FWA Pens Letter to Payroll Tax Conferees Urging Opposition to Pay, Retirement Cuts
Thursday, January 26, 2012(Federal Workers Alliance)
Federal Workers Alliance Chairman William R. Dougan penned a letter today to the members of a Congressional conference committee tasked with passing a bill to extend the payroll tax cut. One of the two bills in conference is ridden with painful cuts to federal pay and benefits and could be devastating for federal workers and their families. In the letter, Dougan asks that conferees stand up for the middle class, and stand with federal employees. Here is the full text of the letter:
Dear
Conferee:
On behalf of the Federal
Workers Alliance (FWA), comprising 22 unions
representing over 300,000 federal employees, we
ask you to reject financing the Social Security
payroll tax extension at the expense of the
federal employees whom we represent. The
House-passed bill, H.R. 3630, funds these
extensions by penalizing federal workers in a
number of ways. The Senate version of this
legislation rejected these harmful
“pay-fors,” and we ask that you reject them
in the conference
committee.
First, we ask that you reject
the extension of the pay freeze. Federal
employees have already contributed $60 billion
to deficit reduction through the existing
two-year pay freeze. Based on a two percent
calculation for cost-of-living adjustments, the
pay freeze results in nearly a
$20,704.35 pay cut for a
federal worker earning an annual salary of
$50,000 over the next decade, and a $ 47,137.93
pay cut over 20 years. This
significant loss in pay is an unjust burden on
the nurses who care for our veterans, law
enforcement officers who patrol our borders,
civilian defense workers who support our
troops’ missions, and inspectors who ensure
the safety of our food and
medicines.
Second, we ask that you reject
the proposed increase in the pension
contribution. H.R. 3630 would require
federal workers to contribute an additional
1.5% of their salary to their retirement
without any corresponding increase in benefits.
Currently, a federal worker who makes $50,000
per year will receive a federal pension of just
$15,000 per year after 30 years of service.
Third, we ask that you reject
the elimination of the Federal Employee
Retirement System (FERS) minimum Social
Security supplement for workers not subject to
mandatory retirement. Many workers must retire
early for reasons outside their control, such
as illness or to care for a sick spouse or
parent.
These workers have counted on these
funds when planning their retirement and
eliminating it now would compromise their
retirement
security.
Finally, we ask that you reject
a proposal to establish a new retirement system
for federal employees hired beginning in 2013.
This new system would change the pension
calculation from the employees’ “high-3”
to a “high-5” salary and would increase the
current employee contribution from .08 percent
to 4 percent. It is estimated that these
changes would lower pension values by
approximately 30 percent despite a much higher
contribution on the part of those workers. Data
shows that current retirement benefits, such as
FERS, are one of the key ways that the federal
government recruits and retains the best and
brightest workers. These changes would
compromise that important
standard.
We ask that you reject these
provisions in H.R. 3630 that would freeze pay
and cut benefits for federal workers in the
House-Senate conference committee. Thank
you for your consideration of this
request.
Sincerely,
William R.
Dougan
Chairman
