Home > Social Security becomes law in 1935...
Click image to enlarge 598807
Show image list »

Social Security becomes law in 1935...



Item # 598807

Currently Unavailable. Contact us if you would like to be placed on a want list or to be notified if a similar item is available.



August 14, 1935

LEOMINSTER DAILY ENTERPRISE, August 14, 1935 
 
* Social Security bill is passed 
* Franklin D. Roosevelt signs
 

The front page has a three column headline: "PRESIDENT SIGNS SECURITY BILL" with subhead (see photos). 1st report coverage on President Roosevelt signing the Social Security Bill into law.

Other news, sports and advertisements of the day throughout. Complete in 8 pages, a few small binding holes along spine, otherwise  nice.
 
wikipedia notes: Social Security in the United States is a social insurance program funded through dedicated payroll taxes called FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act). Tax deposits are formally entrusted to Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund, or Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund, Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund or the Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund. The main part of the program is sometimes abbreviated (OASDI), in reference to its three beneficiaries (OA for retirement, S for widows and survivors income, D for the disabled, and I for insurance). When initially signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935, the term Social Security covered unemployment insurance as well. The term, in everyday speech, is used only to refer to the benefits for retirement, disability, survivorship, and death, which are the four main benefits provided by traditional private-sector pension plans. In 2004 the U.S. Social Security system paid out almost $500 billion in benefits.[4] By dollars paid, the U.S. Social Security program is the largest government program in the world.

The Social Security Administration is headquartered in Woodlawn, Maryland just to the west of Baltimore. SeeSocial Security Administration.

Largely because of solvency questions ranging from immediate crisis to large projected future shortfalls, reform of the Social Security system has been a major political issue for more than three decades during the presidencies of Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush. (See Social Security debate (United States).)

Category: The 20th Century