Well, I think we can all relax. Trump just tapped Dr. Oz to oversee Medicare and Medicaid.
I believe I can sign up for Medicare before the inauguration since I turn 65 in April. I need to make sure to do so at the earliest possible moment. Is that three months before my birth month (so January 1) or three months before my actual birthday?
when I saw your post last night I thought you were kidding.
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FYI - the House just passed HR 82, eliminating the windfall elimination provision and government pension offset. No word on whether Schumer will allow the Senate to act on it. But seems an indication that the Repubs currently in the House aren’t determined to greatly restrict SSA bens.
(Not trying to hijack into a discussion as the relative merits of those provisions or this action. But if you receive/desire government benefits, just realize the rules change. And folk before/after such changes get treated differently.)
From the “Medicare and You” handbook, available on Medicare’s website:
“Generally, you can first sign up for Part A and/or Part B during the 7 month period that begins 3 months before the month you turn 65 and ends 3 months after the month you turn 65.”
So if your birthday is in April, you can sign up beginning January 1. Note that your coverage would not start until the first day of April.
I am due to retire next year but don’t know if that will even be possible now with whatever changes are going to occur. I have insurance through work right now. I am 67 so I could conceivable sign up for Medicare asap. I think I’ll make an appointment to discuss with someone.
I already have Part A.
Probably have to work until I fall over and die. Which won’t be long hopefully lol.
@enipla this is what is affecting you. If this legislation goes through it may greatly change your situation.
At the risk of hijacking this thread (although it is discussing strategies for making moves before Dr. Oz can fuck things up): It’s cheaper for me to move from my employer health insurance to Medicare plus Medigap G. Mainly because if I drop health insurance my employer provides a monthly stipend which more than covers Mrs. Martian and my premiums (plus our annual deductible is much lower). With my previous employer is was even more of a no-brainer because the Medicare/Medigap premiums were lower than my part of the employer-supplied insurance. YMMV of course depending on your specific circumstance.
Thank you for mentioning this. I never thought of it from that angle. I am going to check into this possibility as well as scheduling an appointment with a Medicare specialist.
If this legislation goes through it may greatly change your situation.
Possibly not. Depends on what he would otherwise expect to receive from SS - either on his or his wife’s acct. If his SS expectation is relatively low, and he expects relatively high bens from his county due to their wise investments, it may make no/minimal change.
But it definitely WOULD affect many people significantly. And would piss off a lot of people who were previously subject to the windfall/offset, or who made changes to avoid it, which would now have been beneficial not changed. And I haven’t read the bill to see what - if anything - it says about retroactivity.
Like I said, the rules change all the time. Sometimes in your favor, sometimes not. But this certainly does not suggest a commitment to reduce SS benefits.
when I saw your post last night I thought you were kidding.
If only. ![]()
this is what is affecting you. If this legislation goes through it may greatly change your situation.
It’s not a pension. Or a pension offset. It’s in my name. I can invest it however I want. We don’t get pensions.
I could withdraw it tomorrow, but would have to pay tax on it.
Well, whenever I withdraw it, I will have to pay tax on it. I suppose I could move it. But that doesn’t change anything. It would be taxed as income when I withdraw it.
And just to mention another possibility - my decision will be a no- brainer to keep my former employer’s insurance. Which will reimburse the Medicare premiums for myself and my husband, function as a Medicare supplement, provide prescription coverage and cover care anywhere in the world, (Medicare does not generally cover care outside of the US)
And just to mention another possibility - my decision will be a no- brainer to keep my former employer’s insurance. Which will reimburse the Medicare premiums for myself and my husband, function as a Medicare supplement, provide prescription coverage and cover care anywhere in the world, (Medicare does not generally cover care outside of the US).
We don’t have that option unfortunately.
In fact my county government agency is planning on eliminating the private health insurance and requiring everyone under 65 to sign up with the state marketplace options.
If you are still working past 65 you will be required to sign up for Medicare.
One of the local counties has already done this.
For now I am not choosing a retirement date until I can see at least some of the bigger picture. Plus I am doing research on Medicare options in my locality.
It sucks.
Not sure which thread to put it in, so I’ll put it here. Over the past week, SSA Commissioner resigned 1 year into a 6 year term. And the #2 guy in SSA Office of Hearings and Appeals stepped away from his leadership role. I suspect they will not be the last, and that many Agencies will see top-level management step down rather than deal with the incoming admin.
Mehmet Oz will attempt to privatize Medicare. "
But there is some reason to be hopeful. As my coll, existing laws will make it somewhat challenging for Oz to completely wreck Medicare." Why Republicans Are “Very Excited” About Dr. Oz – Mother Jones