The Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) has been at the top of the legislative hit list for groups representing federal and public retirees for decades.
It's quiet, as August is a time when things are on hold until at least after Labor Day. But a lot awaits lawmakers when they return.
Slightly more than half of members of the Armed Forces are married and many of their spouses need to work. But getting a job can be difficult.
Feds more than most groups need to check on their tax status after retirement. That's why many move.
Who knows if there will be a pay raise... but one thing is for sure, health insurance premiums will be going up. The issue is, what will you pay them with?
The windfall elimination provision reduces the Social Security benefit for someone with less than 30 years of covered service if they qualify for an SSA benefit after as little as five years of covered service.
Thanks to a 1997 tax law that included the then-new Roth option, many people saving for retirement now have two choices.
Have you had your professional mid-life crisis yet? If not, this might be a good time to get it over with.
Despite tough talk from Congress and the White House, the federal employee benefits package has so-far remained untouched.
Should you stick with the TSP? Or would you be happier elsewhere? Financial expert and successful TSP investor Abraham Grungold shares his thoughts.
The Trump administration wants to share some of the D.C. wealth by moving jobs — but not necessarily the people in them — to other parts of the nation that could use the business.
The new budget deal between Congress and the White House includes a two-year ban on sequestration-related furloughs for federal workers.
Benefits expert Tammy Flanagan joins Your Turn today to answer questions about Social Security and retirement applicable to both federal and private sector workers.
Thousands of feds in some of FEHBP's best and most expensive health plans may be spared from a pending 40% tax on their favorite plans.
Turns out the plan to move Washington-based civil servants closer to the geographic areas they deal with, and the taxpayers they serve, isn’t as cut-and-dried as getting a new Amazon facility.