How would you like a pay freeze and a two percent raise at the same time. Senior Correspondent Mike Causey says that\'s what may happen to a large chunk of the ...
While most federal workers are looking at a White House-induced 2-year pay freeze most American workers, including some federal employees, may get a 2 percent increase in take home pay starting next year.
Unless you’ve just returned from outer space, you know that the President proposed and Congress is moving to impose, a two-year freeze on pay raises for 1.4 million white collar civilians. At the same time the administration wants Congress to jump-start the economy by giving millions of American workers, including some but not all feds, what amounts to a 2 percent pay raise starting in January.
As often happens during times of ambitious financial tinkering, many federal and postal workers feel they are caught in the middle as taxpayers and government employees.
The majority of U.S. government workers are under the Federal Employees Retirement System. Like most other American workers they pay into Social Security. If Congress approves the change the Social Security payroll tax would drop two percentage points starting in January.
But a huge chunk of the federal workforce, maybe as many as half a million employees, do not pay into Social Security. These people, most hired before the mid-1980s, are under the old Civil Service Retirement System. They pay into medicare but not the much larger Social Security tax. So any cut in the Social Security tax wouldn’t benefit them even though they, like their coworkers under the FERS program, would both be subject to the pay freeze. And a lot of them think this is unfair. For instance:
Many more have asked if they would be left out of the Social Security tax reduction?
Short answer: Yes. If you don’t pay the tax there will not be any reduction in what they don’t pay.
Next question: Is that fair? Is it fair for the government to freeze government workers pay and then give the majority of them (those under the FERS system) an extra 2 percent to spend next year?
Open Season: If you haven’t picked your 2011 health insurance plan your time is running out. The open enrollment period ends at close of business Monday. If you are looking for some tips on best-buys, click here:
To reach me: mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
Nearly Useless Factoid
by Suzanne Kubota
A short, nearly useless tale from Asylum.com on The Secret History of What You Wear Every Day:
Maybe it was Napoleon. Maybe it was Frederick the Great. Maybe it was the Duke of Wellington. We may never know, but one of these guys thought it would be a good idea to put buttons on coat sleeves to keep his soldiers from wiping their noses on them. (Or maybe the whole thing is just a big lie, and the buttons are there because coat sleeves used to open and needed buttons to stay fastened. But isn’t the Napoleon story better?)
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