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KEY POINTS

RETIREE HEALTH CARE

  • Public safety officers (fire fighters, law enforcement officers, and emergency medical personnel) retire earlier than their peers in other occupations, and are generally many years away from being able to participate in Medicare. Since they often lose employer-provided health insurance when they retire, they are forced to spend their retirement money on health insurance premiums.

  • Public safety officers often face significant health care needs as a result of a career responding to emergencies in hazardous and stressful environments.

  • Although some jurisdictions offer retirees the option to remain in the employer-provided health plan, retirees are generally required to pay all or most of the premiums. Whether the retirees retain their employer-provided insurance or seek another insurance carrier, they face steep costs over many years. It is not uncommon for retired public safety officers to spend 80 percent of their pension checks on health insurance.

  • The average fire fighter pension is approximately $23,000 a year. If a fire fighter uses most of it to pay for health insurance, he or she is left with very little to make ends meet.

  • The HELPS Retirees Act would provide a modest benefit to help retired public safety officers afford health insurance. The legislation would allow retirees to designate up to $5,000 from their pension funds to be used for health premiums without paying taxes on these funds.

  • The money being used for the health premiums will not come from tax dollars. All the money will come directly from the retiree’s personal retirement funds.

  • The proposal does not create new health care programs or provide public safety officers access to any health care options they don’t already have. It simply makes existing options more affordable by shielding legitimate premium expenses from taxation.

  • The administration’s budget proposal includes more than $150 billion for tax-based initiatives to help reduce the number of uninsured people. The cost of the HELPS Retirees Act would be a tiny fraction of that amount.

  • The nation’s fire fighters, police officers and emergency medical personnel spend their entire careers risking their lives to protect the lives and property of Americans. In recognition of their service, they should be afforded a small measure of protection against exorbitant health care costs in their retirement years.

  • Proposals that expand access to health insurance save federal dollars in the long run by reducing costs associated with providing health care for the uninsured.
     


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International Association of Fire Fighters
1750 New York Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20006 • 202.737.8484 • 202.737.8418 (Fax)
Copyright © 2010 International Association of Fire Fighters.  Last Modified:  3/18/2010