| What 
			women should know about Social Security 
 
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            [March 31, 2011] 
            While 
			the Social Security program treats all workers — men and women — 
			exactly the same in terms of the benefits they can receive, women 
			need to know what the program means to them in their particular 
			circumstances. Understanding the benefits to which they may be 
			entitled may mean the difference between living more comfortably 
			versus just getting by in their later retirement years.  | 
		
            | One of the most significant 
			things women need to remember in terms of Social Security is the 
			importance of promptly reporting a name change.  If you haven’t told 
			us of a name change, your earnings may not be recorded properly and 
			you may not receive all the Social Security benefits you are due.  
			Not changing your name with Social Security also can delay your 
			Federal income tax refund. To report a name change, please fill out 
			an Application for a 
			Social Security Card 
			(Form SS-5). You can get the 
			form by visiting 
			
			
			www.socialsecurity.gov, 
			visiting any Social Security office or card center, or by calling 
			Social Security’s toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213 (TTY: 
			1-800-325-0778). You must show us a recently issued document as 
			proof of your legal name change. 
			
			 If building a family is in 
			your plans, it’s a good idea to apply for a Social Security number 
			for your baby in the hospital, at the same time that you apply for 
			your baby’s birth certificate. Social Security will mail the card to 
			you.  Or, you can elect to wait and apply in person at any Social 
			Security office.  However, if you wait, you must provide evidence of 
			your child’s age, identity and U.S. citizenship status, as well as 
			proof of your identity. Then, we must verify your child’s birth 
			record, which can add 12 weeks to the time it takes to issue a card. When women start receiving 
			Social Security retirement or disability benefits, other family 
			members may be eligible for payments as well. For example, benefits 
			can be paid to a husband:  
				If he is age 62 or 
				older; or At any age if he is 
				caring for your child (the child must be younger than 16 or 
				disabled and receiving Social Security benefits on your record).
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			Benefits also can be paid to 
			unmarried children if they are:  
				Younger than 18;
				Between 18 and 19 
				years old, but in elementary or secondary school as full-time 
				students; or Age 18 or older and 
				severely disabled (the disability must have started before age 
				22).  The family of a woman who 
			dies may be eligible for survivors benefits based on her work.
			 For more information about 
			women and Social Security, ask for the publication, What Every 
			Woman Should Know (SSA Publication No. 05-10127) or visit our 
			special Women’s page online at 
			
			
			www.socialsecurity.gov/women. 
			
			  By Judith Bartels Social Security District 
			Manager in Springfield, IL  |