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dalton99a

(84,832 posts)
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:20 AM 22 hrs ago

Senate passes Social Security benefits boost for many public service retirees

Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:20 AM - Edit history (1)

https://apnews.com/article/social-security-congress-565aaf221de6d607f207e286655eef25

Senate passes Social Security benefits boost for many public service retirees
By STEPHEN GROVES
Updated 11:16 PM CST, December 20, 2024

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate passed legislation early Saturday to boost Social Security payments for millions of people, pushing a longtime priority for former public employees through Congress in one of its last acts for the year.

The bipartisan bill, which next heads to President Joe Biden, will eliminate longtime reductions to Social Security benefits for nearly 3 million people who receive pensions from work in federal, state and local government, or public service jobs like teachers, firefighters and police officers. Advocates say the Social Security Fairness Act rights a decades-old disparity, though it will also put further strain on Social Security Trust Funds.

The legislation has been decades in the making but the push to pass it came together in the final weeks — and was completed in the final hours — that lawmakers were in Washington before Congress resets next year. All Senate Democrats except one, as well as 23 Republicans, supported the push to bring it to a final vote in the Senate. The final vote was 76-20.

The bill repeals two provisions — the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset — that limit Social Security benefits for certain recipients if they receive retirement payments from other sources such as the public retirement program for a state or local government.

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Senate passes Social Security benefits boost for many public service retirees (Original Post) dalton99a 22 hrs ago OP
Mazel tov! Drum 21 hrs ago #1
And Musk is ready with his "DOGE" scissors question everything 21 hrs ago #2
Not happening. n/t valleyrogue 21 hrs ago #3
To see how many people will want to Luigi him dalton99a 21 hrs ago #8
I am so happy! This has affected me since I retired in 2017. A Brand New World 21 hrs ago #4
Very similar to me madville 12 hrs ago #16
It took over a decade, but it finally happened. valleyrogue 21 hrs ago #5
+1. It is a horrible injustice that keeps some retirees in abject poverty dalton99a 21 hrs ago #6
Yay!!! Great news!! I didn't know what the bill was. LeftInTX 21 hrs ago #7
Thank you to the Senate and to President Joseph Biden. sheshe2 21 hrs ago #9
This kind of bipartisanship is the way it is supposed to be. That is the way it USED to be valleyrogue 21 hrs ago #10
I can't tell you how happy I am right now. sheshe2 21 hrs ago #11
so, passed in both houses?" MadameButterfly 17 hrs ago #12
It is on Biden's desk dalton99a 13 hrs ago #14
Yes. It passed both houses overwhelmingly. President Biden will sign it. n/t valleyrogue 12 hrs ago #17
When does this go into effect? senseandsensibility 7 hrs ago #34
Retroactive to January 2024 dalton99a 54 min ago #36
Why were some government employees exempted from SS in the first place ? MichMan 13 hrs ago #13
Our pension is better than SS madville 12 hrs ago #15
Rules for thee, but not for me. MichMan 12 hrs ago #18
It's not an "opt out" madville 12 hrs ago #19
Not Sure How It Got Started - I Paid 10% Each Check To Teacher Retirement System alcuno 7 hrs ago #35
But if you never worked a Public Government job, ALL you get is just SS. They used to call that Double Dipping. mackdaddy 11 hrs ago #20
Yes, I remember the frenzy about "double-dipping" pensioners back then RandomNumbers 10 hrs ago #21
Collecting a pension and getting Social Security is NOT "double dipping." That was a right-wing LIE peddled years ago. valleyrogue 9 hrs ago #22
Thanks for that background RandomNumbers 8 hrs ago #30
This was truly bipartisan legislation. valleyrogue 8 hrs ago #31
Completely untrue. valleyrogue 9 hrs ago #24
You ARE saying that anyone who paid into SS shouldn't get the benefits they earned, although you probably don't mean to. HeartachesNhangovers 8 hrs ago #26
The thing is most of those who make the "big pensions" wouldn't qualify for SS in the first place. valleyrogue 8 hrs ago #27
Does this pave the way to drop public employee pension plans? leftstreet 9 hrs ago #23
No. n/t valleyrogue 8 hrs ago #25
Good. Because anything our overlords label a "Fairness" Act.... leftstreet 8 hrs ago #28
It IS a "Fairness Act." This was bipartisan legislation of the best sort. valleyrogue 8 hrs ago #29
Right, got it leftstreet 8 hrs ago #32
Only 20 GOP senators voted against repeal. valleyrogue 8 hrs ago #33

A Brand New World

(1,132 posts)
4. I am so happy! This has affected me since I retired in 2017.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:35 AM
21 hrs ago

My social security has been reduced by 50% because I spent the last 21 years of my career in state government and have a state pension. The first 23 years was in social security jobs. This will make the budget easier to manage.

madville

(7,470 posts)
16. Very similar to me
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:00 AM
12 hrs ago

My first 25 working years I paid into social security, my last 20 working years will be in my current city/municipal job that has an exempt pension. I was looking at a 50% reduction to my SS once I started drawing it but this is great news!

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
5. It took over a decade, but it finally happened.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:38 AM
21 hrs ago

Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:40 AM - Edit history (1)

The WEP in particular was outright theft of earned benefits from those of us who worked in state government agencies that didn't pay into SS, no matter how small the state pension amount. I got $120 deducted off my SS benefit when I took SS early at age 62 in 2017. This was about a third of my dinky Nevada pension of $341. The "reasoning" behind such a capricious penalty was the idea that public employees have "big pensions." Never mind anybody with a "big pension" would never earn enough quarters to even qualify for SS in the first place. It was those of us in the middle, who worked in midlife in non-SS covered employment but didn't work 30 years in "substantial earnings" employment not to be docked with this penalty. And having to pay Medicare Part B made my total loss per month $300 bucks. However, it will be nice to get that $120 per month back.

dalton99a

(84,832 posts)
6. +1. It is a horrible injustice that keeps some retirees in abject poverty
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:45 AM
21 hrs ago

Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:59 AM - Edit history (1)

“We have spent decades working to pass this legislation, and tonight is a victory for all the public servants who will finally get the Social Security they have earned,” said Senator Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat who was a lead co-sponsor of the bill. The bill marked Mr. Brown’s final legislative achievement, after he lost a brutal and expensive re-election bid last month.

“Tonight, Congress ensured that police officers, firefighters, teachers and public servants across Ohio will be able to retire with the Social Security they spent their lives paying into,” he said.

Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine and a lead sponsor of the measure, framed the issue as a “long overdue” matter of fairness affecting teachers, firefighters and police officers as well as some federal employees who were hired before 1984, when the federal pension system was brought under the Social Security system.

In a floor speech Wednesday, Ms. Collins cited one of her constituents, a retired female schoolteacher who had to return to work at age 72 after her husband’s death to make financial ends meet. The woman’s husband was a Navy veteran who paid into Social Security for 40 years, but since she received a public pension from the school system, her surviving spousal benefits through Social Security were reduced by two-thirds.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/21/us/congress-social-security.html

LeftInTX

(30,504 posts)
7. Yay!!! Great news!! I didn't know what the bill was.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:48 AM
21 hrs ago

This effects alot of teacher retirees here in Texas.

sheshe2

(88,086 posts)
9. Thank you to the Senate and to President Joseph Biden.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 12:58 AM
21 hrs ago

Also a huge thank you for unanimously passing the cancer research bill for children that is now on its way to Bidens desk.

Bravo.

Also a huge thank you to our Congress, Republicans and Democrats that voted to keep our government up and working for all the people.

This despite 'Resdent elect Elon Musk who on his own (okay, a little help from his mini me trump) tried to sink it.



valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
10. This kind of bipartisanship is the way it is supposed to be. That is the way it USED to be
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:05 AM
21 hrs ago

before the radical right ruined the GOP and had a "no compromise" mentality.

Chuck Schumer deserves a lot of credit for getting this legislation to the Senate floor. If this had been McConnell, the legislation would have died in its tracks. The late Orrin Hatch killed this proposal over and over, as did the House Ways and Means Committee.

This repeal will help many people.

sheshe2

(88,086 posts)
11. I can't tell you how happy I am right now.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:11 AM
21 hrs ago

Both the Senate and Congress came through with flying colors. They did and I am going to give them a lot of credit for what they made possible today.

I may be heartbroken in the near future, however I will celebrate this day.

MichMan

(13,516 posts)
13. Why were some government employees exempted from SS in the first place ?
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 08:44 AM
13 hrs ago

No one else can opt out. Was it considered inferior and good enough for everyone else (like the rest of us) except them?

madville

(7,470 posts)
15. Our pension is better than SS
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 09:54 AM
12 hrs ago

I am currently exempt from SS at my current local government job and we contribute 5% to our municipal pension and get 2.25% credit towards that pension for each year of service. So someone that works for the city for 30 years retires on 67.5% of their highest 5 years average salary. Work 20 years get 45%, etc. Our city owns and operates all of the utilities, even multiple power plants, so it’s always been well funded. We also get a 5% 401k match, so it’s typical for retirees to have hundreds of thousands in that at retirement to supplement retirement.

I contributed to SS for over 20 years and was looking at it being reduced 50% once I drew it because I’m eligible for an exempt pension so this is great news, will be around an extra $1000-$1200 a month from SS.

I’ve always been a retirement hound though. Did 20 years in the military (11 active and 9 reserve) so get that pension, get my VA disability compensation, I was a federal employee for awhile and bought my military time into it so will get a modest FERS pension at age 62. Then I’ll probably do 20 years at this city job so will get that pension and now my full social security with no penalty.

MichMan

(13,516 posts)
18. Rules for thee, but not for me.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:14 AM
12 hrs ago

Doesn't matter what pension or other retirement avenues are available in the private sector, everyone is forced to contribute to SS (whether they like it or not), even the self employed. Not only that, if they fail to do so they get fined by the IRS.

Yet, public employees are permitted to opt out of the system that is required for everyone else because it isn't good enough for them.



madville

(7,470 posts)
19. It's not an "opt out"
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:26 AM
12 hrs ago

We don’t have a choice. Some states and municipalities chose not to participate in social security long ago, I believe they cut off the creation of any new exempt pension plans in the early 1980s.

But yes it is better, it’s a great recruitment and retention tool.

alcuno

(8,079 posts)
35. Not Sure How It Got Started - I Paid 10% Each Check To Teacher Retirement System
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:47 PM
7 hrs ago

We didn't pay into social security. But I was someone with 40 credits into social security for previous jobs so I never thought I'd get anything. Been collecting social security for one year with a 60% reduction

mackdaddy

(1,614 posts)
20. But if you never worked a Public Government job, ALL you get is just SS. They used to call that Double Dipping.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 10:57 AM
11 hrs ago

So I never worked a job for any substantial time that was anything but a Social Security contributed job.

I remember back in the 80s when they eliminated pensions and put everyone on a 401k with company matches. Well the 'matching' faded away in just a few years. I was self employed for a time and then got to pay twice for my SS taxes, both employee and employer contributions. 401K accounts are great if you know how to invest, but every time a republican took over there was a major crash and the account bounced around like superball under a table.

But, my ONLY retirement income is Social Security plus my own personal savings in my 401k/IRA accounts. So I worked half a century too, just not smart enough to work a government job, so I get less? The answer is yes.

Fortunately I structured my life to be able to live on less than 2k per month total even with over 20% of that going to health insurance and copays.

I am not saying that anyone who payed into the SS system should not get benefits. It is just that there were some valid reasons for the partial benefits if you were only in the system for part of your working career.

Actually I just hope that the DOGEbags leave me with any retirement income.

RandomNumbers

(18,229 posts)
21. Yes, I remember the frenzy about "double-dipping" pensioners back then
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:31 AM
10 hrs ago

I wasn't even paying much attention to politics at that time. It really strikes me how what enraged the masses back then, now goes the other direction, and the masses direct their ire at other people.

I guess it keeps the politicians in business, and saves them from having to spend time on people who are too busy struggling with their daily lives to use their voices in politics effectively.

To be clear, I don't know enough to know in what ways the original "anti double dipping" policy was poorly written and unfair. It may be that it needed adjustment. I'm just musing that the folks affected by this generally aren't those worst-off in our society - but they were able to get the megaphone and politician's attention.

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
22. Collecting a pension and getting Social Security is NOT "double dipping." That was a right-wing LIE peddled years ago.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:20 PM
9 hrs ago

The REAL definition of "double dipping" is if you retired from a governmental job collecting a pension then would be hired back to that same or similar job while still collecting the pension. States typically have strict rules on this. This is NOT the case here. By that "logic," NO public employee in any state or federal employee should have both a pension and Social Security. By that "logic," NO private employee should collect both a pension and Social Security.

The Reagan administration decided to penalize people who were working in jobs that didn't pay into Social Security but actually earned a benefit in covered employment. That was the "windfall elimination provision." It was always bullshit. The Reagan administration thought this was a good wedge issue to pit people without pensions against those who did.

60 MInutes back in the early 1980s did a hatchet job on this issue, and that helped put this rotten provision into law.

RandomNumbers

(18,229 posts)
30. Thanks for that background
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:53 PM
8 hrs ago

Still, I think "it must be nice" to get both pension and SS. And the miscreants who will soon be in charge, seem likely to gut as much as they can gut from the SS that those on the lowest rungs get.

It's not that I begrudge people who've worked hard getting a decent retirement from that. It's that I wish the attention were going to those who needed it most; and I fear instead that those worse off will indeed get the attention, and that it will be to make them even MORE worse off. But hey, it's what a majority of voters in the swing states (what's that about 8 states?) voted for, so hooray for Democracy. Sigh. (You would be right in thinking I did not take my happy pills today)

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
31. This was truly bipartisan legislation.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:56 PM
8 hrs ago

Many states affected by the offsets were in red states like Texas, Louisiana, Kentucky, and Ohio. Many supporters of the legislation were Republicans who LISTENED to their constituents.

Not Ted Cruz or Thune or McConnell in the Senate, but many of them did.

Nobody is going to "gut" Social Security and think they would ever get away with it.

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
24. Completely untrue.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:31 PM
9 hrs ago

You could have always taken a job in the public sector. That was your choice. I PAID into SS for 41 years and counting, yet because I had a grand total of 5.04 years in service credit in Nevada public employment getting a piddling $341 and did not get 30 years of "substantial earnings," I got SCREWED out of $120 a month out of my SS that I earned. The big stink is if a person worked 30 years in "substantial earnings," which always went up, then the WEP would not apply. 30 years is completely arbitrary and based on the outdated notion people worked at one employer their entire working career before retiring. For many of us, that was not true and continues not to be true. I had many low years. I currently work a nine-month (full time) classified position in school district employment in Oregon, but my earnings fell just short of reaching the "substantial earnings" threshold. I am almost 70 years old and can't work forever. WEP was completely unfair to people like me who were trying to make up for the low earning years.

26. You ARE saying that anyone who paid into SS shouldn't get the benefits they earned, although you probably don't mean to.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:40 PM
8 hrs ago

Nobody is getting SS benefits they didn't pay for. What the WEP does is reduce your EARNED SS benefits (in my case by 40%), because you earned a different government pension as well. It was sold as a way to address the unsightly possibilty that someone might retire rich on government pension + SS, but it affects ANYONE who EARNED both kinds of pensions, regardless of how little they get. My current SS benefit is $647 / month, Although I EARNED a benefit 40% higher.

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
27. The thing is most of those who make the "big pensions" wouldn't qualify for SS in the first place.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:49 PM
8 hrs ago

If they have 30, 35, or 40 years in, they are not going to be able to get the 40 quarters to become eligible for SS benefits.

The WEP directly impacted people like me who went into non-covered employment in midlife, but didn't get "outrageous" pensions because they had less service credit. I was only in non-covered employment a total of 5.04 years, with about 1 1/2 years of it also working for a private school fulltime paying into SS. I was still cheated out of about $120 a month SS.

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
29. It IS a "Fairness Act." This was bipartisan legislation of the best sort.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 01:52 PM
8 hrs ago

A lot of people who earned both an uncovered pension AND Social Security benefits were cheated out of those full SS benefits they EARNED. It IS a matter of fairness.

leftstreet

(36,417 posts)
32. Right, got it
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:00 PM
8 hrs ago

And yes it's only fair.

But reading the articles about it, the GOPers are already making stmts OH we can't afford this! And how this will stress the already underfunded SS staff etc.

valleyrogue

(1,184 posts)
33. Only 20 GOP senators voted against repeal.
Sat Dec 21, 2024, 02:07 PM
8 hrs ago

Only 75 Republicans in the House voted against repeal. The rest LISTENED to their constituents. This took many years of lobbying to get to this point. Usually one person obstructed, whether it was Orrin Hatch or somebody on the House Ways and Means Committee.

The "Social Security will be insolvent" mantra has always been a right-wing lie from the early 1980s, peddled by Koch-financed "libertarian" organizations like the Cato Institute. It was always about ideology with these crackpots. They wanted to create resentment and generational warfare while at the same time the REAL motive was the billionaires and businesses not wanting to pay their share of FICA taxes. Furthermore, no federal program can "go broke" since the federal government prints the money. Any bookkeeping "shortfall" can easily be remedied by paying it out of the general fund. This is why there has never been any big push to "fix" Social Security in recent decades. There is no need to.



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