President Bush signed the Railroad
Retirement and Survivors' Improvement Act of 2001 into law on December
21, 2001.
The legislation liberalizes early retirement benefits for 30-year
employees, eliminates a cap on monthly retirement and disability
benefits, lowers the minimum service requirement from 10 years to 5
years of service if performed after 1995, and provides increased
benefits for some widow(er)s. The financing sections of the new law
provide for the investment of railroad retirement funds in
non-governmental assets, adjustments in the payroll tax rates paid by
employers and employees, and the repeal of a supplemental annuity
work-hour tax.
The following is a summary of the changes in railroad retirement
benefits and financing provided by the new law, which was based on
joint recommendations to Congress negotiated by a coalition of rail
labor organizations and rail freight carriers.
Railroad Retirement Benefit Provisions
60/30 retirement. The new law amends the Railroad Retirement
Act by eliminating the early retirement reduction applied to the
annuities of 30-year employees retiring between the ages of 60 and 62
if their annuities begin January 1, 2002, or later. The spouses of
such employees would also be eligible for full annuities at age 60.
Full 60/30 benefits have not been payable to 30-year employees
retiring before age 62 since 1983 legislation reduced such early
retirement benefits.
This provision is not retroactive and not applicable to 30-year
employees who retired on the basis of age and service prior to January
1, 2002, or to their spouses, even if their spouses retire after 2001.
However, if a disability annuitant is age 60 and has 30 years'
service, his or her spouse can now receive an unreduced annuity as
early as age 60 if the spouse's annuity beginning date is January 1,
2002, or later.
Maximum provision. The new law eliminates, effective January 1,
2002, a maximum on the amount of combined monthly employee and spouse
benefit payments which had been intended to prevent benefits from
exceeding an employee's creditable earnings prior to retirement. This
maximum provision had the unintended effect of reducing benefits for
former employees with no earnings, or low earnings, in the 10-year
period prior to retirement, and for long-service employees with
moderate earnings.
While not retroactive, the amendment will prospectively increase
benefits, effective January 1, 2002, for almost 2,600 employee and
12,000 spouse annuitants on the Board's rolls whose benefits were
reduced by the maximum provision prior to 2002.
In 2001, the average monthly employee benefit reduction under the
maximum provision was $164, and the average spouse reduction was $78.
The removal of any benefit reductions applied to affected annuitants
should be completed by June 2002. Such annuitants can expect to
receive accrual payments in late May 2002 retroactive to January, and
increased regular monthly payments reflecting their new rates
beginning with the monthly payment due on June 1, 2002.
Notices are being sent by the Board to all affected annuitants in
January 2002 advising them accordingly.
Notices will also be sent in January to employees whose spouses may
have been previously advised by the Board to defer filing for spouse
benefits because of the adverse effects of the maximum provision, as
their spouses would now want to consider filing for railroad
retirement benefits.
Basic service requirement. The new law lowers the minimum
eligibility requirement for regular railroad retirement annuities from
10 years (120 months) of creditable railroad service to five years (60
months) of creditable railroad service for those with five years of
service rendered after 1995. Benefits payable on the basis of this
provision are not retroactive and are not payable earlier than January
1, 2002.
Also, for those with less than 10 years of service, additional
earnings credits acquired under social security coverage would be
required for a tier I benefit. A tier II benefit would be payable even
if the employee never worked under social security coverage.
Additional requirements apply in disability cases. In addition, a
deceased employee with five years' service after 1995 must still have
had a "current connection" with the rail industry in order
for survivor annuities to be payable by the Board under this
provision, rather than the Social Security Administration.
Anyone with five years of service performed after 1995, who was
previously denied benefits because of the 10-year service requirement,
will want to contact a Board office.
Widow(er)s' benefits. The new law establishes an "initial
minimum amount" which is based on the two-tier annuity amount
that would have been payable to the railroad employee at the time the
widow(er)'s annuity is awarded. The initial minimum amount is computed
with a widow(er)'s tier II amount equal to 100 percent of the
employee's tier II amount. Under prior law, the widow(er)'s tier II
amount was equal to 50 percent of the employee's tier II amount; only
the tier I amount equaled 100 percent. Widow(er)s' annuities computed
on the basis of the new initial minimum amount will not be adjusted
for annual cost-of-living increases until the annuity amount is
exceeded by the annuity amount the widow(er) would have been paid
under prior law, with all interim cost-of-living increases otherwise
payable.
This provision is effective February 1, 2002, and is not payable
retroactively. The Railroad Retirement Board estimates that about 20
to 25 percent of the widow(er)s on its rolls in 2001 will see some
increase in their annuity. This provision applies to widow(er)s on the
rolls before the effective date only if the annuity the widow(er) is
currently receiving is less than she or he would have received had the
new law been in effect on the date the widow(er)'s annuity began. Most
widow(er)s' annuities awarded before October 1986 will not be
increased. Many of the widow(er)s' annuities currently being paid are
already higher than the annuity that would be payable under the new
law because of previous cost-of-living adjustments.
Widow(er)s affected by this change can expect to receive any
accrual payments, retroactive to February, in late April of 2002, and
increased regular monthly payments reflecting their new rates
beginning with the payment they receive on May 1, 2002. Letters will
be sent in January to affected widow(er)s on the Board's rolls,
advising them as to whether they will receive an increase. As a
result, widow(er)s do not need to take any action or contact the
Board.
Railroad Retirement Financing Provisions
Investment changes. The new law provides for the transfer of
railroad retirement funds from the Railroad Retirement Accounts to a
new National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, whose Board of
seven trustees is empowered to invest Trust assets in non-governmental
assets, such as equities and debt, as well as in governmental
securities.
The Trust will not be treated as an agency or instrumentality of
the Federal Government. Its Board of Trustees will be comprised of
seven members: three members selected by rail labor to represent the
interests of labor; three members likewise selected by rail management
to represent management interests; and one independent member selected
by a majority of the other six members. The new law also provides that
if the parties involved cannot agree on the selection of Trustees
within 60 days of the law's enactment date, an impartial umpire shall,
at the petition of a party to the dispute, be appointed by the
District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia. The
Trustees will be appointed only from among persons who have experience
and expertise in the management of financial investments and pension
plans. The Trustees will be subject to reporting and fiduciary
standards similar to those under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act.
The new law also allows for railroad retirement benefit payments in
the future to be issued by a qualified non-governmental financial
institution, rather than the Treasury Department. The selection of the
financial institution would be made by the Railroad Retirement Board,
after consulting with the Board of Trustees and the Secretary of the
Treasury. Railroad retirement payments will continue to be processed
through the U.S. Treasury in the meantime.
Effect on payroll tax rates. The new law reduces the tier II
tax rates on rail employers, including rail labor unions, in calendar
years 2002 and 2003, and beginning with 2004 provides automatic
adjustments in the tier II tax rates for both employers and employees.
It also repeals the supplemental annuity work-hour tax rate paid by
employers, beginning with calendar year 2002.
The tier II tax rate on rail employers and rail labor organizations
is reduced from 16.10 percent to 15.60 percent in 2002 and to 14.20
percent in 2003, but the tier II earnings base is not changed; and for
2002, that amount remains at $63,000. The tier II tax rate for rail
employee representatives will be 14.75 percent in calendar year 2002
and 14.20 percent in 2003.
While there will be no change in the tier II tax rate of 4.90
percent on employees in the years 2002 and 2003, beginning with the
taxes payable for calendar year 2004 tier II taxes on both employers
and employees will be based on the ratio of certain asset balances to
the sum of benefits and administrative expenses (the average account
benefits ratio). Depending on the average account benefits ratio, tier
II taxes for employers will range between 8.20 percent and 22.10
percent, while the tier II tax rate for employees will be between 0
percent and 4.90 percent.
The new law does not affect tier I social security equivalent tax
rates. The tier I tax on employees and employers remains the same as
for social security covered employees and employers.
Other revenue provisions. While supplemental railroad
retirement annuities provided by the Railroad Retirement Act continue
to be due and payable, the new law, in addition to repealing the
supplemental annuity work-hour tax, also eliminates the separate
Supplemental Annuity Account under the Railroad Retirement Act.
Supplemental annuities provided under the Railroad Retirement Act will
now be funded through the new National Railroad Retirement Investment
Trust.
No changes were effected in railroad unemployment insurance taxes
on employers.
The Board is making every effort to notify by mail all parties
affected by this legislation as soon as possible. Therefore patience
on the part of annuitants would be appreciated when contacting Board
offices, as a higher than usual volume of calls is expected as a
result of the passage of this legislation.
Railroad Retirement Board offices are open to the public Monday
through Friday, except on federal holidays. Persons can find the
address and telephone number of the Board office serving their area by
calling the Board's automated toll-free Help Line at
1-800-808-0772, or from the Board's Web site at www.rrb.gov.
E-mail inquiries about this legislation can be sent to the RRB by
going to the Board's Web site. Under "Latest News!" on the
opening page, click on "Send us a secure message about the new
Law or its effect on you." |