Five Percent Increase in Employee Pension Contributions Passes House
Friday, May 11, 2012(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Thursday, a
bill containing a five percent increase in
federal worker pension contributions passed the
House of Representatives, bringing with it
considerable risk for already cash-strapped
federal families.
Introduced by
Republican Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan
(R-WI), the Sequester Replacement
Reconciliation Act seeks to increase current
federal workers’ retirement contributions for
FERS employees from 0.8% to 5.8%, and from 7%
to 12% for those enrolled in CSRS. The proposed
pension hike would be phased in over five
years, though new hires with less than five
years of federal experience would be required
to pay the full 5.8%
immediately.
In short, if
this bill becomes law, it will effectively cut
your take-home pay by 5%, without receiving a
dime in return.
“These cuts
are unacceptable,” said NFFE National President
William R. Dougan. “A five percent decrease in
take home pay will cost federal workers tens of
thousands over the course of their careers.
More critically, it would take much needed cash
out of their pockets and their communities. In
an economy like this, we can’t afford to play
political games with these workers’
livelihoods.”
Beginning in
2013, the measure would also abolish the FERS
Annuity Supplement for new hires, burning a
critical bridge between a federal career and a
secure retirement. This, in addition to the
immediate contribution increase, would make
retirement for these employees a distant and
uncertain dream.
According to
Ryan, the bill was designed to avoid
sequestration cuts which are scheduled to hit
the Department of Defense next year. Cuts to
Defense and other federal programs are required
since the Congressional Super Committee failed
to secure enough cuts to avoid the
sequestration trigger. Now, Ryan is asking for
federal employees to pick up the tab for
lawmakers’ mistakes.
“We can’t
keep treating federal employees like a piggy
bank,” said Dougan. “No group of individuals
have sacrificed more to pay down the federal
deficit than federal workers over the past two
years. They have rent to pay, gas to buy, and
kids to send to college, just like everyone
else. Certain members of Congress think you can
get blood from a stone, but the fact is that
federal workers have given all they can, and
they will not take it
anymore.”
Luckily for federal workers, many in the Democrat-controlled Senate agree, and have pledged to kill this bill once it arrives. NFFE will be joining them on Capitol Hill every step of the way to make sure this bill never becomes a law.
