I found some of these FAQs on the MEA webpage. These are just a sample of some of the questions and answers that can be found by visiting www.mea.org
Who would be eligible for the proposed Retirement Stimulus Initiative?Anyone who is actively employed by a Michigan public school or community college and has met the age and service requirements to be eligible for a regular or early reduced pension can take advantage of the plan.
How many years must I have been employed, vested, etc.?You need at least 10 years of service to become vested if you are a MIP member. It is possible to become vested with five years of service if you are age 60.
Is this plan only available to teachers? What about assistants, support staff, administration, community college, etc?It would be available to ALL K-12, community college and higher education public school employees in ALL employment classifications.
How do I calculate my pension based on my current earnings?You can go to www.michigan.gov/orsschools and find a calculator to assist you in calculating your pension. You have to determine your final average salary for the three highest consecutive years of earning if you have MIP or five consecutive years under the Basic program. You multiply that figure by .015, and then multiply that figure by your total years of service credit.
Is there a cap on the allowed pension benefit?There is no cap.
Why is this program being proposed?The goal is to save school districts $411 million dollars in the first year and $1.7billion over 10 years.
How long will I have to take advantage of this offer?Once the bill in introduced, the specific timelines will be known. Our concept proposal would permit you to apply between March 1, 2009 and March 31, 2010.
When will this offer take effect?If the proposal becomes law, you could claim the 2.0 multiplier as early as June 2009
What is the advantage of taking this offer?You would receive a 33.33% increase in your pension for the rest of your life.
Will this proposal affect my health benefits?This proposal will have no impact on your eligibility for health insurance benefits.
How is this proposal different from a regular retirement? Will this apply to those who have already retired?This proposal is not retroactive and will only apply to those employees who are currently employed and eligible to retire. This stimulus would provide a significant increase in lifetime pension.
If I already planned to retire, will I miss this offer?Assuming a stimulus bill is passed into law, you won’t miss this offer. However, you may want to delay filing for your retirement until you see what the Legislature does with this stimulus
Are there penalties if I do NOT accept this offer?There is no penalty. You continue to work, and earn your regular salary and added service credit.
Is this plan feasible? Won’t it cost the MEA more money?It will not cost the MEA more money. Participating employers may see a modest increase in their retirement contribution rate in order to pay for the stimulus. However, local districts will realize tremendous savings from the stimulus so they should be able to handle the increased costs that they will incur.
Will this plan fail and go broke in 10 or more years?No, that is not likely. This plan cannot “go broke.” There are funding requirements that must be met, and there are constitutional guarantees that require the pension plan be funded properly.
Is there a percentage age penalty for those who retire early?If you elect an early, reduced pension, your pension is subject to one-half of 1 percent reduction for each month that you take your pension prior to your 60th birthday. This presumes that you are age 55 with 15 or more years of service.
Are early retirees eligible?Yes, if you meet the requirements listed above.
Can we buy years and will bought years count?Purchased years of service credit will count for the purpose of determining your annual pension.
What is the definition of “retirement eligibility” under this proposal?To be eligible for a monthly retirement pension, you must meet minimum age and service requirements.
These requirements vary depending on whether you are a Basic Plan or Member Investment Plan (MIP) member. In general, Basic Plan members are those who were in the Public School Employees Retirement System before the Member Investment Plan was introduced in 1987, and, when offered a choice, elected to remain in the plan when offered a choice.
Full Retirement Provisions for each plan are described below:
MIP members
As a MIP member, you will qualify for full retirement under any of the following provisions:
MIP 46 with 30. You qualify for full retirement at any age with at least 30 years of service. However, if you have purchased universal buy-in service credit, you must be at least 46 years of age. At least 15 years of service credit must have been earned through the Michigan Public School Employees Retirement System.
MIP 60 with 10. You are eligible for your pension at age 60 with at least 10 years of service credit.
MIP 60 with 5. If you are age 60 and you have at least 5 years of service credit, you qualify for a pension if at least 0.1 years of service credit have been earned in each of the five school fiscal years immediately before your retirement effective date and you terminated your public school service immediately before your retirement effective date. A school fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30.
Basic Plan members
As a Basic Plan member, you qualify for a full retirement under the following retirement provisions:
Basic 55 with 30. You will qualify for your pension when you are at least 55 years of age and have 30 or more years of service credit. At least 15 years of service credit must have been earned through the Michigan Public School Employees Retirement System (MPSERS).
Basic 60 with 10. You qualify for a pension at age 60 with at least 10 years of service credit.
Early Reduced Retirement Provisions
Whether you are Basic or MIP, you can take an early, reduced retirement as early as age 55 if you have at least 15 but fewer than 30 years of service. Your pension amount is permanently reduced by one-half of 1 percent for each month you take your pension before age 60.
You must be an active member to be eligible for the early reduced benefit. An active member is someone who is still working and contributing to the plan. If you terminate employment before the month you reach pension eligibility age, you become a deferred member. Deferred members don't qualify for the early reduced pension.
To retire under the early, reduced provision, you must meet all of the following conditions:
You worked in the month of your 55th birthday. An exception may apply if you were born in a summer month.
You have at least 15 but fewer than 30 years of service credit with at least 10 years of service credit earned under this system.
You earned at least 0.1 year of service credit in each of the 5 school fiscal years immediately before your retirement effective date. The fiscal year in which you are retiring counts in the 5 school fiscal years.
You terminated Michigan public school service immediately before your retirement effective date.
Is there an age requirement or age limit? No, there is no maximum limit but there are eligibility requirements. See the answer to the above question.
Would I have to wait until age 55 to start collecting my pension?See the answer to the questions above regarding eligibility. Basic Plan members would have to be 55 years of age or older to take advantage of this stimulus.
Is there a 2.0 multiplier? If so, who qualifies and how?A bill has to be adopted and signed into law before any increase in the multiplier becomes effective. The current multiplier is 1.5 percent. See the above answers concerning who qualifies and how.
Will this plan be offered to Basic members?Yes, all Basic and MIP plan participants could take advantage of the offer if they are qualified to retire.
What is the maximum number of people that will be able to participate? Is there a limit?The legislation will dictate what, if any, limits may be imposed. The MEA proposal initially did not include limits. We estimate that there are approximately 55,000 members who may be eligible.
Can any of my years of service in the Catholic school system count toward my retirement?Your service in the Catholic school system is considered non-public and can only count if you purchase your non-public service in the form of service credit. You can only purchase five years of service credit. Also, your non-public service does not count toward the 10-year vesting requirement. Go to www.michigan.gov/orsschools for more information.
What is the governor’s proposal and will it work?The governor is proposing a one-time severance bonus. The state dollars allocated for it would have to be matched by cash-strapped local school districts.
Given this economy, it’s not likely that the governor’s severance idea will generate enough retirements, unlike MEA’s proposal. Also, the governor’s plan will force school districts to come up with financing at a time when they don’t have the resources available to them.