Millions to Get Bigger Social Security Checks After Bipartisan Bill Passes

Payroll | December 23, 2024

Millions to Get Bigger Social Security Checks After Bipartisan Bill Passes

If signed by the president before the new Congress convenes on Jan. 3, the law would boost Social Security payments to more than 2 million beneficiaries, according to the Congressional Research Service.

By Gregory Korte
Bloomberg News
(TNS)

Millions of Americans may see their Social Security benefits increase under a bill headed to President Joe Biden’s desk—though critics warn that the measure comes at the cost of pushing the fund further toward insolvency.

If signed by the president before the new Congress convenes on Jan. 3, the law would boost Social Security payments to more than 2 million beneficiaries, according to the Congressional Research Service. The increases—as much as $550 a month for some retirees—would be retroactive to December 2023.

Those beneficiaries are mostly those who have received foreign pensions or government workers such as police officers, firefighters and teachers who contributed to a federal or state pension plan but didn’t pay Social Security taxes.

The legislation, called the Social Security Fairness Act, eliminates two formulas that reduced benefits for these workers who receive foreign and government pensions in addition to Social Security. Those provisions, known as the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset, were enacted more than 40 years ago in response to an increase in retirees who hadn’t fully paid into Social Security and to more dual-income couples retiring.

Sponsors of the law say the old Congress over-corrected, and unfairly withheld earned benefits from retirees and their spouses.

While the White House hasn’t said whether Biden would sign the bill, it passed both chambers with bipartisan majorities: 327-75 in the House last month and 76-20 in the Senate early Saturday morning.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the bill would hasten Social Security’s insolvency—now projected to come by 2034—by another six months and add $196 billion to budget deficits over the next 10 years. As a result, a typical couple retiring in 2033 may see lifetime benefit cuts of $25,000, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

The Senate rejected an amendment from Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican from Kentucky, that would have pushed back the retirement age to 70. Only three senators supported the amendment.

Lillianna Byington and Steven T. Dennis contributed to this report.

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©2024 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency LLC.

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Comments: 16

Margaret M. BlairDecember 23 2024 at 2:12 pm

I agree with this bill, however, you must find a way to subsidize the Social Security Benefits. This provision should have never gone into practice in the first place. I will say maybe you should make sure that the wealthy are paying their share and if the qualify for Social Security, only then should they receive payments. Maybe you should increase the amount and/or use a portion of sales tax monies and put it into Social Security as well! If you don't do something it will end! We need support of all people so this can continue. The one last thing I would say, is there are many who are collecting benefits, stating they are not able to work. I believe you need to check into these cases a little more closely, as many do not need these benefits, they need to go back to work!

John andreattaDecember 23 2024 at 2:25 pm

Here's the thing !! My wife is a college graduate, she's worked 35 years in her career. If people believe that 2/3s of her social security should be cut because I left her 50% of my PERS retirement to add security to her life in my passing . Is a idiot .. it's that simple , know one told me this , wep / GPO is appalling if you work in the public and private sector and fill the obligations to social security you should be payed at retirement age .. it means I worked hard in public and private and paid into both retirements and deserve them both ...

Beatriz BurkittDecember 23 2024 at 5:00 pm

I have been teaching for twenty-eight years. I have all of the rights to receive social security benefits from my husband, who paid towards social security for more than 40-years. We both believe that ALL Americans should contribute to social security monthly. Why teachers were not included to pay monthly towards social security?

John HashemDecember 23 2024 at 6:21 pm

If we have hundreds of billions of dollars to give to other countries there's no excuse for social security to become insolvent. There will be hell to pay if that happens.

George KilgoDecember 25 2024 at 1:02 pm

This law should have passed years ago.

jijiDecember 26 2024 at 5:08 pm

People should be able to collect what they have contributed. Those are their money. Period. Social Security’s insolvency is completely another issue we need to solve. To solve this issue, taking money from people entitled to such benefits is almost like a crime.

Robert NicholsonDecember 27 2024 at 9:30 am

I along with others who would benefit from this, applaud all the work that went into making this happen in Congress. It's sad to see each passing day with no signature from biden who is off partying in the Bahamas. Signs 50 bills into law in one day and ignores this one for the 3rd time. As the report from Congressional Oversight Committee is titled, "A Legacy of Incompetence".

Steve ThomasDecember 27 2024 at 12:49 pm

Why has this not been signed? If I'm correct it must be signed by the 3rd. of January. If anyone has connections to the white house, please remind President Biden to please get this done. Thank you!

Eric GalantDecember 27 2024 at 2:11 pm

It is time this egregious change to Social Security Benefits has finally happened. I started working and paying into Social Security when I was 16. I spent a total of 20 years in the military paying into social security. I have always worked two or more jobs, paying what was required of me into social security. Because I also retired from a an entity that was social security tax exempt I had my Social Security Benefits cut by 60%, actually stolen from my spouse and I. I started drawing Social Security Benefits 12 years ago and I estimate that my loss of social security benefits because of WEP is upwards of $75,000 total. That is what happened to me and I am sticking with it.

Robert NicholsonDecember 28 2024 at 9:13 am

Upon checking the Congress.gov web site, under actions taken it shows that HR 82 was passed by the Senate on the 21st but did nothing in the way of movement until the 27th. It shows that it was presented to biden on the 27th. So it appears that Congress sat on it for 6 days and held it up. Supposedly the president has 10 days from the time it is presented to sign it, veto it or let it pass without signature.

Lee DavisDecember 28 2024 at 1:04 pm

If President Biden just received the bill, yesterday, 12/27, then that explains why it hasn’t yet been signed. He has until January 3rd. I pray he signs it sooner than that- like in the next day or so or at least before 1/1. What can he be waiting for?

James wallsDecember 29 2024 at 9:44 am

If the president doesn’t sign the fairness bill, you would have to believe the whole thing has bad been a sham done by the politicians! The insiders all know what happening one way or another. The democrats will have to take responsibility if not signed!

Jerry HarrisDecember 29 2024 at 11:34 am

Hopefully Joe won’t step on pop top and blow out his flip flop, bruise his heel and head on to icu.

Sean LAGRANDDecember 30 2024 at 10:58 am

We have heard from the National Fraternal Oder of Police President, that there will be a Social Security Fairness Act signing and ceremony on January 6, 2025 after the January 3rd deadline, could a bill still become law when a new Congress convenes?

jijiDecember 30 2024 at 7:08 pm

Sean LAGRAND, One of authors of Federal News network explains your question. Her explanation is very concise and clear. https://federalnewsnetwork.com/explainers/2024/12/how-much-time-does-a-president-get-to-sign-a-bill-into-law/

jijiJanuary 4 2025 at 1:04 am

On January 2nd, 2025, two senators, Susan Collins and Sherrod Brown, sent a letter to the SSA acting commissioner, Carolyn Colvin. The letter said that since president Biden is expected to sign the bill on January 6th, 2025, SSA should swiftly implement the Social Security Fairness Act afterward. Although the letter used the term "Biden is expected", I believe he will sign. If the senators had not been almost 100% sure, they would not have sent such a letter at this moment.

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