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Pension Basics for Local Officials Teacher Welfare Education Program 3F(n) Edmonton Catholic Teachers’ Local #54.

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Presentation on theme: "Pension Basics for Local Officials Teacher Welfare Education Program 3F(n) Edmonton Catholic Teachers’ Local #54."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pension Basics for Local Officials Teacher Welfare Education Program 3F(n) Edmonton Catholic Teachers’ Local #54

2 Defined Benefit Plan Benefit is defined by formula –A percentage of salary –Years of service Contributions are made to fund service

3 Sources of Retirement Income Government pension programs –Canada Pension Plan (CPP) –Old Age Security (OAS) Employment pensions –Alberta Teachers’ Pension Plan Individual savings –RRSPs –Tax Free Savings Accounts

4 DEFINED CONTRIBUTION (DC) VERSUS DEFINED BENEFIT (DB) PENSION PLANS

5 Defined Contribution (DC) Plan Contributions are defined, pension is not Contributions are invested for the member Member makes some or all contribution decisions Investment risk is the responsibility of the individual Monthly pension received is total of contributions plus earnings of the plan

6 DC Plan Continued Administration costs are in excess of 2% Market fluctuations can have a negative affect on your retirement security. (NOTE: THIS IS NOT YOUR ALBERTA TEACHERS’ PENSION PLAN (ATTP) )

7 Benefits of a Defined Benefit (DB) Plan Pension amount is known and predictable Pension is based on salary prior to retirement including negotiated salary increases Risk is shared between employer (government) and all plan members (NOTE: THIS IS YOUR AlbertaTPP)

8 Funding the Defined Benefit Prefunding –Funding future pensions as they are earned Actuaries estimate pensions –owed to all teachers over their lifetime –death benefits –pensions owed to teachers who quit prior to being eligible for pension (salaries, age of retirement, mortality rates) Calculate amount needed today to pay pensions later depending on expected rate of return. Assign to each sponsor (government and teachers) depending on contribution agreement

9 Contribution Rates (What plan sponsors pay) September 1, 2014 TeachersGovernment Normal Cost (60%) 7.85%7.85% 10% COLA 0.50% 0% Post 1992 Deficiency4.80%4.80% Post 10% COLA 0.23% 0% Total 13.46% 12.65% Teachers: Up to Yearly Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE) $53,600 - 11.44%; and over YMPE - 16.34% COLA = Cost of Living Allowance (annual increase based on provincial averages)

10 Our Defined Benefit (What we get out of the plan) Integrated with CPP 1.4% of five year average salary up to the YMPE (2015 amount is $53,600) 2% salary over the YMPE Add those two together and multiply by years of service

11 Example Teacher 1- Single Life, 5 year guarantee –$90,000 5 year average salary –30 years of service $50,000 X 1.4% = $700.00 $40,000 X 2% = $800.00 $1,500.00 X 30 = $45,000 annual pension (50% of pre-retirement income)

12 Eligibility For an unreduced pension –Age 65 or –Age plus service equals 85 For a reduced pension –Age 55 and –Five years of pensionable service Reduction is 2% per year below 65 or 85 index, which ever is less

13 Accumulating Service Earn it - By earning salary * Buy it (if you have Substitute Service or Leaves of Absence) – use RRSP moneys Transfer it (from other teacher plans or other public sector plans) Accumulation while on disability * NOTE: CONTACT ATRF FOR BEST OPTION FOR YOU. DO IT NOW! THE LONGER YOU WAIT, THE MORE IT WILL COST.

14 5 year average 60 best consecutive months Periods of leave are dropped out unless purchased –Do not count as 0 but are replaced by a previous year Part time by contract or assignment –Annualized Part time by leave of absence –Not annualized

15 Pension Options Single –Paid on one life Joint –Paid on two lives –Joint Equal –Reducible by 1/3 –100/60 Guarantees –5, 10, 15 years of payment guaranteed if the pensioner dies CPP Advance

16 Pension and Marriage Pensions are marital property under the Marital Property Act Divorce –Sign off pension in the divorce agreement –Split pension Single pension –Pension partner must sign waiver Death –1. Spouse –2. Dependent minor children –3. Beneficiary –4. Estate

17 Who gets your pension? If still teaching: –Single - beneficiary receives contributions plus interest double for dependent minor children –Married – pension partner receives pension based on years of service commencing the month following death, no index reduction Retired according to option chosen

18 Who qualifies as a pension partner? Legally married Common law couples who: –live together for at least three years, and –publicly present themselves as a couple Same gender partners also eligible under common law terms

19 Pension and Taxes RRSP room 18% of salary (to a maximum of $24,930) Pension benefit earned takes up RRSP room Room taken up is called a Pension Adjustment (PA); PA=1.4% of YMPE + 2% of balance ($1478 X 9) – 600 = $12,702 $90,000 X 18% = $16,200 Room = $3498

20 Improving the Plan Last pension improvements were granted in 1992 (10% addition to COLA for teachers) ATA objectives for improvements to the plan are contained in long range policies 6.A.1 to 6.A.13 and current directives 6.B.1 to 6.B.7 Government would have to agree to an improvement which are requested each year after ARA –Teachers contributions would rise as we pay one half –The 2007 unfunded liability agreement includes a provision barring improvements retroactive prior to 1992.

21 Final Points Funding and Sustainability Pension Envy Overly rigorous application of ITA Caps The current Alberta Government attention to poor pension plan governance is not an issue for ATRF.


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