Archive for the 'FERS' Category

CSRS retirees get 3.6% COLA in January, FERS 2.6%

Federal News Radio reports that the Social Security Administration has confirmed that retirees will receive a 3.6% cost of living adjustment in January. The COLA also applies to federal pensioners:

Federal retirees under the old Civil Service Retirement System receive the full COLA amount.

However, there is a slightly different system for retirees under the Federal Employees Retirement System. If the COLA is more than 3 percent, FERS retirees will receive 1 percent less than the general increase. If the COLA is between 2 percent and 3 percent, FERS retirees receive just a 2 percent increase.

For example, with a COLA of 3.6 percent, FERS retirees can expect to receive a 2.6 percent increase.

However, most FERS retirees will not have the COLA applied to their annuity until age 62.

via Social Security announces 3.6 percent COLA – FederalNewsRadio.com.

Federal Times article exposes the Big Lie about “unfunded” federal pensions

To hear right wing pundits talk, you’d think the federal pension system was about to destroy America. That’s why millionaire politicians like Darrell Issa want to eliminate pensions for middle class working people (while clinging to their own more lucrative taxpayer financed retirement plans).

A recent Federal Times article discusses the “problem” in some detail, and comes to a surprising conclusion: there isn’t a problem!

But there’s no evidence to suggest federal pension plans are a financial bomb waiting to go off. That was defused when CSRS was ended, and since FERS is legally required to be fully funded, the unfunded liability will fade over time.

OPM and outside observers such as Adcock and Palguta aren’t the only ones saying the system is sound. The Congressional Research Service has published several reports in recent years on federal pension programs, all of which concluded the programs are on solid ground.

"Although the civil service trust fund has an unfunded liability, it is not in danger of becoming insolvent," CRS said in a January report.

Audit firm KPMG has consistently given OPM’s financial statements and retirement programs unqualified opinions, meaning they found no significant problems.

And the Government Accountability Office said in a 1995 report that CSRS’ flaws, which resulted in the unfunded liability, were resolved with the creation of FERS.

"Provisions have been made for the retirement fund to always have sufficient budget authority to cover future benefit payments," former Assistant Comptroller General Johnny Finch said at a House hearing.

via Fed pensions underfunded by $673B – FederalTimes.com.

House Approves FERS Sick Leave and Thrift Savings Reforms

National Association of Postal Supervisors Legislative and Regulatory Update – July 31, 2008

House Approves FERS Sick Leave and Thrift Savings Reforms

The House of Representatives has approved legislation that would give employees covered under the Federal Employees Retirement System largely the same retirement credit for unused sick leave as already applies to workers covered under the older Civil Service Retirement System. Also included in the House-passed measure are improvements to the Thrift Savings Plan. The conferral of FERS sick leave credit has been a legislative goal of the National Association of Postal Supervisors.

The FERS sick leave approach approved by the House last night is more generous than that originally proposed in FERS sick leave legislation introduced earlier this year by Rep. James Moran (D-VA). Under the measure approved by the House, FERS employees who retire within three years of the bill’s enactment would receive service credit, in the computation of their pension, for 75 percent of their accrued sick leave at the time of retirement. Those who retire three years after enactment would receive 100% credit for all of their unused sick leave. Moran’s original proposal would have provided a cash payout to FERS employees of up to $10,000 for unused sick leave.

Delighted with the more generous approach approved by the House, Congressman Moran in a statement said, “Our current use-it or lose-it sick leave system for FERS employees hurts productivity and increases training costs.” “We need to be incentivizing the accrual of sick leave, not encouraging people to call in sick in the weeks leading up to retirement. With today’s passage, we’re putting FERS employees on par with their CSRS colleagues, replacing a flawed approach to sick leave with one proven to work in everybody’s favor.”

The FERS sick leave provisions were included in a larger measure approved by the House that would grant the Food and Drug Administration authority over tobacco products. The bill, the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (H.R. 1110), was approved by a 326-102 vote. It would require the FDA to regulate the labeling and advertising of tobacco products and ban flavored cigarettes excluding menthol.

The tobacco measure also includes provisions that would improve the Thrift Savings Plan, including the automatic enrollment into the TSP of of newly-hired eligible federal and postal employees and members of the military. It also would authorize the Federal Thrift Retirement Investment Board to establish a Roth contribution plan and self-directed investment options within the TSP. It is the addition of the Roth contribution plan option that, under Congressional budget scoring rules, would provide additional federal revenue, making possible the more generous, CSRS-like FERS sick leave formula. The Roth revenue also offsets the loss of federal tobacco taxes from an anticipated decline in smoking.

The tobacco bill, including the FERS and TSP provisions, now moves to the Senate, where its prospects are uncertain. The bill enjoyed wide bipartisan support in the House, but few days remain in the legislative calendar, and Republican leaders and the Bush administration are opposed to the tobacco provisions. The White House has threatened to veto the bill, arguing that it would disproportionately tax low-income Americans, through user fees assessed against tobacco companies to raise funds to underwrite FDA’s regulatory efforts. The Postal Supervisors and other postal and federal employee groups will continue to push for enactment.

Bruce Moyer
Legislative Counsel, National Association of Postal Supervisors

Golden Handcuffs

Does FERS encourage the best and brightest to leave federal service for the private sector?:

The current FERS program likely will result in either the most productive or skilled employees leaving well before 30 years for better paying opportunities. This will likely include contractor jobs where the taxpayers pay more for the same services…

FederalNewsRadio - The Golden Handcuffs