Thanks to congressional interest in federal retirement benefits, Senior Correspondent Mike Causey says membership in the Die At Your Desk Club may soar. So what...
Based on the low percentage of federal workers who belong to unions or job-related professional groups, one could assume that feds are not, as a rule, joiners.
But…
That could change as Congress zeroes in on civil service retirement benefits and considers introducing private-sector style job insecurity to the federal service. In fact if retirement benefits are reduced (basing annuities on the highest 5-year average salary rather than the current high-3 formula) that could force tens of thousands of current civil servants either to work much longer than they plan or to move into the DAYD Club and expire at work!
The bipartisan deficit reduction commission proposed a number of cuts in federal benefits. Many of them , including the feared high-5, have been translated into legislative form.
Many feds accepted the White House-imposed 2-year federal pay freeze (the commission wanted a 3-year freeze), but they are reacting strongly to the plan to reduce future retirement benefits. According to Congressional Research Service figures the high-3 to high-5 change would reduce the average benefit by $1,484 for feds retiring this year.
Any such change has a long way to go. It would have to go through the House (very possible) then clear the Senate (less likely). In any case, if it became law, workers would, presumably, have time to get out under the more generous high-3 formula. But people don’t like worrying. Or fear that the change might be made retroactive.
We’ve heard from lots of feds on the subject. All but one says it would cost them a bundle and/or be a graceless breach-of-contract.
Here’s what people are saying:
Sure Cindy. Try this: click here to see the legislation on Thomas.loc.gov, then click on Bill Summary & Status.
To reach me: mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
Nearly Useless Factoid
by Suzanne Kubota
NASA Pilot John Young was officially reprimanded by the agency for taking a corned beef sandwich into space during the Gemini 3 mission in 1965. “After the corned beef boldly went where no sandwich had gone before,” notes MentalFloss.com, “NASA only allowed officially sanctioned food on spacecraft and the days of astronauts packing their own lunches were over.”
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