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KEY POINTS
MANDATORY SOCIAL SECURITY
• Approximately 75 percent of the nation’s fire fighters are not
enrolled in the Social Security system. Instead, they participate in
specialized fire fighter pension plans that have been designed to
reflect the unique circumstances of their profession, including
early retirement ages and high rates of disability. Requiring Social
Security coverage of all state and local government employees would
undermine these tailored pension plans.
• The revenue generated by mandatory coverage of state and local
government workers would be marginal and temporary. The wholesale
disruption of the retirement plans of our nation’s first responders
is too heavy a price to pay for such a small contribution to the
solvency of the Social Security system.
• Forcing fire fighters into the Social Security system would
amount to an unfair 6.2 percent tax increase on these middle-income
workers.
• Paying the employer’s share of the Social Security tax would
place a financial strain on many cash-strapped municipalities. This
would lead to cutbacks in municipal services, including fire
protection.
• Claims that public employees are “double-dipping” by receiving
Social Security benefits to which they are not entitled are
inaccurate. The current law contains offsets which reduce Social
Security benefits for those receiving a government pension from a
non-covered employer.
• The creation of these specialized public sector pension plans
came in direct response to Congress prohibiting public employees
from participating in Social Security. As recently as 1994, fire
fighters in many states were not allowed to join the system. It is
unfair to force public agencies to now curtail or abolish these
well-funded, financially stable plans just to generate a small
amount revenue to the Social Security Trust Fund.
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