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Social Security: Photocopy Your Identification Card

Overview of File Box 3 [1]With a busy schedule, I understand how your document organization gets shoved to the side. I get it!

With homework, laundry, meals, soccer, dishes, and family activities, you need a little reprieve. Take heart, this week’s project will only take about 5 minutes. 😉

Working within File Box 3 [2] in the first category of Social Security documents, we have filed our annual statement [3] for each family member and our identification card [4] for each family member.

If you are still waiting on these documents or are correcting, then work where you are.

Photocopy Your Identification Card

When you get your identification card, I recommend keeping 2-3 copies of each card in your file box or notebook. You will need to give a copy of your Social Security card to your employer to accurately report your earnings on your W-2 Wage and Tax Statement.

Weekly Project: Make a copy of each family member’s Social Security Identification Card.

Protect Your Identification Card

Tracy’s Soap Box: This topic of identity theft is near and dear to me. 

Stepping up on my box, I want to help you. Your Social Security number is your private number. In the wrong hands, you will spend more time than you can imagine getting your identity cleared.

When asked for your Social Security number, challenge the reason for the information.

I do not give my number to my doctor’s offices. Yes, they like to use that information for identification, but I do not give the entire number. They may use the last 4 digits or a phone number or a date of birth.

There is one exception –  when the insurance company uses your Social Security number rather than an insurance identification number to file claims.

If the party requesting my Social Security number gives a good reason for needing it, then I make the decision to give or not give it. However, if the reason is only for identification, then I request another form of identification because they don’t need my Social Security number.

You may think this is extreme, but the documentation sent with your Social Security identification card states:

Some private organizations use Social Security numbers for record keeping purposes. Such use is neither required nor prohibited by Federal law. The use of your Social Security number by such an organization for its own records is a private matter between you and the organization. Private organizations cannot get information from your Social Security record just because they know your number.

Any Federal, State, or local government agency that asks for your number must tell you: whether giving it is mandatory or voluntary, its authority for requesting the number, and how the number will be used.

If the government has regulations as to how they use my number, then I hold the private sector responsible as well. When I fill out the documentation at the doctor’s office and hand the clipboard back to the receptionist, she may leave that document on her desk while she takes a break.

Though she cannot get information from my Social Security record, she may allow another patient visual access to my Social Security number. This is the problem I have with using my number for identification.

Lest you think this doesn’t happen, I was given a clipboard of documents as a new patient. In filling out the pages, I found someone else’s forms under my paperwork listing their medical, personal, and insurance information. Yeah! I gave the documents back right away with a comment expressing my concern regarding their privacy practices.

If you choose to use your Social Security number in the private sector for record keeping, then take heed to protect access to your private number – stepping down from my box. 😉

In using time wisely, protect your identity by keeping your Social Security Card in your filing system with a couple photocopies for those who need access to your number and benefits.

In organizing your important documents, we are over two-thirds complete. Happy organizing!

Question: What do you think about private organizations using your Social Security number for identification?