Sunday, May 21, 2017

Some information links for US Government (CSRS) Retirees


US Federal Government (CSRS) Retiree, Annuitant, and Spousal Information Links



I prepared this note for a family friend. The purpose of this document is merely to gain some information before one calls Government offices and attorneys. This is not a legal opinion. I am not an attorney.

I am putting some information together but there is no guarantee about the completeness, applicability, appropriateness, and relevance of the information presented below.

One may use the information at one’s own discretion and risk.

It is always best to consult an attorney when you need good help.

Some of the links are commercial sites. It is not the purpose of this writer to endorse any of them.

If you are a FERS retiree, then you should look for appropriate links. I may redo the document for FERS retirees later on.



1.      Retirement System:

 US Federal government employees who joined the service before 1982 or so came under Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS).



(Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) applies to those who joined Federal Government Service after January 1, 1984.)



Information about this retirement system is available at the following link.






The retiree will have a Civil Service Retirement Number (Claim Number or CS number) will be required in all correspondence with the OPM (Office of Personnel management) of the US Government.



Their basic annuity is calculated as given at the following link:






2. Retirees or Family Members:


 


Survivors of Annuitants Under the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS)-




 


Information is available at this link.




Information is available online.




The employee/retiree’s CS number has to be entered to get more information. Each employee will have a CS number. It will be on a card that the employee may have.



If one is not readily available, OPM (Office of Personnel Management) can be called and the number obtained.




Some private organizations also provide information. Here is some information from Government Executive Magazine. This is explained quite well here. Some example calculations are also provided there.



(Note: FERS is different from CSRS, and CSRS Retirees and their survivors can ignore information related to FERS employees.)






NARFE (National Association of Retired Federal Employees) also provides information about retirement and spousal benefits in their magazines, newsletters, and website.



http://www.narfe.org/FederalBenefitsInstitute/ (Information is available free of cost to members only. Som discontinued his membership.)





3. Life Events:

Life events are explained here.







4. Life Insurance and Health Insurance:



It is possible that a retiree may have some life insurance based on what he opted for. It is called Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance (FEGLI).



a) Please see Item 10 for FEGLI information.



b) Health insurance is called FEHB.






They may be called and the beneficiary information checked.



They will usually ask for Social Security number, CS number, and date of Birth.








5. Social Security:

If the person worked for private industry, he may have some Social Security coming. That may be adjusted based on the pension that the amount of pension the person receives.



Surviving spouse may also qualify for a part of the Social Security benefit.



Questions should be addressed to Social Security Administration.





I found that it is better to visit your local Social Security Office than calling them on the phone.



6. Thrift Savings Plan (TSP)



CSRS employees do not get any government contribution to TSP. But they could contribute to TSP and defer paying taxes on those contributions.



Check if a person has TSP contributions.






A retiree 70 and ½ years and older would have already been withdrawing Required Minimum Withdrawal (RMD) amount. The balance will go to the surviving beneficiary.



7. Divorce and what pension goes to divorced spouse:



a) Here are links with information.



















b) You may have a court document(s) describing the financial obligations; check them. If you do not have them with you, you can get them from the court where the settlement took place. Most such public documents are obtainable online now.





8. What annuity does a surviving spouse of a Federal retiree get?







9. Contacting OPM:



What the pension a retiree is getting and what insurance premiums he is paying will be known from the notice that OPM sends the retiree annually. There is a lot of information there.



















10. Federal Employees’ Group Life Insurance (FEGLI) Program:

How much FEGLI life insurance coverage do I have?

Please see the following website and call the phone number for information.

https://www.opm.gov/healthcare-insurance/insurance-faqs/life/

Reading this FAQ about FEGLI may answer one’s questions.

How much Federal Employees Group Life Insurance do I have?

http://fedretire.net/a-life-insurance-check-up-understanding-fegli-coverage-%e2%80%93-part-1/ (Federal retire.net may be a private company and not a government agency)

If you are retired contact OPM at 1-888-767-6738 if you don’t have a record of what you elected for coverage. You can also contact FEGLI at the number located on our web site at http://federalretirement.net/fegli.htm. If retired, check the copies of your retirement paperwork.

https://answers.nssc.nasa.gov/app/answers/detail/a_id/4914/~/how-do-i-change-my-beneficiary-for-fegli%3F

Designation of beneficiary form:

https://www.opm.gov/Forms/pdf_fill/sf2823.pdf

https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/nrcs141p2_018278.pdf

Where to send the form:

https://answers.nssc.nasa.gov/app/answers/detail/a_id/4950/related/1/session/L2F2LzEvdGltZS8xNDkzNTIxMjQyL3NpZC9HVnhua21obg%3D%3D

11. ID Numbers to have ready:

When you call Government Offices, they will ask for some key ID numbers. You get such information from the documents that you have in your files.

You need not visit OPM offices. Most work can be done over the phone. Some work can be done online, if you have registered and remember your User ID and Password.

a) Notice of Annuity Adjustment:

This document comes from OPM (Boyers, Pennsylvania office) once every year (and at other times when cost of living adjustments are made for your pension).

This will describe how much annuity a retiree gets and how it is dispersed. This document might provide a lot of information that one need not ask OPM about.



It also has the Claim number or CSA number (8 digits). This number will be needed when OPM Retirement Services is contacted.



(When a Federal employee retires, his/her files are sent to Boyers, Pennsylvania office and Washington DC office may not have them. The DC office may contact Boyers or look at computer files. This is my knowledge; I hope it is correct.)



b) Statement of Annuity Paid:

This document comes (in late January or early February each year) just before you prepare income taxes. It also comes from OPM’s Boyer, Pennsylvania office.



c) Social Security Numbers:

You would have them on cards or you would have them on your tax filing documents.



d) Social Security Benefit Statement:

If any social security is being paid to you, this statement comes for the Social Security office in February each year.



e) Date of Birth:

Date of Birth, place of birth will be asked by some or most offices.

{It is important to record such information on paper and put it in a safe deposit box at your bank. If you forget such information, you can readily get it or your trusted loved ones can get it for you to help you.}

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