How can you get a pay raise and take a pay cut at the same time? Thanks to an election-year perfect storm, federal workers may be about to find out, Senior Corr...
How can you get a pay raise and take a pay cut at the same time? Feds may be about to find out.
Summer 2012 will be anything but a slow news time for federal and postal workers and for retired and about-to-retire civil servants. At issue are how much (if any) of an inflation-catchup federal retirees will get in January, how much (if any) the 2013 federal pay raise will be and how much take-home pay will be cut if workers are forced to pay more for their future pensions. Here’s what’s at play:
But low inflation, including months when living costs actually dropped (deflation), left retirees without any COLAs in both 2009 and 2010. The retirees finally got a COLA of 3.6 percent this year. And they are in line for — but not guaranteed — a raise of about 1.51 percent in 2013. The final amount of the 2013 COLA will be determined by the increase in the CPI-W (consumer price index) from the third quarter of this year ( July, August, September) over the CPI-W level for the third quarter of 2011.
Congress is about to set a record for number of days not worked this year. And with a tough election coming up members are going to be home stumping for votes a lot between now the early November. Some people think they may prevent them from doing anything — good or bad — for feds.
But lots of insiders say that you are likely to wind up paying more for your pensions and the only issue is whether it will be the amount proposed by the President or the tougher level being pushed by some in Congress.
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
By Jack Moore
The earliest known instance of a woman in film throwing a drink in a man’s face — long a cinematic staple — was in the 1914 silent film The Wages of Sin, according to Slate.
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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