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The trust fund behind many Americans' monthly Social Security benefits could be depleted in the next decade, leading to cuts in benefits of up to 23%. A: A six-member board made up of the Treasury, ...
Social Security Board of Trustees Annual Report warns of an accelerated timetable for trust fund depletion and potential benefit reductions that could significantly impact ...
With Social Security projected to be insolvent in 8 years, it's time for Congress to finally pay attention to entitlement ...
If Congress fails to act in the very near future, the date on which Social Security will no longer be able to pay full benefits is only eight years away in 2033, according to the just-released Social ...
2. Government workers see long-awaited relief Repealing the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO) should benefit roughly 2.5 million public sector retirees. The ...
Early this year, near the end of his term in office, President Biden signed the Social Security Fairness Act, a law that ended the Windfall Elimination Provision and Government Pension Offset ...
By coming into effect, the Social Security Fairness Act effectively repealed two provisions — namely, the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and the Government Pension Offset (GPO) — which limited ...
Senate Commerce Committee Republicans are proposing an alternative to a controversial provision in President Trump’s tax and spending bill about states’ regulation of artificial intelli… ...
The provision in the House bill passed by the lower chamber on May 22 would have prohibited states from enforcing any law or regulation “limiting, restricting, or otherwise regulating" AI models ...
Majors at risk of elimination under the new Indiana law include Farm & Ranch Management, American & U.S. Studies and Nutritional Sciences.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) is making good headway with its rollout of payments for those impacted by the Social Security Fairness Act. After being signed into law in January, the Social ...
The Social Security Administration says it has processed 2.5 million retroactive payments to people previously locked out of retirement benefits.