What to Know for Monday, May 4th, 2026:

1: Medicare portal database exposed health providers' Social Security numbers for weeks

(Image Credit: iStock)

  • Publicly accessible database leaked dozens of providers' SSNs with names: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services inadvertently exposed healthcare providers' Social Security numbers in a database powering its new Medicare provider directory — the database was publicly available for "at least several weeks" as part of CMS data transparency efforts, with SSNs linked to provider names and identifying information.

  • CMS blames providers for entering info in wrong fields: After The Washington Post informed officials Tuesday, CMS said the problem "stems from incorrect entries of provider or provider-representative-supplied information in the wrong places" — essentially claiming providers entered their own Social Security numbers in the wrong database fields, leaving them exposed.

  • Latest technical problem with Trump's Medicare provider directory: The directory launched last year to help you look up which doctors accept which insurance plans, but has faced multiple setbacks — an early version was "rife with errors, including misidentifying which health care providers were covered by which health care plans," and Democrats are now demanding a House investigation into CMS's handling of sensitive data.

2: USDA Secretary claims 4.3M fewer on SNAP reflects "freedom" — experts say work requirements, not fraud, drove the drop

(Image Credit: AP Photo)

  • Fraud accounts for less than 1%, not millions: In fiscal year 2023, only 41,476 people were disqualified from SNAP for fraud out of 42+ million total participants — experts say "new requirements mandated by a massive tax and spending cut bill pushed through Congress last summer are the primary reasons" for the 4.3 million drop.

  • H.R. 1 bill expanded work requirements to ages 55-64: Previously, able-bodied adults over 54 without dependents were exempt from strict work requirements (80 hours/month) — the new law raised that age to 64, lowered dependent child age from 18 to 14, and removed exemptions for homeless people, veterans, and former foster children.

  • Most decline happened after bill signed in July 2025: Only 743,572 people dropped from January-June 2025, but 3.47 million dropped from July 2025-January 2026 after Trump signed H.R. 1 — Congressional Budget Office projected the bill would "reduce participation in SNAP by roughly 2.4 million people in an average month over the 2025-2034 period."

3: Seven ways Social Security calculates benefits unfairly — from divorce bonuses to second-earner penalties

(Image Credit: Getty Images)

  • Second earners get robbed, divorced spouses get windfalls: If you earned a $1,400 benefit but your spouse earned $3,000, you only get the $1,500 spousal benefit (50% of your spouse's) — your own contributions "go down the drain." Meanwhile, if someone was married and divorced four times (each 10+ years), all four ex-spouses can collect 50% spousal benefits simultaneously, generating $8,000/month combined ($16,000 when the primary earner dies).

  • Work longer, get less — the "drudge penalty": Social Security only counts your best 35 years of earnings, so if you worked 45 years instead of 35 years, you get less than someone who contributed the same total amount over fewer years — the benefit formula penalizes workers who put in more hours by ignoring their extra years of contributions.

  • Gender gap and poverty trap hurt different groups: Women outlive men but get the same monthly amount (single men and gay male couples get less than they deserve, single women and lesbian couples get more) — plus lower-income retirees and smokers have shorter lives, which "undoes much of the progressivism in the benefit formula" since they collect over fewer years.

Here’s What You Missed on YouTube:

Check out our new YouTube videos for Monday, May 4th.

May 2026 Social Security Payments: All 4 Dates, Double-Deposit Friday & 6 Reasons Your Check Changed

The Retirement Navigator Podcast

🎙️ Episode #7: The Senior Living Myths That Are Costing Your Family Time, Money, and Peace of Mind featuring Michelle from Asbury Communities

What Senior Living Actually Looks Like in 2026 — And Why Most Families Have It All Wrong

Most people hear "senior living" and picture a nursing home. They assume they can't afford it. They assume Mom or Dad will lose their independence. And so they wait — until a crisis forces their hand and their options shrink.

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If you're 55+ and thinking about the next chapter — or you have a parent who is — this conversation will completely shift how you see your options.

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This newsletter is for information only. Always confirm your options directly with Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, or a qualified advisor before making big decisions about your benefits.

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