Public Employers SSA-1945
AnneHa
214 Posts
We received notification YESTERDAY from our retirement system that employers who do not take FICA deductions from payroll checks have to file the above form with our retirement system for every new hire after January 1, 2005. Fortunately, turnover is low so I don’t have much catching up to do, but I am ticked that the SSA didn’t bother to let us know about this. The form is located at:
[url]http://www.socialsecurity.gov/form1945/SSA-1945.pdf[/url]
Anne in Ohio
[url]http://www.socialsecurity.gov/form1945/SSA-1945.pdf[/url]
Anne in Ohio
Comments
Anne in Ohio
The legislature a few years back changed the system rule to say that all you need to retire is four years. Coincidentally, that's the term of their service, if defeated. They had a bill two years ago that would effectively double their retirement, only theirs. Some of us caught it and exposed them in letters to the editor. Of course they all said they had not even read the bill.
Yes, we have a cost of living. It's referred to as a 13th check. I elect to get mine on December 15. There is the option to have that divided among the 12 monthly checks. I'd rather have a Christmas surprise though. That way I don't even have to balance a checkbook in December or January. It multiplies exponentially. For example if the first year after you retired, the formula granted you an $800 COLA, then it grows by $800 each year, so that in your tenth retirement year, your COLA check would be $8000. It's a guaranteed growth COLA, in that it cannot be diminished or discontinued even with market fluctuations.
Anne Williams
Attorney Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers, LLC