A Push Toward Digital That Has Warren Worried
Senator Elizabeth Warren isn't happy about the Social Security Administration's latest efficiency drive. The agency wants to cut in-person field office visits in half by fiscal 2026, dropping from more than 31 million visits last year to a target of about 15 million. Warren sees this as making life harder for people trying to claim benefits they've rightfully earned.
In a Monday post on X, Warren wrote, "This sure sounds like another way to make it even harder for Americans to get the benefits they've earned. I will not stop fighting to protect Social Security." She shared details from a Nextgov/FCW report that laid out the agency's ambitious digital transformation plans.
The Digital Shift Under New Leadership
Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano is steering the agency toward online interactions instead of in-person visits or phone calls. He's told lawmakers the agency isn't "getting rid of field offices" despite closure reports, but the numbers tell a more complex story.
Field office staffing has dropped by nearly 2,000 people according to AARP figures from April. Then in July, the SSA reassigned about 1,000 field office workers to handle the national phone line, further thinning the ranks of front-line staff who deal with people face-to-face.
Centralizing Operations Across 1,250 Offices
The agency is also centralizing claims processing, moving work traditionally handled at individual field offices into central operations. Chief of field operations Andy Sriubas told staff in an email that the model of roughly 1,250 field offices functioning as "mini-SSAs" needs to evolve into a unified national system that leverages the agency's full capacity.
According to the SSA, these changes will free up field staff to focus on in-person problem-solving while routing complex, time-intensive tasks to specialized teams. Whether that vision matches reality for Americans trying to navigate the system remains the question Warren and others are raising.