TRS retirement report: a bi-annual newsletter for active members [Winter 2014]

www.TRSGA.com

TRS RETIREMENT REPORT
A BI-ANNUAL NEWSLETTER FOR ACTIVE MEMBERS Winter 2014

FY 2015 Employee & Employer
Contribution Rates
In its annual meeting held May 15, 2013, the Board of Trustees adopted the employee and employer contribution rates for FY 2014-15. Effective July 1, 2014, the contribution rates will be:
Employee Rate: 6.00%
Employer Rate: 13.15% z

News by the Numbers
from
Jeffrey L. Ezell, Executive Director

$64 Billion

I am very pleased to report that our assets have grown significantly over the past year. Since December 2012, TRS assets have increased $8.5 billion, bringing our net assets, as of December 2013, to $64.1 billion. Thanks to a stronger stock market and our diligent team of investment professionals, TRS is doing well and is financially and actuarially sound.

Pre-Retirement Seminars at the
TRS Office
TRS will be hosting preretirement seminars in our Atlanta office on:
February 14 at 10am February 17 at 10am &
2pm April 4 at 10am April 7 at 10am & 2pm June 9 at 10am & 2pm June 10 at 10am & 2pm
We encourage members within 5 years of retirement to attend a pre-retirement seminar prior to scheduling a one-on-one counseling session. You may register online via your TRS account at www.trsga.com. z
INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

104,521

We reached a milestone last January of exceeding 100,000 retirees. As of January 1, 2014, we now have 104,521 TRS retirees. Did you know that we have 6,073 retirees who are over 85 years of age and 110 of these retirees are over 100 years of age? It is our pleasure to provide all of our retirees with the professional customer service they deserve and an assurance that their retirement benefit will be paid timely and accurately each and every month.

$3.5 Billion

TRS paid over $3.5 billion in benefits to retirees during Fiscal Year 2013 and almost 90% of our retirees reside in Georgia. As consumers, our retirees pump money back into their community's economies through expenditures on goods and services. This economic impact amounts to approximately $6.0 billion a year. These expenditures increase economic demand and encourage employment through-out the State. In other words, you as a TRS retiree have a substantial impact on Georgia's economy.

34,000

Our member education programs continued to be successful in 2013. We individually counseled over 7,000 members. We also conducted over 300 educational presentations, meetings, and benefit fairs, reaching over 27,000 members,
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Retirement Application Deadlines

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Applying for Retirement

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Allowable Sick Leave Usage

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News by the Numbers continued
and sponsored 10 retirement seminars across the State with speakers from TRS, the Social Security Administration, the State Health Benefit Plan, the Board of Regents Health Plan, and financial/estate planning experts. Six employer training seminars were attended by over 200 human resources personnel.

2014

The 2014 Georgia General Assembly convened on January 13, 2014, and is the second year of the two-year (2013 - 2014) biennium session. Retirement legislation that has a fiscal impact can only be introduced during the 1st year of a two-year session and can only be acted on during the 2nd year. Fiscal bills from 2013 that were moved forward for an actuarial study remain valid through the 2014 session. A fiscal bill that was not moved forward has "Died in Committee" and will not be considered during the 2014 session. A synopsis of current legislation is available on the TRS website and will be updated frequently during the session.

Please visit us online at www.trsga.com to receive the latest news and to periodically view your account. Feel free to contact us by chat, email, or phone if you have any questions or if you just wish to let us know how we're doing.

I wish you a prosperous, healthy, and happy New Year! Thank you for your continued support! z

Summer 2014
Retirement Application Deadlines
Due to the high volume of new retirements in the spring, submitting applications early will help ensure new retirees receive their first benefit check in the month they retire. Please keep the following dates in mind as we advance towards summer:
June 1st retirees must complete and submit applications and paperwork to TRS by March 31, 2013 if they would like to receive their first benefit check in June.
July 1st retirees must complete and submit applications and paperwork to TRS by April 30, 2013 if they would like to receive their first benefit check in July.
Applications received after these dates will be processed on a first-come, first-served basis. We do our best to accommodate everyone, but applications/forms received in our office by the deadlines listed ensure a timely retirement benefit payment. The retirement application is not complete until all of the following forms have been received by TRS:
Application for Service Retirement
Identification for members and beneficiaries
State and Federal Tax Withholding forms
Affidavit of Residency (must be notarized)
Retirement Certification Report (TRS-8) completed by your employer
If you have any service credit for which you are eligible to purchase, it must be purchased PRIOR TO RETIREMENT.
Federal and State statutes require verification of lawful presence in the United States when applying for public retirement benefits. Therefore, TRS must require that every member applying for either service or disability retirement complete a notarized Affidavit of Residency form. z

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applying for retirement

In an effort to provide you with the most expedient and accurate method of applying for retirement, retiring members have the ability to apply for retirement online. Please remember that TRS is no longer accepting paper applications. Our online process is quick, easy and more efficient.

To apply, simply log into your account and click "Apply for Retirement." You will then be prompted to provide information specific to your retirement. When the process is complete, a summary sheet is provided for your records. There are links to other forms not covered in the online process, as well as "Tips" to help make the process as easy and user-friendly as possible. So you are prepared, please note the following items needed to complete the retirement application process.

Items and Information Needed to Complete Your Application:
; Your Information: name, address, daytime phone number, SSN, date/of/birth, copy of official ID (driver's license, passport, birth certificate, immigration papers, or a state issued ID).

; Your Primary and Secondary Beneficiary's Information: name, address, SSN, date/of/birth, copy of official ID (see list above).

; Direct Deposit Information: checking or savings account and routing numbers.

; Benefit Estimate: you may use this as a reference to help you choose your monthly retirement benefit option and your PLOP payment (if applicable).

; PLOP Rollover (if applicable): name, address, and phone number for rollover institution, type of rollover plan, and your rollover account number.

; Tax Withholding Amounts: federal and state for monthly benefit payment, and PLOP if taking a lumpsum cash distribution.

; Your Alien Number Issued by the Department of Homeland Security or Other Federal Immigration Agency (if applicable)
If you are unable to complete and submit your application, you may log back into your account and continue at a later date. Please note that your online application will only remain active for 45 days. After 45 days, your application is void and you must begin the process again. Once the application is completed, the member must print and sign a summary sheet and send to TRS. z

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Preparing Yourself Mentally for Retirement When you retire, you have to establish a new identity, purpose and relationships.

When Nancy Schlossberg, a professor of counseling psychology at the University of Maryland, retired at 67, she thought it would be smooth sailing. It wasn't.
"It took me a while to figure out who I was. It was a difficult transition. At first, I literally couldn't say the words -- `I'm retired.' "
Over the next few years, she interviewed more than 150 retirees and conducted several focus groups with retirees, and she realized that many people had prepared a financial portfolio for retirement, but they hadn't taken stock of their psychological portfolios.
Schlossberg, now 84 and living in Sarasota, Fla., found that some people spend years preparing themselves psychologically for this transition, but others don't think about it until they actually quit working. Based on her research, she wrote Revitalizing Retirement: Reshaping Your Identity, Relationships, and Purpose; and Retire Smart, Retire Happy.
Even contemplating leaving a job creates a lot of anxiety for some, she says. "They love their work, and they are busy. They have an established life, an established routine, established relationships at work and established assumptions about themselves and the world. When you leave all that to retire, you have to establish new routines, new relationships and a new way of seeing yourself and the world."
To prepare yourself mentally for retirement, Schlossberg recommends taking a hard look at three areas of your life:
Your identity. It's who you are to yourself and the world. You can think of it as what you put on your business card or your tagline under your e-mail signature, she says. "When I was a professor at the University of Maryland, it was very easy to say that, and people got a picture of who I was. If you are a roofer, painter, artist, teacher -- that's part of your identity. One man who retired as CEO of a Fortune 100 company had plenty of money for his golden years, but he said his retirement felt `hollow' because he hadn't thought about his new identity."
Some people may be OK with saying "retiree," but others will be happier if they strive to define a post-

retirement identity that will provide structure to their days and meaning to their lives.
Your purpose/mission. This is related to your identity. It's what gets you going in the morning. It's your passion. It can take some time to sort out, and you may have several different missions or purposes during your golden years, Schlossberg says. You can ask yourself what you wish you had done in your life and turn that into a new focus. "One woman said to me, `I help organizations develop mission statements, but I don't have a mission statement myself.'"
Your relationships. When you leave your work life, you often lose touch with people who were once a part of your everyday life, so you need to develop new relationships, new communities. You might do that by engaging in volunteer activities, going to a health club or even hanging out at Starbucks, Schlossberg says.
This is the perfect time to spend more time with your children and grandchildren. "I love to play in the sand with my grandchildren."
Your relationship with your spouse or partner may change, because you'll probably be spending a lot more time together, Schlossberg says. Sometimes too much togetherness causes people to get on each others' nerves for minor things, so couples may need to negotiate some new ground rules, she says.
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Allowable Sick Leave Usage & Attendance Incentive Programs

If your employer offers an attendance incentive program, please be aware that it may impact your ability to apply unused sick leave days toward retirement, and therefore could impact your lifetime monthly benefit.

Acceptable Sick Leave Usage
Example 1: Employer pays $200 at the end of the school year if five (5) days or less are used. This is a general attendance policy and is not based on a variable number of unused sick leave days used.
Example 2: Member has 188 days of unused sick leave credit. Member will need 170 days to reach 30 years of service for retirement purposes. The employer wants to pay member for 18 days of unused leave. Member may be paid for 18 days and retain 170 days for TRS retirement credit.
Example 3: Member works for a system that awards more than 1.25 days a month in sick leave credit. TRS will take the total amount of unused sick leave reported and apply a reduction based on the 1.25 day limit. For any excess days over the 1.25 day formula that TRS will not award credit, member can receive payment for those days without any effect on TRS retirement credit.
Example 4: Member works for a system that only allows a member to accrue a maximum of 45 days of unused sick leave credit. Anything in excess of 45 days will be forfeited by the member for system purposes. This does not affect the member's ability to use those forfeited days for TRS retirement credit. At retirement, any forfeited days based on a system's accrual limits will be counted for retirement credit; however, the 1.25 day rule still applies.
Attendance Incentive Programs
A number of employers offer their employees monetary incentives to encourage good attendance. Some employers offer this incentive or bonus at the end of each school year and/or at the time the employee retires.

Payments based on any attendance incentive program offered through your school system that are not based on any variable number of sick leave days are allowable and the number of unused sick leave days reported to TRS would not be affected.
Programs that offer variable payment amounts based on number of sick days, WILL reduce the number of sick leave days you report to TRS.
Example 1: Employer offers $200 at the end of the school year if no sick days were used; $150 if one sick day was used, $100 if two sick days were used, and no payment if 3 or more sick days were used. If any payment is made using this type of program, then all unused sick leave days remaining for that year of employment cannot be reported to TRS for sick leave credit at retirement.
Example 2: Employer offers $20 per day for every day of unused sick leave. For every $20 paid, the system would have to reduce the unused sick days by one day and report the balance to TRS. z

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Preparing Yourself Mentally for Retirement When you retire, you have to establish a new identity, purpose and relationships.

Developmental psychologist Adam Davey, a professor of public health at Temple University's College of Health Professions and Social Work, agrees. "There is an old statement about couples and retirement: `I married him for better or for worse but not for lunch.'
"Suddenly having a husband home and underfoot can be a source of irritation. Since men's friendships are very often concentrated around work or activities, the transition to retirement can place unwanted expectations for wives."
Davey says one good strategy he heard from a retiring couple is they told friends and family that they were going to take the first three months of retirement just for themselves so they could fully "enjoy the honeymoon period of their retirement."
The important thing is to make sure you realize that you still count, Schlossberg says. "When you retire, you can feel marginalized. Some people feel they no longer matter, but feeling that you matter, that you are appreciated and depended upon is important to experiencing a happy retirement."
Based on interviews with more than 150 retirees, Schlossberg identified the following ways that people approach retirement:

start something new. For example, a bank teller might become a docent in a museum. An investigative reporter might become an artist. It is about adventures in new arenas."
Often, people take some of the regrets they have about things they wish they'd done and turn them into a plan, she says.
Searchers who explore new options through trial and error. This means you look into different activities. You talk to people in the fields you're interested in. You volunteer for different projects or programs, and if you don't like one, you try something else. This is much like what happens to many high school and college graduates who don't know exactly what they want to do when they graduate, so they search and struggle to find their way, Schlossberg says.
Easy gliders who enjoy unscheduled time letting each day unfold. "They let the day unfold. Maybe they'll babysit the grandkids one day. Maybe they'll go to the movies. They may just hang out. They don't have an agenda, and they are comfortable not having one."
Involved spectators who care deeply about the world, but engage in less-active ways. This may be an art director who is retired but still goes to art museums, or a politician who is still a news junkie, she says.

Continuers who keep using existing skills and interests. They still use skills, interests and activities but modify them to fit retirement. "I am a continuer. I don't teach or have a salary, but I still write and speak about things I've always been interested in."
Adventurers who start entirely new endeavors. They see retirement as an opportunity to make daring changes in their lives. "I'm not talking about becoming mountain climbers, but these are people who

Retreaters who take time out or disengage from life. There are two kinds of these folks: people who are couch potatoes and people who are taking time out to figure out what to do.
"Many combine paths, and over time, one's path might change," Schlossberg says. "The point of looking at paths is to realize the many options for everyone during retirement."
Nanci Hellmich, USA TODAY