The bill, known as the Social Security Fairness Act, now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature. It passed the Senate by a vote of 76-20 just after midnight on Saturday. The House had already approved a similar bill in November.Last night, the Senate passed our Social Security Fairness Act.
— Ruben Gallego (@RubenGallego) December 21, 2024
This means teachers, firefighters, police officers, and other public servants in AZ will get the Social Security benefits they earned – a clear win for families across our state.https://t.co/VDSue06h3L
Approximately 2.4 million individuals are impacted by WEP and GPO. This includes federal annuitants in the Civil Service Retirement System, firefighters, teachers, and law enforcement officers.Public servants dedicate years of service to improving the lives of their neighbors and caring for their communities. As they retire, they should have full access to their social security benefits. I voted in support of the Social Security Fairness Act to ensure that they do.
— Senator Dick Durbin (@SenatorDurbin) December 23, 2024
The WEP reduces benefits for annuitants who worked in both a public sector position not covered by Social Security and a job that is covered by Social Security. The GPO reduces Social Security for surviving spouses who also worked in the public sector. The two-thirds reduction by GPO often results in a full elimination of the benefit. Advocates have called the WEP and GPO provisions unfair to public servants.The Senate has followed the House and passed our #SocialSecurityFairnessAct by a vote of 85-11. This means that tens of thousands of Ohioans and millions who served communities nationwide will now be able to receive the full retirement benefits they earned.https://t.co/P5uAenvd6b
— Rep. Marcy Kaptur (@RepMarcyKaptur) December 21, 2024
When @POTUS signs the #SocialSecurityFairnessAct into law, millions of teachers, first responders, letter carriers & other public workers will get the fairness they earned.
— Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (@RepDWStweets) December 21, 2024
Penalizing public service is wrong. I’m proud to help correct this costly mistake.https://t.co/IGY2UrWLpp