AFL COUNCIL FIGHTS MOVE TO MERGE RETIREMENT SETUPS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP57-00384R001200230003-3
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RIFPUB
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K
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1
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November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 5, 2000
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3
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NSPR
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Approved For Release 2000/08/25 : CIA- AFL. Council Fights M we To Merg6 Retirement Setups By Joseph Young The AFL Government Employes 'Council has informed the special Congressional-appointed committee studying the Govern- 'ment's retirement system that it strongly opposes any;"move that would combine or even supplement civil service retirement benefits with social security. In a recent meeting with the committee, leaders of the council, which represents Federal em- ploye unions with more than ever slight, would give Congress 500,000 members, said that new the excuse to abolish the civil l l b e i a. I i zerl ;.;., _-- ....,....,,< ;. ' b e n e f i t s should be en- acted within the frame- Work of the civil service retirement system rather than aug- menting it by social sec u- rity. The com- mittee, which b y Congress Joseph 'Young. to study and recommend changes in the Government's retirement system, is now hearing the views of various employe groups in connection with its project. The committee has not yet decided what it will recommend. It will service retirement system even- tually. They stress the fact that for career employes who work most of their adult life in the' Government, civil service re- tirement benefits are far greater than those provided by social security. presided a L1he meeting. ,}fifty Kaplan is committee chairman. The other members are the Sec- retaries of Defense and Treasury, chairman of the Civil Service Commission, chairman of the Board of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve System, and dirdo. for of the Budget Bureau. All of them were present or had repre- sentatives at the meeting. OVERSIGHT - An apparent oversight in the new veterans preference law approved by Con-. gress deprives the wives of dis= abled veterans and the widows of those killed in action from getting top consideration for civil service jobs. Until now they have held these rights. The new law was aimed pri- marily at requiring veterans to make a passing grade in civil service exams before getting 5 and 10 points preference. It also allows only veterans with at least 10 per cent compensable OTHER PROPOSALS - The disability to go to the top of emnloye leaders also urged the civil service job registers. committee to draft proposals However, the way the new, law that would eventually bring the is written it does not include 800,000 Government indefinite wives and widows among those workers under civil service re- who can go to the top of civil tirement. These employes are service job registers, as they now under social security. could previously. Wives and The employe officials also pro- widows still receive 10 points posed that short-term Federal veterans preference, but they workers be given credit under can no longer be placed ahead the civil service retirement sys- of other eligibles on civil service tem for their term of service, so fob lists. that if they ever return to Gov- ernment they can continue their Undoubtedly, this is due to'an consider the views of actuaries civil service retirement coverage. and financial experts before , The committee was asked to drafting its proposals that are back increased annuities for re- due to be submitted to Congress +,,.e, W.A...1 -,,?U- o?A ,.,, The AFL Federal employe leaders told tl~e committee that 1 they were fearful that linking civil service retirement with social security would eventually cause the disintegration of the civil service retirement system. The employe leaders strongly urged liberalizing Government employes' survivorship insurance benefits, which in most cases are higher under social security. They also urged increasing bene- fits for short-term Federal em- ployes, the benefits of which are also greater under social secu- rity. But these improvements should oversight on the part of those who drafted the law, rather than any deliberate move to deprive the women of these rights. The urge elimination of the cut in i American Legion said it will ask pension that a retired worker Congress when it convenes in January to rectify this oversight. must take if his wife is to re - ceive benefits when he dies. Also, a lower retirement age, especially for employes hit in reductions-in-force, was advo- cated. H. Eliot Kaplan, New York at- torney and civil service expert, Read the Federal Spotlight column in The Star six days a week and listen to the radio edition of the Federal spot- light every Saturday at 7:30 p.m. over WMAL. be made within the framework of the civil service retirement system, the union leaders de- clared. The adamant oppos tion to even supplemental social! security benefits came as a sur- prise to some committee mem- bers. It had always been known that employe groups are strongly opposed to merging civil service retirement with social security. But it had been thought that employes . would not object to supplemental social security benefits such as survivorship in s`~'p}i se 00/08/25 : CIA-RDP57-00384R001200230003-3 parently feel tha any con#nec- tion with social slcurity, how-