Subsection A. and B. revised to:
               
                  
               A. GENERAL
               A State or political subdivision may have made reports and payments for Social Security
                  coverage of its employees to the Internal Revenue Service, under the Federal Insurance
                  Contributions Act, in the mistaken belief that such action provided coverage for the
                  employees.
               
                
               B. ERRONEOUS REPORTS WITHOUT COVERAGE
               A political subdivision without a Section 218 agreement may be reporting Social Security
                  for employees who are members of the public retirement system. Or, an entity without
                  a Section 218 Agreement or a retirement system for its employees has been withholding
                  and reporting Social Security since before 1990.
               
                
               To correct erroneous reporting, the State may provide coverage through an error modification
                  or a regular Section 218(e)(3) modification. If the error involves a retirement system,
                  the State must comply with the referendum procedures before executing an error modification
                  or a Section 218(e)(3) modification. If the retirement system was not in existence
                  at the time the error was made, the coverage group would be covered as an absolute
                  coverage group under Section 218(b)(5) of the Act and a referendum would not be necessary.
               
                
               Subsection C., revised first paragraph of C.
               
                  
               C. ERROR MODIFICATION
               An error modification provides coverage as of the date the error first occurred. The
                  effective date is the first day of the first period (quarter or year) for which the
                  erroneous reports were filed, but no earlier than the date the entity came into existence.
                  Use of an error modification sometimes results in a substantial tax liability for
                  the State or political subdivision. This occurs when the error exists over a long
                  period, and there were employees of the entity who were not reported to IRS. For this
                  reason, a modification that utilizes the provision of Section 218(e)(3) of the Act
                  is sometimes preferable to using the error modification.