![]() | ||
![]() |
Texas AFT | |
| Home Calendar About Us Join Links for Locals Recent News Press Center Our Issues Political Action Member Benefits Members Page Resources Publications and Reports Professional Development Useful Links Legal Issues AFT.org Contact Us |
Support New Legislation for Social Security Fairness!
Updated August 27, 2009 Send a letter to Congress (New Letter! If you've participated before August 26, 2009, you can participate again.) The latest news on the new Social Security Fairness Act On Page 2... The latest news on the new Social Security Fairness Act The Fairness Act as of the August 2009 recess has 304 cosponsors in the U.S. House, 29 in the U.S. Senate. All 12 Democrats in the Texas delegation to the U.S. House are cosponsors; so are nine of the 20 Texas Republican members. Neither of the two Republican U.S. senators from Texas is on board. The nine Republican cosponsors are: Michael Burgess of Flower Mound, John Carter of Round Rock, Michael Conaway of Midland, Louie Gohmert of Tyler, Ralph Hall of Rockwall, Michael McCaul of Austin, Randy Neugebauer of Lubbock, Ron Paul of Lake Jackson, and Ted Poe of Humble. For the record, the 11 Texans in the U.S. House who have chosen not support the Fairness Act, all Republicans, are: Joe Barton of Ennis, Kevin Brady of The Woodlands, John Culberson of Houston, Kay Granger of Fort Worth, Jeb Hensarling of Dallas, Sam Johnson of Plano, Kenny Marchant of Irving, Pete Olson of Sugar Land, Pete Sessions of Dallas, Lamar Smith of San Antonio, and Mac Thornberry of Amarillo. In the 2007-2008 session of Congress, AFT and coalition allies in the fight to pass the Social Security Fairness Act made new headway, as both the U.S. Senate and U.S. House Social Security Subcommittees held hearings on the adverse impact of the two offsets. For the 2007 Senate hearing, Texas AFT submitted written testimony.(Click here for an account of that hearing.) Texas AFT Secretary-Treasurer John O'Sullivan testified at the 2008 House hearing on the adverse impact of these two pension offsets. (Click here for a discussion of that hearing.) You can send your representative and senators a letter today urging them to take immediate action to repeal the Government Pension Offset and Windfall Elimination Provision. You also can contact them on the Texas AFT toll-free line to the U.S. Capitol switchboard: 1-866-327-8670. Social Security Offsets Target Texas School Employees Government Pension Offset Windfall Elimination Provision What Were They Thinking? The results have been disastrous. As a resolution filed in the Texas legislature noted, these offsets “severely and unfairly penalize recipients of public pensions,” including Texas teachers and other school employees as well as police officers, firefighters, and other public servants. The offsets especially harm lower-income employees. And they discourage qualified individuals from entering the teaching profession in Texas lest they lose their earned Social Security benefits.More than a million public servants are adversely affected by these Social Security benefit offsets. The victims are concentrated in Texas and 12 other so-called "non-Social-Security" states ( Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Rhode Island). The American Federation of Teachers, Texas AFT's national affiliate, is part of a nationwide coalition seeking the repeal of these offsets, and Texas AFT works with AFT counterparts in other states to build support for the Fairness Act. How Do We Get Congress To Undo The Damage? What the Fairness Act would do Obstacles: Defenders of the offsets justify them as a protection against “windfalls” that are out of proportion to an individual’s lifetime contributions, but the unjust result is that individuals with substantial Social Security earnings coverage, comparable to the earnings of other beneficiaries who are not subject to offsets, are singled out for substantial reduction of Social Security benefits because they are public servants. The impact of these offsets is disproportionately suffered by low-income school employees and women. (Average retirement benefits for Texas school employees are $1,800 a month; included in this average are all employees from superintendents to custodians. Texas TRS pensioners do not receive an automatic COLA. The average TRS retiree receives only 58 percent of final average pay in retirement.) The reality is that the GPO and WEP do serious damage to the retirement security of millions of current and future school retirees and make recruitment and retention of qualified staff even harder for our schools. The main argument against the Fairness Act is cost. But let’s put that cost in perspective. The annual cost of the Fairness Act would be equal at most to 2 or 3 percent of the “tax gap”–the revenue owed but not paid to the IRS each year, primarily by business entities. Thus, the annual cost of the Fairness Act could be fully covered by even marginally more effective enforcement of existing tax laws. Or it could be fully covered by closing tax loopholes on income squirreled away abroad by American-based multinational corporations. These are just two possibilities. There is a way to fund the Fairness Act, if there’s a will. |
|
|
© American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO. All rights reserved. Photographs and illustrations, as well as text, cannot be used without permission from the AFT. |