Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He collected SS. She had a teaching pension and a very small SS payment (did not even cover Medicare). He died. She received a series of very confusing letters from SS. She took them to a local SS office. They told her she should expect to get two checks every month to collect off both accounts.
This is not our understanding of how SS works. Shouldn't she only collect the higher of the two (adjusting for her pension)?
That is my understanding as well... and there's no adjusting for the pension. Pension has nothing to do with Social Security.
However, while her husband was alive, she should have qualified for a SS amount that was 1/2 of his amount. You say her SS payment was very small? She should have applied for half of his...
Unless there's some kind of teacher related deal- I know in some states, teachers do not pay into social security, and that may affect whether they can claim their husband's SS? I don't know about that.
+1 Even within a state (Georgia, for example), some school systems may not pay into Social Security.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He collected SS. She had a teaching pension and a very small SS payment (did not even cover Medicare). He died. She received a series of very confusing letters from SS. She took them to a local SS office. They told her she should expect to get two checks every month to collect off both accounts.
This is not our understanding of how SS works. Shouldn't she only collect the higher of the two (adjusting for her pension)?
That is my understanding as well... and there's no adjusting for the pension. Pension has nothing to do with Social Security.
However, while her husband was alive, she should have qualified for a SS amount that was 1/2 of his amount. You say her SS payment was very small? She should have applied for half of his...
Unless there's some kind of teacher related deal- I know in some states, teachers do not pay into social security, and that may affect whether they can claim their husband's SS? I don't know about that.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I don't understand the Medicare implication. Was she using her SS to pay for Medicare? If she was old enough to draw SS, wouldn't she also be receiving MC benefits rather than still paying into the system?
Anonymous wrote:Here's information about the GPO and you can see if it affects this relative. It only affects teachers in some states:
https://www.socialsecurityintelligence.com/teachers-retirement-and-social-security/#:~:text=If%20you%20meet%20both%20of,(2%2F3)%20of%20your
"What About the Government Pension Offset?
The nitty-gritty of the Government Pension Offset (GPO) is simple. If you meet both of the requirements for the GPO – you are entitled to a Social Security benefit as a survivor or spouse and have a pension from a government job where you did not pay Social Security tax – your Social Security survivor or spousal benefit will be reduced by an amount equal to two-thirds (2/3) of your pension.
As an example, let’s say Michael worked for 30 years as a teacher in California (one of the 15 states where schoolteachers are not covered by Social Security) and his wife was an accountant.
Upon retirement, he began receiving his California teacher’s retirement pension of $3,000 per month. His wife retired at the same time and filed for her Social Security benefits of $2,300 per month. Sadly, she passed away a short three years later.
Upon her death, Michael learned that because of his CalSTRS pension he would not be eligible to receive a normal Social Security survivor’s benefit. Thanks to the GPO his survivor’s benefit was reduced to a measly $300 per month. Here’s the math:"
Anonymous wrote:He collected SS. She had a teaching pension and a very small SS payment (did not even cover Medicare). He died. She received a series of very confusing letters from SS. She took them to a local SS office. They told her she should expect to get two checks every month to collect off both accounts.
This is not our understanding of how SS works. Shouldn't she only collect the higher of the two (adjusting for her pension)?
My great-Aunt gets two checks - one for her late husband and one for her.