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President Joe Biden signs the Social Security Fairness Act during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House, Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025, in Washington.
NEA News

LANDMARK Victory! GPO and WEP repealed

With a win 40 years in the making, NEA secures full retirement benefits for educators.

Key Takeaways

  1. On January 5, President Joe Biden signed into law the bipartisan Social Security Fairness Law, capping off a 40-year effort by NEA members to repeal the punitive and discriminatory Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and the Government Pension Offset (GPO) laws.
  2. About 2.8 million hardworking Americans are currently affected by the WEP and GPO regulations, which slash Social Security, pension and other retirement benefits.
  3. With the repeal of GPO-WEP, impacted individuals will see an average increase of $360 per month in Social Security benefits, depending on their employment history.

In an astonishing accomplishment, NEA and NEA-Retired members have helped restore retirement benefits for millions of educators. 

For more than 40 years, public employees in many states have been subject to punitive and discriminatory measures that reduce their Social Security benefits. 

Called the Government Pension Offset (GPO) and Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP), these rules have robbed firefighters, postal workers, police officers, and educators of the retirement income they earned since 1977 and 1983 respectively. 

In December—after decades of unflinching advocacy by NEA and allies—Congress voted to fully repeal these damaging provisions. On January 5, with NEA Vice President Princess Moss by his side, President Joe Biden signed the repeal into law. 

“Together, working through our union, we ended a terrible injustice,” says Susan Strader, a retired technology teacher from Connecticut. 

Quote byHeather Zunguze, Pacific Grove, California

I am not yet retired and have spent nearly my entire adult life (25 years so far) teaching in public schools. Today, when I hear about this astonishing victory over entrenched economic injustice, I feel both pride and gratitude for our union and the fierce teachers and allies who have been advocating to overturn this injustice for decades. But, more than anything, I feel love and joy for my friend and colleague, Beth G., who kept teaching well into her 60s and even after a heart attack, yes, with love for her work, but also with the pain of being denied what she would be rightfully owed. Hooray for all of the Beth G.’s who are so deserving of their full social security benefits!
—Heather Zunguze, Pacific Grove, California

Real-life impact  

Susan Strader
Susan Strader

When Strader retired in June 2024, she knew her financial situation wasn’t as secure as she deserved after 36 years in the workforce. 

She has zero regrets about her life choices. She spent 12 years working full-time in corporate America and another 12 years raising children. While working as a consultant, she earned a master’s degree and teaching certification, and then spent a rewarding 13 years as a teacher in Connecticut’s Preston Public Schools. 

But because she taught in Connecticut, Strader was subject to GPO and WEP. The same was true for millions of educators in 15 states, and other public employees in a total of 26 states.  

“When people ask, ‘If you knew earlier that your retirement would be affected like this, would you make different choices?’ I can honestly answer no,” Strader says. “But it is still devastating to see how serving as a public employee negatively affected my finances in retirement.”  

Many educators did not know they would be stripped of benefits until they were at the tail end of their careers. 

NEA-Retired President Anita Gibson has heard heartbreaking stories from members who felt blindsided, discovering that the benefits they had earned, or those of a spouse, would be decimated by GPO and WEP.

Quote bySusan Hanes, Santa Rosa, California

I'm 83 and have sent so many emails and letters and made phone calls to my representatives in Congress and the Senate. I had almost given up hope that a repeal could be achieved. Though I may not have many years to benefit, I'm thankful that younger educators and those still teaching—along with so many other public employees—will benefit into the future. For me, when the repeal goes into effect, I expect to receive widow benefits from my late husband's life-long work. The check simply stopped when he died in 2021, at a time when expenses from his medical and at-home care (he was greatly disabled by Parkinson’s) had mounted up and I was worried that my pension and our IRAs wouldn't be enough to sustain me. Now I breathe a sigh of relief—and I thank every one of those out there who helped pass the repeal.
—Susan Hanes, Santa Rosa, California

“Some retiring educators thought they had planned and saved and done the right things to have retirement security, only to have to keep working into their 70s or move in with family when they can’t afford to stay in their homes,” Gibson says. 

“That’s why we have been relentless on this issue,” she adds, noting the hard work of NEA and NEA-Retired members.  

"We have been been relentless on this issue,"  says Anita Gibson, NEA Retired President.

NEA has lobbied federal lawmakers on the issue since the 1990s. In that time, members have traveled to Washington, D.C., met with representatives back home, made calls, sent emails and postcards, and explained the issue to lawmakers, colleagues, and friends.

Quote byNancy Owen, Bloomington, Indiana

At the tender age of 49, I went back to school after two careers as a secretary and librarian. My goal was to be a teacher, after a lifetime of people telling me I would be a ‘natural.’ Becoming a teacher (at age 51) was one of the proudest moments of my life. No one had warned me that I would be punished in my senior years. I found out about WEP when I applied for Social Security at age 65. I had hoped to work until age 70 but was disabled by degenerative spine disease and heart attacks. … This reversal doesn’t mean I’ll live a life of luxury, but it does mean I can live life with dignity in my old age—something I believe I have earned. Thank you, thank you, thank you for your persistence in righting a very big wrong!
—Nancy Owen, Bloomington, Indiana

What are GPO and WEP? 

For far too long, many elected leaders were not well-informed about how these unfair provisions hurt millions of public employees across the nation. Fortunately, educators stepped in with the facts:  

  • More than 2.8 million public sector employees in 26 states were impacted by GPO and WEP. Educators were affected in 15 of those states (see map), because they pay into their state pension system, but not into Social Security. 
  • WEP assumed that none of these public employees earn Social Security benefits—which failed to take into account that many educators hold second jobs and summer gigs that require them to pay Social Security taxes. The provision was often devastating to career-changers like Strader, who did not receive the full benefit of the years they did pay into Social Security. Also, because she did not spend her entire career as a public employee, Strader earned just 16.9 percent of a full teacher pension, which takes over 35 years to secure in Connecticut. 
  • GPO reduced spousal or survivor benefits. More than 70 percent of those affected by GPO lost their entire spousal or survivor benefit. 

Some widowed educators received that survivor’s benefit while they were still working. But the minute they retired and started receiving pension payments, they no longer received the benefit that their loved one earned.

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Quote byBobbie Duncan, Odessa, Texas

In 1983, I was one of the NEA members that NEA brought from affected states to Washington, D.C., to lobby against the initial passage of [GPO-WEP]. After all these years, our work has been rewarded. I jumped through a loophole and qualified for spousal benefits, but my husband’s earned Social Security was reduced when he retired from 34 years in the classroom. I wish he were still here to enjoy this victory, but my benefits will be adjusted and that one-third penalty for being a teacher will be restored. We ARE the NEA! And we never give up! Thank you, NEA leadership and the thousands of members who worked for years to make this real!
—Bobbie Duncan, Odessa, Texas

Bringing home a win  

The best way to help lawmakers understand the problems with GPO and WEP has been to share the stories of our members. 

“Without question, the work that our members have done on this issue and the willingness of NEA-Retired members to share their stories led to this victory,” says Marc Egan, director of NEA’s government relations department. 

NEA members kept a spotlight on this critical issue, and amped up their activism in the last few years. Since the start of 2023, NEA members had hundreds of face-to-face conversations with lawmakers and rallied on Capitol Hill. In 2024 alone, members made hundreds of thousands of calls to encourage their members of Congress to support the Social Security Fairness Act. 

This historic repeal of GPO and WEP will benefit the profession indefinitely, says Anita Gibson: “Our years of advocacy have finally fixed this, not only for our current retirees, but for future generations of educators.”

Quote byLee Butler, Loveland, Colorado

I have been writing to Congress for many, many years about GPO-WEP. I had truly resigned myself to the fact it would not be repealed in my lifetime. Yet, it happened!!! This repeal will mean that I won’t have to keep working part-time at the age of 73. I will be able to keep up with my bills. Everything has gone up in price and, as a senior, it is very hard to survive without family support. Many times, I have raged at the situation and said it just was not fair!!! Now I can stop raging. I have seen the impossible happen. Thank God and all the people who never gave up and got it done!
—Lee Butler, Loveland, Colorado

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The National Education Association (NEA), the nation's largest professional employee organization, is committed to advancing the cause of public education. NEA's 3 million members work at every level of education—from pre-school to university graduate programs. NEA has affiliate organizations in every state and in more than 14,000 communities across the United States.