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Sixty-five is a magic age for many retirees. You're finally eligible for Medicare and can get higher Social Security benefits than at age 62. If your financial situation aligns, you may finally...
PENNSYLVANIA — Hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania residents relying on Medicaid and CHIP must submit a renewal application for the programs or risk losing coverage in April, state officials...
Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System. The Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System (also known as SERS or Pen SERS) is an independent administrative board of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that manages the public pension system for state employees in Pennsylvania.
The Public School Employees’ Retirement System (PSERS) is a pension fund for public school employees in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Eligible members include all full-time public school employees, part-time hourly public school employees who render at least 500 hours of service in the school year, and part-time per diem public school ...
HARRISBURG — Retired Pennsylvania school teachers and other public sector employees stand to get their first cost-of-living adjustment pay in more than two decades if legislation proposed by...
Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement System (also known as PMRS) is an independent state agency of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that manages the public pension system for some municipal employees in Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1974.
If you’re still employed and have a health insurance plan that qualifies for a health savings account (HSA), you should consider signing up. These plans are triple-tax advantaged.
When you're ready to start claiming Social Security retirement benefits, including spouse benefits, or apply for survivor benefits or Medicare coverage, the Social Security Administration makes...
The result was an increased number of retirees in the system and a relatively steep icrease in retirement benefits. Find out what's happening in Lower Macungie with free, real-time updates...
'Struggling to survive': Pennsylvania retiree slapped with lifetime penalty for delaying Medicare sign-up when she was 'too poor to afford insurance' — how you can avoid this costly mistake