Q. I have a friend who worked at the post office with me for 38 years. He passed away in the summer, and his wife has collected two checks after his death. She deposited the first into her checking account and she took the second one to the bank to make a deposit, but it is not showing being deposited. How can we trace this check to find out if it was cashed, deposited or misplaced?
Browsing: SURVIVOR BENEFITS
Q. I am a federal retiree (June 2012), and recently remarried. I want to provide my new spouse with survivor benefits. How do I enroll her? I have been trying to call and/or contact the Office of Personnel Management via the Internet and phone for months and have not been able to get any help.
Q. My mother died while working for the Postal Service at age 60. My father is a survivor annuitant receiving a pension and paying for health care premiums under the Federal Employees Health Benefits plan. My father is turning 65 and eligible for Medicare. Does he have the option of declining Part B and carrying over his current FEHB health care for his lifetime?
Q. Recently, a colleague and I were reading your Dec. 2 article “Don’t let these 5 mistakes disrupt your plans.” Your statement on number 5 (not accounting for the government pension offset) leaves us wondering. We are under CSRS and retiring this month. Her husband is still working and will be eligible to draw Social Security benefits when his time comes to do so. Your statement indicates that when he draws Social Security, her CSRS annuity will be reduced. REALLY? I know that if he draws Social Security and dies, she eligible to receive his Social Security, but her pension with…
Q. I am 59 years old. I receive a civil service retirement from my former spouse, approximately $24,000 per year. I work in the private sector and have paid into Social Security for 40 years. I will be accepting a position in the federal government and plan to work for five years and pay the maximum I can into CSRS. I hope that, after five years, I am eligible for a small retirement from the government in addition to Social Security and my former husband’s retirement. Is this correct, or will there be caps to the amount that I can…
Q. With respect to a recent post on Medicare Part B, just a quick follow-up to help me see the answer. In the previous post, the person was a retired male under age 65 covered by self and family in the Federal Employees Health Benefits plan, so his working wife, age 65, has health coverage and doesn’t need Part B per your previous response since she is both working and covered. 1. When the male, who is retired, turns 65, does he have the option to carry the FEHB coverage past 65 so he doesn’t have to sign up for Part…
Q. I’m a retired federal employee (CSRS). My wife and I both have federal health insurance. My wife is still working (self-employed) and will be turning 65 this year. She went to sign up for Medicare and was told she had to also sign up for Medicare Part B or be penalized even though we have health insurance through Blue Cross/Blue Shield. Social Security Administration said if I was still actively federally employed, she would not be required to take Part B and there would be no penalty. Another person she spoke with from SSA said she is not required…
Q. I have been enrolled in Federal Employees’ Group Life Insurance since 1983 and plan on retiring this year. In 2010, I added life insurance coverage for my spouse. Does the five-year rule apply for eligibility upon my retirement?
Q. My husband was still employed by civil service aboard New River Air Station, N.C., when he passed away. I was told by human resources in Norfolk, Va., that I could buy into survivor annuity (FERS). My husband was short three years of retirement, and I can make a deposit of $12,522.36 to the Defense Finance and Accounting Service to qualify for survivor annuity through FERS, and I would receive $783 a month. DFAS has calculated what he earned during his military career. I am receiving $1,215 a month in Dependency and Indemnity Compensation. I am confused because the Norfolk…
Q. I am a FERS employee with a CSRS spouse who is retired. When I retire, in the event of my death, will her retirement pay be reduced when she gets my Social Security monthly survivor benefit? She has no Social Security eligibility.