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Teaching Profession

Many Educators Across America Are on the Verge of a Retirement Benefits Boost

By Mark Lieberman 鈥 December 23, 2024 7 min read
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Hundreds of thousands of current and former K-12 educators nationwide would be newly eligible for full Social Security benefits when they retire, under a bill that has passed Congress and is now waiting President Joe Biden鈥檚 signature.

The eliminates two components of federal retirement policy designed to help low-income retirees that have long drawn the ire of educators and their advocates: the and the .

The House voted 327-75 to approve the bill on Nov. 12. On Dec. 20, 76 U.S. Senators鈥46 Democrats, 27 Republicans, and 3 Independents鈥.

Biden is expected to sign the bill into law. The result: Educators in public school districts who don鈥檛 participate in Social Security would now be eligible for Social Security benefits that account for all their lifetime earnings from employers that do participate.

The changes would affect many of the educators who work or have worked at schools in the 15 states where many or all public school workers aren鈥檛 eligible to participate in Social Security. Specifically, educators in those states who spent substantial portions of their career working in the private sector could now collect full Social Security benefits.

The bill would not change the fact that educators in those 15 states who have worked their entire careers in schools will not be eligible for Social Security benefits upon retirement.

Those states are Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Texas.

How the policy changes will affect retired educators鈥 wallets

To understand how the policy change will work, consider a scenario: A teacher in Kentucky retires from her school district at age 66 after 20 years on the job. Before that, she spent 25 years in the corporate world. And for her last 10 years as a teacher, she also worked a part-time retail job in the private sector.

This hypothetical teacher鈥檚 two private-sector employers withheld Social Security taxes from her paychecks. But under the Windfall Elimination Provision, her Social Security retirement benefits stemming from that private-sector income would be reduced by up to half the payment she receives from her state pension.

Upon the passage of the new law, that same educator would receive her state pension as well as the Social Security benefits tied to her private-sector income.

Similarly, for the smaller number of educators with spouses or deceased relatives who qualify for Social Security benefits from their own employment histories, the Government Pension Offset reduced the benefit amount those educators received by two-thirds of their pension amount. The bill would wipe out that reduction, so a teacher can collect both their pension and their spouse or deceased relative鈥檚 full Social Security benefits.

See also

Thousands of teachers marched and rallied in downtown Los Angeles on Dec. 15, 2018. A month later, more than 30,000 educators went on strike for a pay raise, smaller class sizes, and more support staff.
Thousands of teachers marched and rallied in downtown Los Angeles on Dec. 15, 2018. A month later, more than 30,000 educators went on strike for a pay raise, smaller class sizes, and more support staff.
Damian Dovarganes/AP

In a , the National Education Association, the nation鈥檚 largest teachers union, hailed the legislation鈥檚 passage as an 鈥渁stonishing accomplishment.鈥 The release quotes a Connecticut teacher of 13 years who retired in 2024 and saw her Social Security benefits reduced, even as her relatively short teaching career meant she was eligible for less than one-fifth the maximum pension in her state.

The teacher, Susan Strader, said in a statement that it鈥檚 鈥渄evastating to see how serving as a public employee negatively affected my finances in retirement.鈥

Not everyone sees the policy change as wholly positive, though. Some experts on Social Security benefits worry that without broader reform, adding new costs to the program鈥攑articularly ones that aren鈥檛 precisely targeted to benefit the most economically disadvantaged workers鈥攃ould pose bigger headaches for retirees in the coming decades.

鈥淭his is just giving out more benefits without taking in more revenue,鈥 said Cory Koedel, a professor of public policy and economics at the University of Missouri who has extensively studied Social Security and public pensions.

Without broader reform, 鈥渋t鈥檚 just going to accelerate cost overruns鈥 that eat into future retirees鈥 benefits, he said.

Why many public school workers can鈥檛 tap into Social Security

The Social Security Act, signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935, created a 6.7 percent income tax for private-sector workers and their employers that serves as the basis for Social Security payments to retirees.

Once workers reach their 60s, they begin receiving Social Security checks drawn from current workers鈥 tax payments. The amounts are determined by a complex formula that offers more aid to lower-income retirees.

But this landmark social-welfare policy excluded all public employees, including teachers, firefighters, and municipal workers.

Congress loosened the requirements in the 1950s, giving states the option to extend benefits to public employees as they saw fit. The majority of states did just that, alongside the pension funds they separately maintain for public employees.

But more than a dozen states kept the ban on Social Security benefits for public employees in place, extended Social Security benefits only to certain groups of public employees, or let public employers decide whether or not to offer those benefits.

In Texas, for instance, only 19 out of more than 1,200 public school districts allow all their employees to benefit from Social Security, while another 37 districts permit Social Security benefits only for employees who aren鈥檛 teachers or administrators, according to a .

Researchers estimated a decade ago that . States that held back Social Security benefits reasoned that those educators would be suitably covered by their pensions.

For many educators, that鈥檚 true.

But researchers in 2022 estimated that as many as 1 million state and local government employees, including educators, who aren鈥檛 eligible for Social Security, .

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That鈥檚 because pension benefits are notoriously complex and unevenly distributed.

Many educators don鈥檛 work for school systems long enough to qualify for the maximum benefit. Some states鈥 pension plans adjust payments to account for the rising cost of living, while others do not. And pensions, unlike Social Security, don鈥檛 uniformly afford higher benefits to lower-income workers.

The Windfall Provision Act worsened those pain points for some pension-eligible educators by forcing them to forgo in Social Security benefits they accrued during their professional careers from private-sector jobs.

The Government Pension Offset, meanwhile, reduces pension recipients鈥 Social Security benefits they received from a spouse or deceased relative by up to two-thirds of the pension benefit. Women make up roughly 83 percent of the Social Security-eligible workers affected by this provision, the nonpartisan .

Earlier this year, a school bus driver who transports students with disabilities testified before Congress that if she were to retire, she would be forgoing roughly $1,500 of the $2,100 in monthly Social Security benefits she had been receiving since her husband died 10 years ago.

鈥淢y husband thought he was leaving me with a benefit that would allow me to live with dignity in retirement,鈥 said Ward, according to a from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the union whose Local 11 covers workers in Ward鈥檚 district. 鈥淲e鈥檝e always had a second income to keep us going, and to lose that is just overwhelming.鈥

Some experts worry long-term woes may outweigh some educators鈥 gains

Some proponents of expanded retirement benefits were skeptical that the Social Security Fairness Act was the right fix.

The newly passed changes are projected to , according to the Congressional Budget Office. By 2035, the program was already slated to have .

Koedel sees the newly passed legislation as a victory for advocates of public employees including educators, but not necessarily as a victory for proponents of redistributing resources to those in society with the greatest need.

鈥淩emoving this policy is going to mostly transfer resources to well-off people鈥攏ot millionaires and billionaires, but people who are more well off than average,鈥 said Koedel. 鈥淭ypically that鈥檚 not what I want the government doing.鈥

Some experts have proposed other avenues to improve educators鈥 retirement benefits.

States could expand retirement options for educators by extending Social Security to all educators. Georgia lawmakers , as did Rhode Island lawmakers , but neither bill passed.

The Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank which opposed the Social Security Fairness Act, the federal government could use its increasingly robust access to employment data to ensure that it鈥檚 not withholding Social Security benefits from workers who won鈥檛 earn sufficient retirement income through other means.

And Chad Aldeman, an expert on teacher pensions who has long advocated against eliminating the WEP and GPO, thinks Congress should instead pass a law .

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