House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Lee, R-Mo., called on the Social Security Administration Monday to immediately implement the "Payroll Information Exchange," or PIE, as it's eight years overdue.
The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 authorized the SSA to create the exchange, which is designed to reduce improper payments.
In a letter to Acting SSA Commissioner Kilolo Kijakazi, Smith and two of his colleagues said SSA needs to implement the PIE program immediately. They told Kijakazi to also inform the committee, by Aug. 14, what steps SSA is taking to complete the task and to explain why SSA has delayed taking action.
The PIE program, the lawmakers explained, "will establish data exchanges with payroll data providers to reduce improper payments, improve administration of the DI and SSI benefit programs, and alleviate monthly reporting burdens for beneficiaries."
In 2021, the SSA published a notice in the Federal Register that it planned to implement the PIE.
"However, no regulations have been published and the agency now claims a notice of proposed rulemaking should not be expected until January 2024 — more than eight years after the program was authorized," the lawmakers wrote to Kijakazi.
According to the lawmakers, in fiscal year 2021, Social Security's combined Disability Insurance and Old-Age and Survivors Insurance programs made roughly $2.5 billion in improper payments, nearly $2 billion of which were overpayments.