The Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) 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 cities ranked by number of beneficiaries in Oklahoma.
Field Offices Ranking by Number of Beneficiaries in Oklahoma (2018)
Rank | Field Office | Number of Beneficiaries |
---|---|---|
1 | Tulsa | 157,250 |
2 | Oklahoma City | 142,285 |
3 | Moore | 77,080 |
4 | Muskogee | 55,040 |
5 | Lawton | 39,820 |
6 | Stillwater | 36,560 |
7 | Shawnee | 30,195 |
8 | Miami | 28,380 |
9 | Bartlesville | 28,285 |
10 | Enid | 27,405 |
11 | Poteau | 26,835 |
12 | McAlester | 24,450 |
13 | Ardmore | 23,235 |
14 | Chickasha | 16,890 |
15 | Clinton | 16,790 |
16 | Durant | 16,590 |
17 | Ada | 15,935 |
18 | Okmulgee | 12,385 |
19 | Paris, TX | 9,180 |
20 | Pampa, TX | 3,850 |
21 | Amarillo, TX | 615 |