McG
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Are you still not reading George or are you just pretending that I've not addressed these statements of yours?George Wallace said:I still can't see any "Double Dippers" taking up any of your suggestions. Why would they give up a pension. take a reduced wage and reduced pension, or any of your ideas, if they could keep the pension and work a second job anywhere else, including the Public Service, not requiring to take 35 days unpaid Annuitant's Leave.
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[*]I have stated that would be grandfathering for existing double-dippers. They would not need to give-up a pension.
[*]The 35 day unpaid leave is not a factor against my proposal as I have stated it would be gone (TB could be sold on this as members would not be collecting the full pension)MCG said:If the change were to come, current annuitants should be allowed to continue on their double-dipping ways.
[*]You are completely off the mark suggesting this would send people to the Public Service before limited obligation service because I have proposed that the same pension-top up would apply for PS employment.MCG said:The 35 day break requirement would also disappear. So the limited obligation TOS would be a full 12 months' pay and with pension top-up for eligible service personnel.
MCG said:Nobody should be simultaneously collecting two full incomes from the governemt (so no full-time employee/service person simultaneously getting pension payments).
[*]I have also addressed the option of going somewhere else to make more money. That is done through better harmonization witht he rest of the federal government pensions. If you want to see any of your entitlements prior to reaching CRA, you need to continue working somewhere in the government (military or PS).MCG said:...allow the pension to top-up pay for anyone that moves over to a lower paying position in the public service.
[/list]MCG said:Once a service member has enough years of pensionable service, they could convert to limited obligation TOS and receive top-up money, they could switch to the PS and (if in a lower paying job) receive top-up money, they could continue to serve under full obligation TOS and build the pension, or they they could leave the Federal Government and wait until CRA before seeing any pension money.
We are looking at different types of member, but not as you have laid it out. You are focused on the members that have already made the jump and are double dipping. I am focused on those who have not made the decision. Your arguments are focused on protecting the double-dip for those who have it, but I have already conceded that protection through grandfathering.George Wallace said:MCG may be looking at one type of member, while I am thinking of the member who has done twenty-five plus years in the CF, has planned and saved for his/her retirement, and has chosen to still serve his/her nation as a Reservist. They have done their time. They still have something to contribute.
Vern, I did present a few more factors that never were put into that income model and scew it back toward the double-dipper ... and I suspect things would ge even more strongly infavour of the double-dipper if you had a finance guy do it all in net-present value.ArmyVern said:I'm still wondering how anyone thinks, that in the long run, the Reg F guy who "double-dips" has it better than the RegF guy who doesn't.
Stats presented by those "anti-double dippers" over in this thread clearly show that the guy who stays Reg F costs more money from the taxpayers coffers than those who don't:
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MCG said:... and of course, this model does not account for the the Pension deductions that come out of the still regular pay vs the absence of the deduction in the double-dipper pay. It also doesn't account for the Reserve Travel Allowance that the full-time reservist is entitled. Apparently the NCR has a case or two where guys are collecting an extra $21.06 for every day they come into the office comuting from Arnprior ... over the years, that's a lot of money that the Reg F guy does not get ... and I've heard pricier examples than this.
That was not missed. Providing an option for stability as a retention tool is the reason for including limited obligation Reg F TOS in my proposal.hamiltongs said:Whatever you may be missing (and I certainly can't see what it is), the "anti-double-dippers" have also missed the fact that people who get out of the Reg F to go class "B" generally do it for stability - that is, they're not taking postings away from home.