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Last month, Congress moved to take rare bipartisan action to change certain Social Security rules.
The House of Representatives on Nov. 12 passed the Social Security Fairness Act by an overwhelming 327 to 75 majority.
The proposal would eliminate rules that reduce Social Security benefits for those who also receive income from public pensions, roughly around 2.8 million people.
For supporters of the bill, that legislative victory has been followed by a suspenseful wait. The Senate must also pass the proposal for it to become law. And the number of legislative days left in this session of Congress are quickly running out.
At a Wednesday rally on Capitol Hill, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, promised to put the bill up for a vote.
“I am here to tell you the Senate is going to take action,” Schumer said, prompting cheers from the crowd including fire fighters, police, postal workers, teachers and other government employees, who stood outside the Capitol building in the rain.
“I got all my Democrats lined up to support it,” said Schumer, adding they need 15 Republicans.
“What’s happening to you is unfair, un-American,” Schumer said. “I will fight it all the way.”
Bette Marafino, an 86-year-old retired teacher and a member of a national grassroots task force that has pushed to have the rules eliminated, was at the Capitol when the House voted in November.
The vote prompted cheers that turned into tears of joy from the small group of advocates who witnessed it. “We were so happy,” Marafino said.
Now, she is worried what may happen if the Senate does not pass the bill by Dec. 20.
“It’s going to be start all over again, and we’ll need to have some champions,” Marafino said, now that Reps. Garret Graves, R-La., and Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., who co-led the bill, are leaving Congress.
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The WEP affects about 2.1 million Social Security beneficiaries — or about 3% of all Social Security beneficiaries — who see their retirement or disability benefit checks reduced because they also receive pension benefits from jobs not covered by Social Security.
The GPO affects almost 746,000 individuals — about 1% of all Social Security beneficiaries — by reducing spousal or widow(er) benefits because of pensions from non-covered government employment.
Rather than eliminate the rules altogether, some experts have suggested it would make more sense to replace them with more precise formulas for adjusting benefits.
Yet groups like the International Association of Fire Fighters maintain eliminating the rules altogether is the best policy.
The starting salary for a firefighter in Louisiana is around $40,000, said Edward Kelly, general president of IAFF. To make ends meet, those professionals often take on second or third jobs, where they do pay Social Security payroll taxes. Yet once they become eligible for the program’s benefits, they have that income reduced.
Generally, workers who pay in the same amount as non-public employees can see their monthly benefits reduced by $500 or $600, Kelly said.
“That’s devastating and it’s patently unfair,” Kelly said. “You’re basically being discriminated against for your public service.”
Public workers say Social Security cuts hurt
For many public workers, the reduction of their Social Security benefits comes as a surprise.
However, those disclosures did not include any information on the WEP or GPO penalties, he said.