The Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program is a program of the Social Security Administration funded primarily through payroll taxes. It was signed into law in 1935 by then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The OASDI program aims to supplement a worker’s lost wages due to retirement, disability or death of a spouse.
The following table shows Social Security field offices ranked by number of disabled workers in Maryland.
Field Offices Ranking by Number of Disabled Workers in Maryland (2018)
Rank | Field Office | Number of Retired Workers |
---|---|---|
1 | Camp Springs | 11,345 |
2 | Glen Burnie | 8,720 |
3 | Towson | 7,780 |
4 | Greenbelt | 7,600 |
5 | Baltimore, Rossville | 7,160 |
6 | Baltimore, Reisterstown Plaza | 6,075 |
7 | Owings Mills | 6,045 |
8 | Abingdon | 5,860 |
9 | Salisbury | 5,520 |
10 | Baltimore, Northeast | 5,310 |
11 | Rockville | 5,295 |
12 | Hagerstown | 5,145 |
13 | Baltimore, Downtown | 5,100 |
14 | Charlotte Hall | 4,945 |
15 | Silver Spring | 4,685 |
16 | Frederick | 4,375 |
17 | Elkton | 4,070 |
18 | Baltimore, West | 4,040 |
19 | Columbia | 3,835 |
20 | Westminster | 3,825 |
21 | Cumberland | 3,545 |
22 | Cambridge | 3,325 |
23 | Annapolis | 3,200 |
24 | Georgetown, DE | 15 |
25 | Downtown, DC | 5 |
26 | Wilmington, DE | 0 |