law, and they need access to PII in SSA records in order
to perform their assigned agency functions.
16. To the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), for the
administration of OPM's representative payee programs.
17. To the Secretary of Health and Human Services or to any State,
any record or information requested in writing by the Secretary for the
purpose of administering any program administered by the Secretary, if
records or information of such type were so disclosed under applicable
rules, regulations and procedures in effect
[[Page 55231]]
before the date of enactment of the Social Security Independence and
Program Improvements Act of 1994.
18. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when:
(a) SSA suspects or has confirmed that there has been a breach of
the system of records;
(b) SSA has determined that as a result of the suspected or
confirmed breach, there is a risk of harm to individuals, SSA
(including its information systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national security; and
(c) the disclosure made to such agencies, entities, and persons is
reasonably necessary to assist in connections with SSA's efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed breach or to prevent, minimize,
or remedy such harm.
19. To third parties, contractors, or other Federal agencies, as
necessary, to conduct criminal background checks and to obtain criminal
history information on representative payees and representative payee
applicants.
20. To Federal, State, and local law enforcement agencies and
private security contractors, as appropriate, information necessary:
(a) To enable them to protect the safety of SSA employees and
customers, the security of the SSA workplace and the operation of SSA
facilities; or
(b) to assist investigations or prosecutions with respect to
activities that affect such safety and security, or activities that
disrupt the operation of SSA facilities.
21. To agencies or entities who have a written agreement with SSA,
to perform representative payee reviews for SSA and to provide
training, administrative oversight, technical assistance, and other
support for those reviews.
22. To state protection and advocacy systems, that have a written
agreement with SSA to conduct reviews of representative payees, for the
purpose of conducting additional reviews that the protection and
advocacy systems have reason to believe are warranted.
23. To agencies or entities with responsibility for investigating
or addressing possible financial exploitation of, an immediate health
or safety threat to, or other serious risk to the well-being of the
beneficiary, for referral, when these issues are identified during a
representative payee review
24. To another Federal agency or Federal entity, when SSA
determines that information from this system of records is reasonably
necessary to assist the recipient agency or entity in:
(a) Responding to a suspected or confirmed breach; or
(b) preventing, minimizing, or remedying the risk of harm to
individuals, the recipient agency or entity (including its information
systems, programs, and operations), the Federal Government, or national
security, resulting from a suspected or confirmed breach.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
We maintain records in this system in paper and electronic form.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF RECORDS:
We will retrieve records by the representative payee's,
beneficiary's, recipient's, or claimant's SSN, EIN or name.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
In accordance with NARA rules codified at 36 CFR 1225.16, we
maintain records in accordance with the NARA approved Agency-Specific
Records Schedules N1-47-09-04 and N1-47-09-5.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
We retain electronic and paper files containing personal
identifiers in secure areas and systems accessible only by our
authorized employees who have a need for the information when
performing their official duties. Security measures include, but are
not limited to, the use of codes and profiles, personal identification
number and password, and personal identification verification cards. We
restrict access to specific correspondence within the system based on
assigned roles and authorized users. We maintain electronic files with
personal identifiers in secure storage areas. We will use audit
mechanisms to record sensitive transactions as an additional measure to
protect information from unauthorized disclosure or modification. We
keep paper records in cabinets within secure areas, with access limited
to only those employees who have an official need for access in order
to perform their duties. We require agencies and entities performing
work for SSA who require access to information from this system to
impose equivalent safeguards.
We annually provide our employees, contractors, and others
performing work for us with appropriate security awareness training
that includes reminders about the need to protect PII and the criminal
penalties that apply to unauthorized access to, or disclosure of PII.
See 5 U.S.C. 552a(i)(1). Furthermore, those with access to databases
maintaining PII are informed of the penalties for improper access and
disclosure of PII.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals may submit requests for information about whether this
system contains a record about them by submitting a written request to
the system manager at the above address, which includes their name,
SSN, or other information that may be in this system of records that
will identify them. Individuals requesting notification of, or access
to, a record by mail must include: (1) A notarized statement to us to
verify their identity; or (2) must certify in the request that they are
the individual they claim to be and that they understand that the
knowing and willful request for, or acquisition of, a record pertaining
to another individual under false pretenses is a criminal offense.
Individuals requesting notification of, or access to, records in
person must provide their name, SSN, or other information that may be
in this system of records that will identify them, as well as provide
an identity document, preferably with a photograph, such as a driver's
license. Individuals lacking identification documents sufficient to
establish their identity must certify in writing that they are the
individual they claim to be and that they understand that the knowing
and willful request for, or acquisition of, a record pertaining to
another individual under false pretenses is a criminal offense. These
procedures are in accordance with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.40 and
401.45.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures. Individuals should also
reasonably identify the record, specify the information they are
contesting, and state the corrective action sought and the reasons for
the correction with supporting justification showing how the record is
incomplete, untimely, inaccurate, or irrelevant. These procedures are
in accordance with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.65(a).
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Same as record access procedures. These procedures are in
accordance with our regulations at 20 CFR 401.40 and 401.45.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
78 FR 23811, Master Representative Payee File.
[[Page 55232]]
83 FR 31250, Master Representative Payee File.
83 FR 31251, Master Representative Payee File.
[FR Doc. 2018-23941 Filed 11-1-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P