SSA strategy taps technology
The Social Security Administration unveils a 10year strategic plan to make the agency fully automated by 2010
The Social Security Administration unveiled a 10-year strategic plan this
week to make the agency fully automated and responsive to its growing customer
base.
In its 2010 Service Vision, SSA lays out a map for providing service
for a clientele expected to double over the coming decade from its current
45 million. SSA plans to achieve this goal by tapping into the latest technological
advances for e-government.
"Already under stress, we now deliver service in a present in which
customers' expectations are raising higher as we look ahead to a future
that promises an explosion in technology and huge growth in workload," SSA
Commissioner Kenneth Aptel said in the plan's introduction.
The plan calls for better service, improved technology, employment opportunities
for beneficiaries with disabilities and training a workforce to replace
large numbers of SSA workers expected to retire in the next five years.
Among the plan's top priorities:
* Enable customers to complete transactions at the first point of contact.
* Maximize technology to automate workload and enhance service.
* Give customers access to electronic records, but protect their privacy.
* Integrate government services with SSA to provide a one-stop shopping
service.
* Create a paperless environment so that all work is handled electronically.
* Survey customers to make sure they are happy, and be responsive to
their complaints.
"In many communities across the country, SSA has been the primary face
of the federal government. The presence of Social Security is assurance
of a certain economic standard of living for the community and the nation,"
the strategic report said.
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