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Social Security Reform Implications for State and Local Governments, Public Employees and Public Pension Plans
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Outline for Today History Social Security reform Mandatory coverage GPO and WEP Political and education issues Outlook for late 2004 and early 2005 How can you help?
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History 1935: 1950: 1983: 1986: 1991: Social security excluded public employees Voluntary participation authorized Voluntary withdrawal prohibited GPO and WEP added New hires mandated into Medicare Must cover everyone with Social Security or an equivalent plan
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Social Security Reform No significant action on overall reform Privatization Status of trust fund More active on related issues
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Mandatory Coverage H.R. 3055 H.R. 743 President’s Commission
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Senate Finance Committee “Organizations representing state and local employees report their members are often unaware of these provisions until they apply for retirement benefits. The Committee believes the Social Security Administration should utilize the annual earnings statement mailed to every employee over the age of 25 to more explicitly inform state and local employees about the GPO and WEP.
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These employees should also be informed about their options to avoid these provisions by electing coverage under the Social Security Program.” [emphasis added]
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Government Pension Offset (GPO) Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP)
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WEP S. 1011 H.R. 2011 H.R. 4391
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GPO S. 363 S. 349 (repeal) H.R. 887 H.R. 594 (repeal) House Resolution 523 (discharge petition)
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Other H.R. 2971 H.R. 743 Loophole Employee notification
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GPO/WEP Issues Partial fix v. repeal Cost Stand alone v. overall reform Growing support Limited institutional memory Dangerous mindset emerging (H.R. 743)
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Political and Education Issues
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Education Myth of the new hire Impact on investments Loss of benefits Less money for salaries and equipment Major plan redesign Impact of federal and state deficits
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National Issue = Federal Mandate Uncovered employees in all 50 states Over 5 million public employees and their employer 75% of all public safety officers 40% of all K-12 public school employees Segal study: $26 billion GAO study
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The Political Landscape
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Political Landscape 2004 election Privatization v. government programs AARP Federal and state deficits Defined contribution pressures Social Security reform; need for transitional funding Health care National security
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Hitting Below the Beltway Empower moderates Promote bipartisanship More benefit in drawing distinctions with eye toward the next election than in resolving issues Presidential election year adds another complication Congressional redistricting: greater partisanship Landmark legislation has typically passed when one party has a meaningful majority
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Outlook for 2004 and Early 2005
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2004 Short time frame Remaining budget issues Election year positioning
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2005 Election results Healthcare and budget pressures International events Early honeymoon factor
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What Can You Do?
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You Can Educate members of Congress and staff Educate key state officials Educate individual plan members Build coalitions Update impact information
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Message Not just a public employee retirement system issue Undermine established pension plans, ultimately reducing critical benefits Benefit isn’t worth the pain Not a help for Social Security; make it a two- year bandage that carries an undetermined long-term liability; don’t bash Social Security
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Make it a national issue Unintended consequences hurt average taxpayer in all 50 states; many states are in a deficit situation and unable to bail out pension funds
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Key Louisiana Members Sen. Breaux (Finance) Sen. Landrieu (Appropriations) Rep. Vitter (Appropriations and Budget) Rep. Jefferson (Ways and Means) Rep. McCrery (Ways and Means) 351,000 LAPERS
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www.retirermentsecurity.org Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security 100 North Pitt Street, Suite 403 Alexandria, VA 22314 Phone: (703) 684-3601 Fax: (703) 684-3417 Email: cprs@lgva.net
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Some Parting Thoughts Educate Frame the debate Keep the genie in the bottle
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Ten Commandments of Politics Don’t stand in the middle of the road, you will get hit from both directions. Don’t tell anyone to go to hell unless you can make them go. Your friends come and go, but your enemies accumulate. Love your neighbors, you may need them for a coalition.
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Speak the truth and speak it clearly and succinctly; on two pages and in short sound bites Respect the power of passion; it always beats good intentions. Never say anything on the phone, email or write in a letter that you wouldn’t want your mother to read about in the newspaper.
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Sometimes in the meeting process, the loudest and most persistent voice often prevails; often that person is crazy. Don’t underestimate your opponents; rabbit punches can hurt. When in doubt, do what you think is right; you will please some people and astonish the rest. Twain.
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