FEDERAL-POSTAL
COALITION
January 13, 2011
The President
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20504
Dear Mr. President:
On
behalf of the 4.6 million federal and postal workers and annuitants represented
by the
national member organizations of the Federal-Postal Coalition, we urge you to
reject the
recommendations made by co-chairs of the National Commission on Fiscal
Responsibility and Reform to cut federal civilian retirement and health
benefits, freeze
federal pay and reduce the federal workforce by 10 percent, and to exclude such
items
from the Administration’s Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 budget proposal.
There is no public policy basis to accept the proposed reductions to federal
civilian
retirement since the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund (CSRDF) is
fully
funded and financially sound. According to the Congressional Research Service:
“Using
a
75-year projection period, the Office of Personnel Management estimates that the
total
value of securities in the trust fund will grow throughout the projection
period, ultimately
reaching about 4.2 times payroll, or nearly 18 times the amount needed to pay
annual
benefits . . . [B]ecause the budget cost of the system can never exceed the cost
of monthly
benefits to living annuitants, the cash required from the Treasury or taxpayers
will never
exceed the cost of those monthly payments.”
For that reason, we are deeply troubled by the commission co-chairs’ proposal to
calculate federal civilian retirement annuities on the highest five years of
salary instead of
the highest three years. According to the Congressional Budget Office, this plan
would
reduce a Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) annuity by an average of $1,424
in
2010 and by an average of $7,148 over five years. A Federal Employees Retirement
System (FERS) annuity would be cut by an average of $462 in 2010 and would be
reduced by an average of $2,322 over five years.
Plans to require FERS workers to contribute a higher percentage of their
salaries towards
their defined benefit annuities would have the effect of a significant pay cut.
While
FERS and CSRS employees currently make payroll contributions to the CSRDF,
historically, most medium and large private-sector employers have not required
their
workers to make any contributions toward their defined benefit pensions.
The co-chairs’ proposal to use the so-called “Chained” Consumer Price Index
(C-CPI-U)
to
set cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) is estimated by the CBO to lower the
Social
Security benefit by three percent after a 10-year period and would likely result
in a
similar reduction to federal civilian and military retirement COLAs. Rather than
adjust
the price index for determining COLAs to reflect the disproportionately high
health care
costs paid by older Americans, the commission proposal to use the C-CPI-U would
further erode federal annuitant inflation protection.
Similarly, the plan to require federal annuitants to pay a higher share of the
Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) premium would impose an unfair burden
on
retirees and survivors whose medical costs are significantly higher than younger
enrollees. In addition, the proposal to pilot premium support under FEHBP would
turn
FEHBP into a defined contribution premium support plan that offers federal
employees a
fixed subsidy that grows by no more than GDP plus 1 percent per year,
guaranteeing
additional cost-shifting onto an enrollee population that has suffered major
increases in
premiums over the past several years. According to the September 2010 Kaiser
Family
Foundation report on employer-sponsored health insurance, the average 30 percent
paid
by
federal workers and annuitants for FEHBP premiums is about the same share paid
by
private-sector workers and retirees.
Freezing or cutting pay sends the wrong signal to the best and brightest workers
federal
agencies will need to recruit and retain to make government operate more
efficiently,
prevent the next terrorist attacks, fight two wars, cure diseases, provide
assistance to
unemployed and disabled Americans and treat wounded military personnel and
veterans.
Indeed, the Office of Personnel Management reported in October that the salary
advantage private-sector workers have over federal employees grew to 24 percent
in
2010, two percentage points higher than in 2009.
Cutting the federal workforce by 10 percent is more about politics than good
human
resource management. In fact, 60 percent of all federal workers will be eligible
to retire
in
the next five years. We can ill afford to lose our most talented and experienced
employees at a time when we are facing unprecedented crises.
In
light of the growing number of critical challenges being tasked to federal
workers, the
government cannot afford to make substantial reductions to the earned
compensation of
individuals who have dedicated their careers to public service. For that reason,
we urge
not to include these ill-conceived proposals in your FY 2012 budget
recommendations to
Congress. Instead, we ask that you defend the integrity of a system that
provides wages,
health and retirement benefits compensation to 4.6 million federal workers and
annuitants
Sincerely,
American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE)
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
Federal Aviation Administration Managers Association (FAAMA)
Federal Managers Association (FMA)
Federally Employed Women (FEW)
International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF)
Laborers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA)
National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association (NARFE)
National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC)
National Association of Postal Supervisors (NAPS)
National Association of Postmasters of the United States (NAPUS)
National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association (NRLCA)
National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU)
Professional Aviation Safety Specialists (PASS)
Professional Managers Association (PMA)
Staff Contacts:
Beth Moten
Director, Legislative & Political Affairs
American Federation of Government
Employees
Email:
motenb@afge.org
Phone: (202) 639-6413
Maureen Gilman
Legislative and Political Director
National Treasury Employees Union
Email:
maureen.gilman@nteu.org
Phone: 202-572-5522
Dan Adcock
Legislative Director
National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association (NARFE)
E-mail:
dadcock@narfe.org
Phone: 703-838-7760
cc: Jack Lew, Director, Office of Management and Budget
=