Showing posts with label Retirement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Retirement. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Meet the postal worker, 90, who has no plans to retire and 'turn into a couch potato'


Meet the postal worker, 90, who has no plans to retire and 'turn into a couch potato'


'Leroy Brown was just about to start his career with the United States Postal Service. His first day: Dec. 31, 1955. ...He's still going strong, working in the Los Angeles International Service Center, a USPS processing center. The 90-year-old is in his 70th year of service to the federal government, including a two-year stint in the U.S. Army...Retirement doesn't seem to be in the nonagenarian's plans. He's healthy, he's active, he loves being around other people and, well, he's not really sure what he'd do anyway. "I don't want to turn into a couch potato," Brown said. "I don't just want to sit around in one place."...'


Reference: www.jsonline.com
Tags: ...a retired postal worker,Postal Retirement, 70 years of Federal Service,Leroy Brown, Retirement,


Monday, May 23, 2022

Meet the Stone Mountain Hookers—a women’s fishing club

Title: Meet the Stone Mountain Hookers—a women’s fishing club

Article Snip: "...Betty Pompey, a Stone Mountain community leader who retired as an executive with the U.S. Postal Service, said she had some fishing experience while living in Savanah. “I showed up with large surf-fishing lures and a big, heavy-duty rod, prompting some laughter,” said Pompey. Now others in the club have rods, reels, line and hooks suitable for local lake fishing for the Bream, Bass, Crappie and Catfish. ..."

Reference: ocgnews.com


Friday, April 9, 2021

How Unpaid Leave Impacts Your Benefits

Title: How Unpaid Leave Impacts Your Benefits

Article Snip: "...You won’t earn any annual or sick leave for a pay period in which you reach a total of 80 hours of LWOP. However, you will earn annual and sick leave during the following pay periods until you once more accumulate 80 hours of LWOP. Then your ability to earn sick or annual leave will end. If you are a part-time employee, the amount of leave you earn will be proportionately less..."

Reference: www.fedweek.com
How Unpaid Leave Impacts Your Benefits,Retirement benefits and LWOP, Retirement,

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Social Security, Medicare and Retirement Plan Changes for 2021

Title: Social Security, Medicare and Retirement Plan Changes for 2021

Article Snip: "...From the pandemic to politics and the economy, it’s been a wild year, especially for those near or in retirement. While some uncertainty remains in the outlook for 2021, here’s what you need to know about Social Security, Medicare premiums and retirement plan contributions..."

Reference: www.thestreet.com
social security,Medicare, Retirement, 2021,

Monday, November 16, 2020

Average Retirement Income 2020: How Do You Compare?

Title: Average Retirement Income 2020: How Do You Compare?

Article Snip: "...Average Retirement Income from Pensions: A mere 31 percent of today’s retirees have retirement income from a pension, a 6% drop over recent years. This number is trending further downward. Consider yourself extremely lucky if you have this income..."

Reference: www.newretirement.com
Average Retirement Income, Retirement, Median vs Mean, Average Retirement Income from Pensions,

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Retire Before Age 40?! 10 Towns Where Your Dream Can Come True

Title: Retire Before 40?! 10 Towns Where Your Dream Can Come True

Article Snip: "...#1 is Huntsville, Alabama, Average salary: $54,630**, Percentage of high-paying jobs: 28.1%, Median home sale price: $202,900. This Southern city is anything but sleepy, since it serves as home to the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, the U.S. Army’s Redstone Arsenal, and offices for Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman. With such aerospace, defense, and tech heavyweights in the area, Huntsville is famed for its educated workforce and sky-high wages to go with it. Paired with Huntsville's low home prices and a cost of living 3.3% lower than the national average..."

Reference: www.chron.com
Huntsville Alabama, Alabama, Retirement,

Friday, July 5, 2019

Retired feds avoid high-tax states

Title: Retired feds avoid high-tax states

Article Snip: "...Nine states don’t have any personal or state tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington and Wyoming. Another nine states exempt CSRS and FERS annuities from state tax: Alabama, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York and Pennsylvania...When it comes to the highest sales tax Tennessee, surprisingly, is No. 1 with a rate of 9.47%, which is why a lot of residents drive north to Kentucky — 38th with 6% sales tax..."

Reference: federalnewsnetwork.com
high-tax states for retirement, Retirement,

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Average Retirement Debt

Title: Average Retirement Debt

Article Snip: "...According to the survey, 8 in 10 middle-income Boomers currently have some debt. Three in 10 devote more than 40% of their monthly income to debt and a quarter have a mortgage with more than 20 years remaining on it. More than half say they intend to enter retirement debt free, but only one-quarter of retired Boomers actually are debt free..."

Reference: www.newretirement.com
Retirement Debt, Retirement,

See how your retirement savings compares to other workers earning a similar salary

Title: See how your retirement savings compares to other workers earning a similar salary

Article Snip: "...Employees earning between $40,000 and $60,000 are likely to have a little more room in their budget to save for retirement. The median 401(k) balance ranges from $16,502 among 20-somethings to $113,504 for workers in their 50s, according to the EBRI analysis. People in their 40s ($79,786) have saved a median of over twice as much as those in their 30s ($35,602). "A moderate earner now is likely in a lower tax bracket, so paying taxes on income and contributing to a Roth now makes sense..."

Reference: money.usnews.com
401k, Retirement,

Monday, August 7, 2017

One Of The Longest-Serving Postal Workers Retires After 60 Years

Title: One Of The Longest-Serving Postal Workers Retires After 60 Years

Article Snip: "... after 60 years on the job – one of the longest-serving postal workers in history. 83-year-old Garland Gralow remembers the day he was hired. “Could you start tomorrow? – just like that – yeah okay,” Gralow remembered..."

Reference: chicago.cbslocal.com
CSRS,

Friday, May 5, 2017

How to Cut Your Tax Bill on Your Federal Retirement Income

Title: How to Cut Your Tax Bill on Your Federal Retirement Income

Article Snip: "...This article will be of more interest to retirees than it will to current federal employees, however, if you’re close to retirement, you will pick up some helpful information if you read it..."

Reference:www.fedsmith.com

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Planning for a Delayed Retirement

Title: Planning for a Delayed Retirement

Article Snip: "...According to the Office of Personnel Management, the average retirement age for a federal employee between 2005 and 2014 was 60.2 years and average length of service was 27.8 years; 54 percent of those were age 60 or older; and half of retirees had 30 or more years of service..."

Reference: www.govexec.com
Data Sources, Retirement Data, Retirement, Average Retirement Age, Delayed Retirement,

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Are Federal Employees next?

Issa's 'Postal Destruction' Bill Passes House Subcommittee

Title: Postal Bill Would Authorize Layoffs, Force Out Senior Employees First

Article Snip: "...employees who are eligible for retirement must be laid off before employees who are ineligible, and dictates that retirement-eligible employees with the longest service must be separated first. The new language also forbids the payment of severance pay to retirement-eligible employees. ..."

Reference: www.apwu.org
destruction of the American working class, Attacks on Federal Workers, Layoffs, retirement, Rep. Issa,

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Golden years losing luster

Title: Golden years losing luster
Article Snip: "...Social Security benefits will replace just 28 percent of a recipient's preretirement income in 2030, on average, down from 39 percent in 2002, according to the Center on Retirement Research. The drop will result largely from the increased Medicare payments and higher income taxes Social Security recipients will have to pay...."
Reference: www.bendbulletin.com
Social Security, Retirement,

Monday, December 6, 2010

Your nest egg is a lot skimpier than it should be. Here's what you can do now.

Title: Retiring in 10 Years? Uh-Oh.
Article Snip: "...Imagine this scenario: You're only five or 10 years from when you hope to retire—but your portfolio looks like it needs another lifetime to bulk up. What do you do?..."
Reference: wsj.com
Retirement