Thursday, December 20, 2012

Day 1: Social Security Numbers

Where do they come up with our social security numbers?

Motivation: filling out health insurance forms, I got to wondering why 3 of us had the first 2 digits and the other two didn't...

Answer: 
(found at wikipedia)

"The Social Security number is a nine-digit number in the format "AAA-GG-SSSS".  The number is divided into three parts.

The Area Number, the first three digits, is assigned by the geographical region. Prior to 1973, cards were issued in local Social Security offices around the country and the Area Number represented the office code in which the card was issued. This did not necessarily have to be in the area where the applicant lived, since a person could apply for their card in any Social Security office. Since 1973, when SSA began assigning SSNs and issuing cards centrally from Baltimore, the area number assigned has been based on the ZIP code in the mailing address provided on the application for the original Social Security card. The applicant's mailing address does not have to be the same as their place of residence. Thus, the Area Number does not necessarily represent the State of residence of the applicant regardless of whether the card was issued prior to, or after, 1973.

Generally, numbers were assigned beginning in the northeast and moving south and westward, so that people on the East Coast had the lowest numbers and those on the West Coast had the highest numbers. As the areas assigned to a locality are exhausted, new areas from the pool are assigned, so some states have noncontiguous groups of numbers.

The middle two digits are the Group Number. The Group Numbers range from 01 to 99. However, they are not assigned in consecutive order. For administrative reasons, group numbers are issued in the following order:
  1. ODD numbers from 01 through 09.
  2. EVEN numbers from 10 through 98.
  3. EVEN numbers from 02 through 08.
  4. ODD numbers from 11 through 99.
As an example, Group Number 98 will be issued before 11.

The last four digits are Serial Numbers. They represent a straight numerical sequence of digits from 0001-9999 within the group.

On June 25, 2011, the SSA changed the SSN assignment process to "SSN randomization". SSN randomization will affect the SSN assignment process in the following ways:
  1. It will eliminate the geographical significance of the first three digits of the SSN, currently referred to as the Area Number, by no longer allocating the Area Numbers for assignment to individuals in specific states.
  2. It will eliminate the significance of the highest Group Number and, as a result, the High Group List will be frozen in time and can be used for validation of SSNs issued prior to the randomization implementation date.
  3. Previously unassigned Area Numbers will be introduced for assignment excluding Area Numbers 000, 666 and 900-999."
Rumination: I still don't get it.  So from what I'm getting with the first 3 numbers, it has to do with zipcodes?  Or region codes?  I couldn't figure it out, so I did a little more googling and found information here that gave me the states and their SS# codes.  Now I get it... kind of.  So the zip codes and state codes have nothing to do with it?  Group numbers are random?  I get the organization method of the numbers, but ... random?  And the last 4 are in the group... so if your numbers were 999.99.9999... group 99 is at number 9999 for you after your birth.

If this isn't right, oh well.  This is what I get out of it and I feel satisfied with my findings.  Of course apparently after June 25, 2011 they have pretty much randomized the numbers... and that I totally comprehend!

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