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VERA
SUMMARY RETIREMENT (6/28/04) · Eligibility ─ You must be an employee in a competitive area that is undergoing a restructuring, reshaping or repositioning of the workforce that results in the elimination, excessing and/or downgrading of a position(s). ─ For employees covered by the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) and for employees covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS), the minimum age and service requirements are: Ø age 50 with 20 years of creditable service, or Ø any age with 25 years of creditable service. ─ For both CSRS and FERS employees, at least five years of service must be creditable civilian service. ─ CSRS employees must have been employed under CSRS for at least one year out of the last two years. · Annuity Commencement Date: ─ CSRS/CSRS Offset Employees: An annuity begins the first day of the month following the effective date of retirement, unless the retirement is effective the first, second, or third day of the month. Then the annuity is effective the day after separation or the day after the last day in pay status. ─ FERS Employees: An annuity is effective on the first day of the month after the effective date of retirement. ─ For CSRS or FERS annuitants, an interim annuity payment (equal to approximately 80 percent of the annuity) begins within eight to ten weeks of the separation date. · Age-based Annuity Reduction: ─ CSRS/CSRS Offset Employees: If you are under age 55, your annuity will be computed like a voluntary optional retirement using calculations based on total creditable years and months of service. Then, your annuity will be reduced at the rate of two percent for each year (or by 1/6th of one percent for each full month) that you are under age 55. This reduction is permanent—your annuity is not recomputed when you reach age 55. ─ FERS Employees: There is no age-based reduction for VER in your annuity if you retire under the age of 55. However, if you are a FERS employee with a frozen CSRS component, then a portion of your annuity is based on a benefit that you accrued under CSRS. Therefore, that portion of your annuity is subject to the reduction mentioned above for CSRS/CSRS Offset employees. HEALTH INSURANCE · To be eligible to carry health insurance coverage into retirement, you must meet two criteria: ─ You must be entitled to retire on an immediate annuity under a retirement system for civilian employees. ─ You must have been continuously enrolled (or covered as a family member) in a Federal Employees Health Benefit (FEHB) program plan for the five years of service immediately before the date your annuity begins or for the full period of service since your first opportunity to enroll (if less than five years). · Your insurance plan does not change and retirement is not an opportunity to elect a new plan. · Your premium payment will increase to the level paid by all other federal annuitants (and federal employees) rather than receiving the more favorable Postal Service employer health benefits contribution. This means the same health plan may be approximately twice as expensive for an annuitant as it is for a postal employee. · As an annuitant, you would pay for health coverage through monthly withholding from your annuity, instead of paying through biweekly withholding from your paycheck (12 payments annually instead of 26 payments annually). Of course, each payment is higher when you pay on a monthly basis. · Tax regulations do not permit you to receive the tax break you receive as an employee under the pretax payment of health insurance premiums provided by the Postal Service. · If you are ineligible to continue existing health insurance coverage into retirements, two options are offered: ─ conversion to an individual policy, or ─ Temporary Continuation of Coverage (TCC). LIFE INSURANCE · To be eligible to carry life insurance coverage into retirement, you must meet the following criteria: ─ You must be entitled to retire on an immediate annuity under a retirement system for civilian employees. ─ You must also have been continuously enrolled in the FEGLI program for the five years of service immediately before the date annuity starts, or for the full period of service since your first opportunity to enroll (if less than five years). ─ You must not have converted to an individual life insurance policy. THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN · Following retirement, you are not eligible to make additional contributions to or borrow money from your Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) account. You may continue to reallocate money among the TSP funds. · If you retire, you will receive extensive information regarding your TSP withdrawal options and whether you may leave your money in TSP. Withdrawal of funds may take at least two months following separation and after the receipt of properly completed forms by TSP. · There are no differences in TSP provisions for retirement under VER versus separation or optional retirement. You will have the same withdrawal choices and tax consequences as any other separated or retired employee of the same separation or retirement date and age. · If you retire before the year that you reach age 55, then any amount that you withdraw from your TSP account before you reach age 59 ½ is subject to an early withdrawal penalty tax of ten percent. However, this penalty tax does not apply to amounts received under certain withdrawal options, such as an annuity or rollover to an Individual Retirement Arrangements. · All employees eligible for VER are fully vested in their TSP contributions and the earnings on those contributions. · If you have an outstanding TSP loan, this would delay a TSP withdrawal because you cannot withdraw funds from your TSP account until you have repaid your loan in full or until your loan has been declared a taxable distribution. FLEXIBLE SPENDING ACCOUNTS · If you are a Flexible Spending Account (FSA) participant, your participation ends as of the day after your retirement. This means that from this date on: ─ You do not owe any more FSA contributions. (Of course, you still are required to make up any contributions you missed before your participation ended. ─ You may request payment only for the expenses of eligible services or items received up to and including your retirement date. Any services or items received after that date are not eligible for payment. ─ Your deadline for submitting claims does not change – it is September 30 of the year following your year of FSA participation. · The Postal Service FSA is not available to you as an annuitant. (Under Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax rules, all employers may only make FSAs available to employees, not retirees). SICK LEAVE · For CSRS employees, the years of service used to compute the annuity are a combination of creditable federal and postal service + unused sick leave hours converted to creditable service. Sick leave is used in the annuity computation, but cannot be used to meet the service credit eligibility requirements for VER. · For FERS employees with a frozen CSRS component in the annuity, you receive credit in the CSRS portion of your annuity only for sick leave you had when you transferred to FERS (or what you have when you retire, if it is less). Sick leave earned since you transferred to FERS is not creditable for retirement purposes. · For FERS employees without a CSRS component, sick leave is not creditable for retirement purposes. ANNUAL LEAVE If you are a nonbargaining unit employee, you may be eligible for a lump sum payment for your earned and unused annual leave up to your annual leave carryover limit plus any annual leave earned and unused in the current year, as well as any unused donated leave. Note: Annual leave in excess of the carryover limit cannot be carried forward in the next leave year. MORE INFORMATION You may wish to consult the following web sites for more information: · Retirement, health insurance, and life insurance · Medicare |