Me too, I have an extra chair for you at the table..No pension for thee
Me too, I have an extra chair for you at the table..No pension for thee
I think you left out exotic soaps and cologne.I left out the fact, until my youngest got into high school my wife was not working again, so a big chunk I was the bread winner alone. We did not have party money, cig money, honey roll money or lounge money. Let along video disc money.
Work a couple of doubles a week for the last 3 years and you’re Golden…….the highest compensation during a three year period.
That happens in law enforcement and with firefighters. In the year before they retire, they get loads of overtime. Some firemen virtually live in the firehouse and are seldom at home with their families.Work a couple of doubles a week for the last 3 years and you’re Golden…….
This is nice for your 401K also. ~15% of an overtime paycheck is a lot more going in there than a 40hr check. Regardless, I'm still far from the multimillionaires in this thread and I've been contributing to a 401k for just over 30yrs.Work a couple of doubles a week for the last 3 years and you’re Golden…….
I gave up pay raises for a better pension. Many younger workers think pay first.No pension of any kind. The joys of being self-employed.
However, I have been retired for almost 24 years, pursuing hobbies that in some cases are well compensated. When and if I reach 'official retirement age', we'll see if I get any of the money I've paid in, back.
The wife is also retired with no pension, as she was self-employed.
Maybe @ZZman will share his pension with us??
I gave up pay raises for a better pension. Many younger workers think pay first.
I think the real question for a young person at this point is will the pension actually be solvent in 30 years, given most are underfunded already. It really depends on the specific pension I suppose.I gave up pay raises for a better pension. Many younger workers think pay first.
You’re gonna call the PBGC with your SS number.Does anyone know a resource (public, not private, not worth the cost) that will search for a “lost” pension?
I worked for and left a company in 1985 that said in my exit papers that I was vested in a pension worth about $50/mo. Gas money. That company was sold, absorbed many times since and does not exist. Do pensions go poof if the company does? This employer was a Fortune 500 company division that was sold off a few years after I left to another, since defunct, company
Six pensions incoming between me and the wife.
Leisure time for BITOG!Good to see lots of folks here getting nice $$$ in retirement.