[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 20, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 20CFR226.31]

[Page 440-441]
 
                      TITLE 20--EMPLOYEES' BENEFITS
 
                  CHAPTER II--RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD
 
PART 226_COMPUTING EMPLOYEE, SPOUSE, AND DIVORCED SPOUSE ANNUITIES
--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart C_Computing a Spouse or Divorced Spouse Annuity
 
Sec. 226.31  Reduction for public pension.

    (a) The tier I annuity component of an spouse/divorced spouse 
annuity, as described in the preceding sections of this part, is reduced 
if the spouse/divorced spouse is in receipt of a public pension.
    (b) When reduction is required. Unless the spouse or divorced spouse 
annuity meets one of the exceptions in paragraph (d) of this section, 
the tier I annuity component is reduced each month the annuitant is 
receiving a monthly pension from a Federal, state, or local government 
agency (government pension), but excluding a pension paid by a 
government of a foreign country, for which he or she was employed in 
work not covered by social security on the last day of such employment. 
For purposes of this section, Federal government employees are not 
considered to be covered by social security if they are covered for 
Medicare but are not otherwise covered by social security.
    (c) Payment in a lump sum. If the government pension is not paid 
monthly or is paid in a lump-sum payment, the Board will determine how 
much the pension would be if it were paid monthly and then reduce the 
monthly railroad retirement annuity accordingly. The number of years 
covered by a lump-sum payment and thus the period when the annuity will 
be reduced, will generally be clear from the pension plan. If one of the 
alternatives to a lump-sum payment is a life annuity, and the amount of 
the monthly benefit for the life annuity can be determined, the 
reduction will be based on that monthly benefit amount. Where the period 
or the equivalent monthly pension benefit is not clear, it may be 
necessary for the Board to determine the reduction period on an 
individual basis.
    (d) Exceptions. The reduction does not apply:
    (1) If the annuitant is receiving a government pension based on 
employment for an interstate instrumentality; or
    (2) If the annuitant receives or is eligible to receive a government 
pension for one or more months in the period December 1977 through 
November 1982 and he or she meets the requirements for social security 
benefits that were applied in January 1977 (even though he or she did 
not actually claim such benefits nor become entitled to such benefits 
until a later month). The January 1977 requirements are, for a man, a 
one-half support test (see paragraph (e) of this section), and, for a 
woman

[[Page 441]]

claiming benefits as a divorced spouse, marriage for at least 20 years 
to the insured worker. A person is considered eligible for a government 
pension for any month in which he or she meets all the requirements for 
payment except that he or she is working or has not applied; or
    (3) If the annuitant was receiving or eligible (as defined in 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section) to receive a government pension for 
one or more months before July 1983, and he or she meets the one-half 
support test (see paragraph (e) of this section). If the annuitant meets 
the exception in this paragraph but he or she does not meet the 
exception in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, December 1982 is the 
earliest month for which the reduction will not affect his benefits; or
    (4) If the annuitant has been eligible for a government pension in a 
given month except for a requirement which delayed eligibility for such 
pension until the month following the month in which all other 
requirements were met, the Board will consider the annuitant to be 
eligible in that given month for the purpose of meeting one of the 
exceptions in paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this section. If the 
annuitant meets an exception solely because of this paragraph, his or 
her benefits will be unreduced for months after November 1984 only.
    (e) The one-half support test. For a man to meet the January 1977 
requirement as provided in the exception in paragraph (d)(2) of this 
section and for a man or a woman to meet the exception in paragraph 
(d)(3) of this section, he or she must meet a one-half support test. 
One-half support is defined in part 222 of this chapter. One-half 
support must be met at one of the following times:
    (1) If the employee upon whose compensation the spouse or divorced 
spouse annuity is based had a period of disability, as defined in part 
220 of this chapter, which did not end before he or she became entitled 
to an age and service or disability annuity, the spouse/divorced spouse 
annuitant must have been receiving at least one-half support from the 
employee either--
    (i) At the beginning of the employee's period of disability; or
    (ii) At the time the employee became entitled to an age and service 
or disability annuity.
    (2) If the employee upon whose compensation the spouse or divorced 
spouse annuity is based did not have a period of disability, as defined 
in part 220 of this chapter, at the time of his or her entitlement, the 
spouse or divorced spouse annuitant must have been receiving at least 
one-half support from the employee at the time the employee became 
entitled to an age and service or disability annuity.
    (f) Amount of reduction. (1) If the spouse/divorced spouse annuitant 
becomes eligible for a government pension after June 1983, the Board 
will reduce (to zero, if necessary) the tier I annuity component by two-
thirds of the amount of the monthly pension. If the amount of the 
reduction is not a multiple of 10 cents, it will be rounded to the next 
higher multiple of 10 cents.
    (2) If the spouse/divorced spouse annuitant became eligible for a 
government pension before July 1983 and he or she did not meet one of 
the exceptions in paragraph (d) of this section, the Board will reduce 
(to zero, if necessary) the tier I component by the full amount of the 
pension for months before December 1984 and by two-thirds the amount of 
his or her monthly pension for months after November 1984. If the amount 
of the reduction is not a multiple of 10 cents, it will be rounded to 
the next higher multiple of 10 cents.
    (g) Reduction not applicable. This reduction is not applied to 
claimants who both filed and were entitled to a spouse benefit prior to 
December 1977.