Posts Tagged ‘CSRS’

Federal Employees and Retirees Need to Check Federal Tax Withholding To Avoid Penalty Next Spring

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

by Edward A. Zurndorfer, CFP

The Making Work Pay Credit (MWPC) was enacted as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) which was signed into law on Feb. 17, 2009. The maximum credit is $400 for single taxpayers and $800 for married taxpayers filing jointly. The credit will be available for 2009 and 2010.

In many ways the MWPC is similar to the Economic Recovery Payment (ERP) which was enacted in the Economic Stimulus Act for the 2008 tax year. Both the MWPC and the ERP are calculated based on earned income and both are phased out above a modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) of $75,000 for singles and $150,000 for married filing jointly. Both the ARRA and the economic stimulus act were designed to put more money in the public’s pocket in order to turn around the depressed economy and to help consumers start spending.

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About the Author

Edward A. Zurndorfer is a Certified Financial Planner and Enrolled Agent in Silver Spring, Maryland. He is also a registered representative with Multi-Financial Securities Corporation (Branch A9X), member FINRA/SIPC, also located in Silver Spring, Maryland.

© 2007-2009 My Federal Retirement. All Rights Reserved.

Cost of CSRS retirement fix pegged at $40 million over 10 years

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

A bill aimed at modifying the way retirement benefits are calculated for certain federal employees who work part-time at the end of their careers would cost the government $39 million from 2010 to 2019, the Congressional Budget Office reported this week.

The legislation (S. 469), sponsored by Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, would modify the way retirement annuities are calculated for employees covered under the Civil Service Retirement System. Currently, CSRS employees who retire with part-time service late in their careers could see reduced annuities.

According to the CBO report, the bill would provide an average of $2,000 more in retirement benefits per year for about 650 of the expected retirees from the CSRS system in 2010. Additional retirements by 2019 would boost the overall cost of the measure to $39 million, according to CBO.

At the same time, the budget office reported, a bill that would let agencies rehire retirees without cutting their annuities would not cost taxpayers extra.

The bill (S. 629), sponsored by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, aims to give federal agencies greater flexibility to hire back retirees on a limited part-time basis. Supporters say it will give agencies a way to quickly hire experienced workers to help deal with issues such as administering economic stimulus funds, while critics — such as the American Federation of Government Employees — claim that it would circumvent fair hiring processes.

The CBO report on the bill said agencies would likely hire retirees whether or not the legislation passed. Already, more than 1,800 retirees are working for the government, and that doesn’t include employees at the Defense Department. Agencies currently must request waivers of the annuity cuts from the Office of Personnel Management.

“The bill would primarily reduce the administrative burden of issuing waivers, rather than significantly increase the number of retirees reentering the federal workforce,” the report stated. “Based on those assumptions …CBO estimates that S. 629 would not have a significant impact on the federal budget.”

Supporters of the measure said the report could help the legislation’s chances of passage.

“The current Congress is very budget-conscious,” said Jessica Klement, government affairs director for the Federal Managers Association.

Because the bill wouldn’t cost the government extra money, it could be passed without violating the House’s pay-go rules, which require new entitlement programs or tax cuts be offset by spending cuts or revenue increases.

The language for both of the provisions CBO evaluated was in an amendment offered to the tobacco regulation bill (H.R. 1256), but was stripped out by the Senate.

The amendment also contained several other provisions affecting government workers, including language allowing employees covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System to count unused sick time toward their retirement, and a measure allowing FERS employees who leave the government to redeposit their retirement money if they want to return to government service.

CBO previously scored these provisions in its report on H.R. 1256, which is awaiting President Obama’s signature. According to the budget office, the FERS sick leave change would cost $600 million over 10 years.

By Alex M. Parker, Government Executive – June 19, 2009

Retirement reform bill clears the House

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

The House on Wednesday approved a retirement reform measure that includes language ensuring sick leave is treated similarly in both federal retirement systems. The bill (H.R. 1804) would give workers in the newer Federal Employees Retirement System credit for their unused sick leave when they retire, putting them on par with colleagues in the older Civil Service Retirement System. It also contains provisions to enroll new employees automatically in the Thrift Savings Plan and create a Roth Individual Retirement Account option within the 401(k)-type program. It gives the TSP board the authority to add self-directed investment window options if doing so is in the best interest of participants.

Finally the legislation, sponsored by House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., would remove rules that effectively penalize CSRS employees for working part-time at the end of their careers and would allow FERS employees returning to government after a stint in the private sector to reinvest their retirement savings and claim credit for previous service.

The House passed the 2009 Federal Retirement Reform Act by a voice vote.

Federal employee and managers’ groups praised passage of the bill, especially the provision equalizing sick leave policies under FERS and CSRS.

“Both groups of employees are dedicated public servants and both groups deserve to have their sick leave counted,” said Colleen Kelley, president of the National Treasury Employees Union.

The Federal Managers Association noted that the measure would give FERS employees incentives to avoid taking unnecessary sick days, reducing the cost of sick leave to the government. FMA also applauded the TSP provisions and incentives for FERS employees to return to government service.

Darryl Perkinson, the group’s national president, urged the Senate to take up the measure and pass it quickly.

Government Executive

OPM urged to notify CSRS participants about survivor annuity rule

Monday, February 9th, 2009

A Washington advocacy group has asked the Office of Personnel Management to make sure federal employees in the Civil Service Retirement System are aware of a loophole that could prevent their spouses or ex-spouses from claiming a survivor’s annuity.

The Pension Rights Center sent OPM acting Director Kathie Ann Whipple a letter urging her to notify all CSRS participants that if they left government and died before claiming their federal benefits, their widows or widowers would not receive an annuity.

“It is essential that CSRS employees have this information when making decisions that could have such significant impact on their families,” the letter stated.

The request comes after a Pension Rights Center project aiming to prevent poverty among older women received calls from women caught off-guard by the policy. “Because participants in CSRS are not covered by Social Security, these pension benefits are, for many of these women, the primary or only source of retirement income,” the group wrote.

Under current law, survivors of federal employees covered by CSRS receive annuities if the employee died while working for the government or retired and immediately began collecting pension benefits. But survivors of CSRS employees who left the government and died before age 62, or reached age 62 but died before filing an application for CSRS retirement, are eligible only for a lump-sum payment of the employee’s retirement contributions, without interest.

Excerpt from GovExec.com

Full Article can be found here.
By Brittany R. Ballenstedt bballenstedt@govexec.com

What is the CSRS Retirement All About?

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

The Civil Service Retirement Act, which became effective on August 1, 1920, established a retirement system for certain Federal employees. It was replaced by the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) for Federal employees who first entered covered service on and after January 1, 1987.

The Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) is a defined benefit, contributory retirement system. Employees share in the expense of the annuities to which they become entitled. CSRS covered employees contribute 7, 7 1/2 or 8 percent of pay to CSRS and, while they generally pay no Social Security retirement, survivor and disability (OASDI) tax, they must pay the Medicare tax (currently 1.45 percent of pay). The employing agency matches the employee’s CSRS contributions.

CSRS employees may increase their earned annuity by contributing up to 10 percent of the basic pay for their creditable service to a voluntary contribution account. Employees may also contribute a portion of pay to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP). There is no Government contribution, but the employee contributions are tax-deferred.

Source: OPM