TMRS_benefits_guide_2012This Benefits Guide provides a comprehensive overview of your TMRS®
retirement program. You may find particular sections of the book especially
helpful to you at different points in your career as a municipal employee.
TIVIR5 has served Texas cities since 1948 and isa valuable part ofthe
benefit package your city offers. Our trained, professional staff mem-
bers are always ready to be of service to you at any time. Please feel
free to visit, phone, or e-mail ua when vve may beofassistance.
Sincerely,
_
David Gavia
Executive Director, TK4RS
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 1
The Texas Municipal Retirement System (TMRS) pro-
vides retirement benefits to employees of approxi-
mately 850 Texas cities. In TMRS, each city chooses
from a menu of retirement plan provisions to provide
affordable, sound benefits to meet the needs of
employees and their families.
This Member Benefits Guide will help you under-
stand your retirement program and make the best
use of your benefits. Because each member city
chooses from TMRS' menu of plan options, TMRS
benefits vary from city to city. For specific questions
about your city's benefits, contact your city's person-
nel department or TMRS. The TMRS website also
provides current information on individual city plan
provisions.
TMRS members with questions about benefits may
call the TMRS Phone Centertoll -free at 800.924.8677
or send an e -mail to phonecenter@7MRS.com.
TMRS is governed by the TMRS Act, Texas Govern-
ment Code, Title 8, Subtitle G, and is a qualified, tax -
deferred retirement plan under Section 401 of the
Internal Revenue Code. The TMRS Act provides that
the administration of TMRS is entrusted to a six -
member Board of Trustees, appointed by the Gover-
nor with the advice and consent of the Senate.
TMRS also publishes this Benefits Guide in Spanish,
and we have bilingual employees to assist you.
,:n l C1 7 l } reprosentontes l' tlI 7C;FC tCt "J 1 ( t?"
10,
The TMRS website, www.tmrs.com, contains up -to-
date information to supplement what is found in this
guide. From the website, you can download forms,
check city plan provisions, and see your own TMRS
account status.
The TMRS website also offers benefit information in
Spanish. i.0 pd inn r „jr? internee fcimbien ofrece infbr-
rrr"rc idn sobrr b' .,r of robi en, Est ert'rc,?J,
2 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
t. ",ha < t e r ¢ fits in ri
Chapter 3 Your Member Account ... ...... m...,....... m ...,.......m...,.......m..... ..
Credit Cl"iapter 4 Earning Service
Chapter r tir rat .. ee....,..... ee....,..... ee. ...,.....ee....,.....ee....,...
Chapter 6 Applying i t r t ..............................
Ckhapt,x 7 Occupational Disability Retirement..... ..................
Chapter 8 Death Benefits ........... ....... ....... ....... ....,.., ....,.
Chapter 9 Leaving City Employment / Refunds ...................
Chapter0 i r ....... .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... - .......... .. .......... ........
Chapter 11 Taxes—. ... ... .
Clhiiapter 12 TMRS Services / Retirement Estimates . ...... w. ... ...
Index `x ,.........,
i ,.,I,
Copyright 2013, Texas Municipal Retirement System.
The TMRS Member Benefits Guide is an informal presentation of the TMRS Act. If any specific
questions of fact or law should arise, the statutes will govern. TMRS, MyTMRS, and the TMRS logo
are registered trademarks of the Texas Municipal Retirement System.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 3
Chapter 1 • Benefits in Brief
Membership
If you are employed by a city that participates in TMRS, in a
position that normally requires at least 1,000 hours of work
in a year, you must join TMRS. Your city must certify every
position that meets this work requirement and enroll each
employee who fills such a position.
Credit for Your Service
In general, you earn a month of service credit toward re-
tirement for each month you are employed in an eligible
position (see page 7) by a TMRS city and the required
deposit is made. You may establish other types of service
credit, including credit for previous employment or active -
duty military service. (See Chapter 4.)
In the spring of each year, TMRS sends you an Annual
Statement of your service credit and your account bal-
ance. You may also view your account information on
TMRS' secure website using MyTMRS ®.
Vesting
In most TMRS cities, you are vested when you have 5
years of service credit. Some cities require 10 years of
service credit to vest.
"Vesting" means you have worked enough years and
established enough service credit to meet the minimum
length -of- service requirement for retirement. Once vested,
if you leave city employment, you may leave your deposits
with TMRS and retire with a TMRS retirement benefit when
you reach age 60 (or meet other retirement requirements
that may be necessary).
Your Beneficiary
Your beneficiary is the person (or persons) you choose to
receive payments from your retirement account if you die.
Although you name a beneficiary when you first become
a TMRS member, reviewing your beneficiary designation
becomes especially important when you have vested after
5 or 10 years of service credit (depending on your city's
plan). TMRS will contact you when you vest to have you fill
out a vested beneficiary form.
4 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Deposits and Accounts
Your member deposits are deducted by your city from
your pay. Depending on your city's plan, your deposits will
be 5 %, 6 %, or 7% of your gross compensation. Your mem-
ber deposits in your account are credited with interest
each year.
Your city matches your member deposits and interest at
retirement at a rate chosen by the city:1 to 1, 1.5 to 1, or 2 to
1. The city match is combined with your member deposits
and the interest credited to your account to calculate your
retirement benefits when you retire.
Member deposits are deducted from your pay before
taxes, so you are not taxed on your member deposits or
interest credits until you receive them from TMRS as a
benefit payment. See Chapter 11 for more information on
tax issues.
By law, you cannot borrow from your member account; nor
can you use it as collateral for a loan.
Retiring
In most TMRS cities, you can retire when you have at least
5 years of service credit (10 years in a few cities) and are
at least age 60.
You may also retire at any age if you have 20 or 25 years
of service credit, depending on the plan chosen by your
city.
At retirement, you will choose a monthly payment option
to receive your benefit. All options pay you a monthly ben-
efit for the rest of your life. Besides the Retiree Life Only
benefit, six payment options are available that can provide
payments to your beneficiary if you die. Choosing your re-
tirement option is one of the most important decisions you
will make as a TMRS member. Detailed information on the
options begins on page 27. A video explaining your retire-
ment options is available on the TMRS website.
Your monthly benefit at retirement is based on your mem-
ber deposits and interest, the city's matching funds, other
credits, your life expectancy (and your beneficiary's, if you
TMRS Member Benefits Guide
choose certain opUons), future account interest assumptions
as set by law, and the monthly payment plan you choose.
Your Annual Statement contains estimates of your retire-
ment benefits. You may also get an estimate by calling
TK4RSat80O.Q24.U677or through K8yTK4RS.
Death Benefits
Upon your death, your beneficiary or estate is guaran-
teed to receive at least a refund of your remaining mem-
ber deposits and interest If you are vested at the time
of your deeth, your beneficiary may also be eligible for a
monthly payment. |f you die after retirement, the monthly
payment your beneficiary receives will be based on the
retirement option you chose. See Chapter for full infor-
mation on beneficiaries and death benefits.
K4anyTIVIRS cities have chosen to offer Supplemental
Death Benefit for members and retirees. Survivors of ac-
tive employees of these cities receive an additional benefit
approximately equal to the employee's annual salary. |fan
employee ofa city with Supplemental Death Benefits dies
after retirement, the Supplemental Death program pays a
lump sum of$75O0toabeneficiary.
Disability Benefits
TIVIRS provides an Occupational Disability benefit (see
Chapter 7). If you become disabled in a manner likely to
be permanent and that prevents you from performing your
job, you may be eligible to retire immediate|y. Your ben-
efit will be based on your member deposits and interest,
the city's matching funds, and any other credits you have
earned.
Leaving City Employment Before Retirement
K you are no longer employed by any TIVIRS city, you may
apply for a refund of your member deposits and interest.
You are not required tm withdraw (refund) your depoa
ita'Ifyouxx|thdraxx(refund)yourmemberdepoaitsand
interest, your TK8RG membership will end. You will not
receive any city matching funds.
K you think you may be working for another TIVIRS city in
the future, you may want to leave your money in your ac'
count.Ao|ongeayouaroaTK8RSmembe[youracoount
earns interest. U you are not veuL*d, your membership
ends after 5 years of inactivity, and your account will no
longer be credited with interest.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Chapter 2 • Membership
If you are employed by a city that participates in TMRS,
in a position that normally requires at least 1,000 hours of
work in a year, you must join TMRS. Your city must certify
every position that meets this work requirement and en-
roll each employee who fills such a position. Regardless of
your age, you become a member of TMRS on the date you
are employed in an eligible position by a participating city.
Employees who are not eligible for TMRS membership
include:
Those in positions that normally require less
than 1,000 hours of work in a year
Those who are hired by cities on a seasonal
or temporary basis
Volunteer firefighters
When you are employed in a position that requires TMRS
participation, part of your compensation will be deducted
from each paycheck and credited to your member ac-
count. Funds contributed by your city to fund their prom-
ise to match a member's account balance at retirement
are credited to the city's account. Upon meeting certain
requirements, you can retire and receive a guaranteed
monthly payment for life based on your deposits and inter-
est, the city's matching funds, and other credits.
Your participation begins on your date of employment,
even though the city might consider you a probationary
employee for other benefits.
Q: Is participation in TMRS mandatory?
A. As long as you are employed at a TMRS city in a po-
sition that normally requires at least 1,000 hours per
year (determined by your city), you are required to be
a member of TMRS as a condition of your job. The
only way to end your TMRS membership (besides re-
tirement or death) is to stop working for all TMRS cit-
ies and withdraw (refund) your member deposits and
interest. If you take a refund, you will not receive the
city's matching funds.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Qs For TMRS purposes, what is compensation?
A° Compensation consists of your gross wages paid by
the city. Compensation includes overtime pay, car al-
lowances, uniform allowances, sick leave, vacation
pay, and other taxable payments you receive from
your employer. For information on workers' compen-
sation payments, see pages 16 —17.
Ow Who decides which TMRS options my city will
adopt?
A: Your City Council decides which provisions are in-
cluded in your city's plan of TMRS benefits. The TMRS
Act requires cities that are beginning participation in
TMRS to include certain provisions in the plan. For cit-
ies that are already TMRS members, optional provi-
sions, such as Updated Service Credit and Cost of Liv-
ing Adjustments (COLAs), can be added or changed
by actions of the City Council.
..............................
Vested Membership
When you are "vested," you have reached an important
milestone in your TMRS membership. Once you have
enough service credit to be vested and you reach the
necessary age requirements, you may retire and receive
a monthly retirement benefit for the rest of your life. If you
leave your city job after you are vested and leave your
member deposits with TMRS, you keep your right to a re-
tirement benefit. Your TMRS deposits will continue to earn
interest, and when you meet the necessary age and ser-
vice credit requirements, you can retire from TMRS. Most
TMRS cities require 5 years of service credit to become a
vested member. Some cities require 10 years.
Ors I've worked for two TMRS cities with different vest-
ing requirements. How can 1 tell when I'm vested?
A: If you have at least 5 years of service credit, all with
5 -year cities, you are vested. Even if you leave a
5 -year city after vesting, you are still vested in TMRS.
If you are not vested with 5 years of service and must
combine service credit from cities with 5 and 10 -year
vesting requirements, you must have 10 years of com-
bined service credit to become vested.
8 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Your Beneficiary
One of your most important decisions as a TMRS member
is the designation of your beneficiary. Your beneficiary is
the person who may receive a TMRS benefit (or the refund
of your member deposits and interest) if you die.
When you first become a TMRS member, you will choose
a beneficiary. Until you become vested (after 5 or 10 years
of service credit, depending on your city's plan), if you die,
your beneficiary will receive a refund of your member de-
posits and interest. Once you become vested, your ben-
eficiary has certain options with regard to your retirement
account if you die (see pages 38 — 40).
Terminating TMRS Membership
Once established, your membership in TMRS continues
until one of the following occurs:
You terminate employment with all TMRS
cities, and you withdraw (refund) your
member deposits from TMRS
You retire under TMRS or die before
retirement
You terminate employment with all TMRS
cities and do not earn service credit with
any participating city for more than 60
months (5 years), and
-- You do not have enough service credit
to be vested (5 years in most cities);
or
You are not employed in a position
covered by a retirement system that
participates in the Proportionate
Retirement Program (see pages
10 and 24).
0: What happens if 1 stop working for a TMRS city and
start service with another participating TMRS city?
A: As long as you leave your member deposits in TMRS,
you keep your membership in TMRS. This applies
even if you are considered a probationary employee
(for other non -TMRS benefits) of your new city.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide
...................................... ...............................
0: What happens if 1 begin a new job that is covered by
another Texas statewide retirement system?
A: As long as you leave your member deposits with
TMRS, you can participate in the following systems
and retain your TMRS membership:
Teacher Retirement System of Texas
Employees Retirement System of Texas
Judicial Retirement System of Texas
(Plan 1 or 2)
Texas County and District Retirement
System
City of Austin Employees Retirement System
This applies even if you are not a vested TMRS
member. Please inform TMRS if you become a mem-
ber of one of these other retirement systems.
...................................... ...............................
You can also combine service credit with these other sys-
tems for determining service retirement eligibility. If you
do elect to use the Proportionate Retirement Program, it
is recommended that you notify each retirement system in
writing that you have service in other systems and wish to
combine your service credit (see pages 22 — 23). Also see
page 25 for information on Proportionate Buyback.
...................................... ...............................
Q What happens if 1 leave employment with all TMRS
cities and 1 do not have enough service credit to be
vested (5 or 10 years of service, depending on your
city's plan)?
A: If you are not working for any TMRS city, you may
leave your member deposits with the System for up
to 60 months and keep your TMRS membership. After
the 60 -month period, your membership terminates. If
you leave your member deposits with TMRS, your de-
posits will stop being credited with interest after the
60 -month period. Therefore, at that time, you should
apply for a refund of your member deposits and in-
terest. You can roll over your refund into an IRA or
qualified retirement plan for income tax purposes (see
pages 50 — 51).
For more information on refunds, see Chapter 9.
:..................................... ............ ... ............
...:
10 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
...................................... ...............................
: I'm vested, and plan to leave the city workforce be-
fore I'm eligible to retire. If I take a refund, do I get
the city's matching funds?
A: No. If you take a refund, you do not receive the city's
matching funds. The only way to receive the city's
matching funds is to retire from TMRS and receive a
monthly benefit.
Q: If 1 leave city employment, do I have to receive a
refund of my account?
A: No. If you are vested, you may leave your account
with TMRS indefinitely. If you are not vested, your ac-
count continues to be credited with interest only for
a 60 -month period after you leave employment. After
the 60 -month period ends, your membership is termi-
nated and you will need to refund your account.
..................................... ..............................:
For more information on leaving funds in your account if
you are not vested, see pages 42 — 45.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 11
Chapter 3 • Your Member Account
Your Member Deposits
Each month, your city withholds a percentage of your
gross monthly compensation and deposits the money in
a TMRS account in your name. These are your member
deposits. Each TMRS city chooses the rate of member de-
posits — either 5 %, 6 %, or 7% of your gross compensation.
Your member deposits to TMRS are tax - deferred, which
means they are not subject to federal income tax un-
til they are paid back to you in the form of a refund or a
monthly retirement benefit. See Chapter 11 for more tax
information.
At retirement, your member deposits and interest are
combined with the city's matching funds and other credits
granted. TMRS then calculates a monthly retirement ben-
efit based on these amounts, a discount rate of 5 %, an
estimate of your remaining life expectancy at retirement,
and other factors.
Interest on Member Deposits
Interest on your TMRS member account is credited once
each year on December 31. Interest is calculated on the
balance in your account as of January 1 of that calendar
year. For example, interest on your account for the year
2012 will be credited on December 31, 2012, and is calcu-
lated on your balance at the beginning of the year, January
1, 2012. Due to a law passed in 2010, all member accounts
are guaranteed a minimum 5% interest credit annually.
Prorated Interest Only When You Retire
You receive prorated interest on your account only during
the year in which you retire. For example, if you decide to
retire in July 2014, your account will receive prorated in-
terest for part of that year. For a July 2014 retirement, you
would receive 7/12's of the preceding (2013) year's inter-
est rate based on the balance in your account on January
1, 2014. Prorated interest allows you to choose the time of
the year you would like to retire without losing interest on
your account.
12 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Qa Can 1 borrow money from my TMRS member
account?
,o No. Bylaw, your member deposits and interest are un-
assignable. This means you cannot borrow from your
account, nor can you use your account as collateral
for a loan.
f* If 1 leave TMRS- covered employment and withdraw
my money, and later become a member again, can 1
buy back my former service credit?
Am If your city has adopted an ordinance that allows
buyback and you are an employee of the city when
the ordinance is adopted, then you may. See page
17.
Your Annual Statement
Each year, TMRS mails you an Annual Statement of your
account with the System. Your Annual Statement shows
the funds in your member account and the total service
credit you have with TMRS. The statement also shows
your estimated retirement income.
Please remember the retirement estimates shown on the
Annual Statement are simply estimates based on certain
assumptions. You should contact TMRS for further infor-
mation before you decide to retire.
Review your Annual Statement carefully. If you see any
errors, contact TMRS. You may be able to correct errors in
your account, but only for a period of four years after the
date the benefit accrued.
It is very important that you keep TMRS informed if
your address changes. A correct address is necessary for
TMRS to send your Annual Statement and other important
information.
You can also see your current account information as well
as view and print your Annual Statement using MyTMRS®
on the TMRS website (www.tmrs.com).
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 13
Your TMRS ID Number
TMRS does not use Social Security numbers to reference
your account. For your privacy and security, we give TMRS
members their own 6 -digit identification numbers. Mem-
ber personal information is confidential, and we do not
share member lists or other personal information with any-
one unless authorized under the TMRS Act.
MyTM RS®
This feature of the TMRS website allows you to view
your personal information online. You can see your ac-
count's current status, refund status, Annual Statement,
and monthly retirement payments through this secure
area of www.tmrs.com. You can run retirement estimates
based on different dates and options. Retirees can view
and print their 1099 -R forms. To use this feature, you
will need to set up a password by logging on to the
website, clicking on the MyTMRS option, and following
the instructions.
City Matching Funds
For every month you make a deposit to TMRS, your city
agrees to match your deposits and interest at retirement
at a rate chosen by the city: 1 to 1, 1.5 to 1, or 2 to 1 (or
100 %, 150 %, or 200 %). The city's contributions to fund its
match of your deposits and interest are held in the city's
TMRS account. When you retire, the city's contributions
become part of your benefit. The only way to receive the
city's matching funds is to retire from TMRS and receive a
monthly payment.
14 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
How DoU Review or Change My Account?
Account balance
Address or name change
Beneficiary info
Change beneficiary
Credited service
Request for statement
Request for statement
to different address
Retirement Estimate
7)
By phone — requires 2 account indontifiee*
N�� UnvvdtnQ —by|etterorfax include signature
and 2 account identifiers
Web — usew/Ww/wyrwescoMvvithposuwond
Fmrm— to make a change requires specific form
with signature; forms available from WWW.TMRS.COM
'Account identifiers Eire personm{dotaAs known mthe member uo�/
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 15
Chapter 4 • Earning Service Credit
Service credit is the time you accumulate toward earning
a retirement benefit. Your TMRS benefit may be based on
several types of service credit. Once each year, in March,
you will receive an Annual Statement showing your TMRS
service credit. You may also view your service credit by
using the MyTMRS® feature on the website.
Current Service Credit
Current Service Credit is the credityou earn for each month
of active employment in an eligible position with a TMRS
city. You receive one month of Current Service Credit for
every month in which you make your required member de-
posit to TMRS. For most TMRS members, the majority of
your service credit will be Current Service Credit.
Workers' Compensation
Does my city make my member deposits to TMRS
while 1 am receiving Workers' Compensation pay -
ments?
A: Your TMRS deposits are based on the compensation
you receive from the city. Since Workers' Compensa-
tion payments are considered compensation, TMRS
deposits should be withheld; however, TMRS cities
have various policies regarding payments to persons
on workers' compensation.
..................................... ..............................:
Some cities supplement the workers' compensation pay-
ment to bring the person up to "full salary." Other cities
do not supplement the workers' compensation payment,
and there is no compensation paid directly by the city from
which your member deposits can be made.
Member deposits to TMRS should be withheld from the
total compensation the city pays to you. In this case, com-
pensation may only be the payment from the workers'
compensation provider, or that payment plus a supple-
ment paid by the city.
If a supplement is paid, the city should withhold your
member deposit based on the total compensation paid
(supplement plus workers' compensation) from the
supplemental pay.
16 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
If no supplement is paid by the city, you may make the ap-
propriate member deposit out -of- pocket from your work-
ers' compensation payment to the city to be transmitted to
TMRS with the normal monthly payroll report.
You will not receive service credit in TMRS for any months
in which no deposits are submitted to TMRS while you are
out on workers' compensation.
Buyback of Service Credit
If you have been a TMRS member and end your mem-
bership by leaving employment and withdrawing your
member deposits, and later return to work for a TMRS city,
you may be able to buy back the TMRS service you re-
funded. The city you go to work for must adopt a buyback
ordinance as part of its TMRS plan. Your former employ-
ment can be with your current city or another participating
TMRS city.
To buy back service credit you previously refunded:
T You must be an employee of the city
and a member of TMRS on the date
of the buyback ordinance's adop-
tion;
T You must have at least 24 consecutive
months of service credit as an employee
of the city adopting the ordinance;
and
T You must re- deposit, in one lump sum, all
of the amount previously refunded plus
a reinstatement fee equal to 5% of the
amount you withdrew for each year since
your refund.
Your member account with TMRS is credited with the
lump sum payment, while the 5% reinstatement fee is
credited to the city's account with the System.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 17
Updated Service Credit (USC)
Updated Service Credit (USC) is a special feature of the
TMRS retirement plan that may increase the value of your
retirement benefits. A city may adopt USC as part of its
TMRS plan.
USC is designed to help career members' benefits main-
tain their value. In calculating USC, TMRS looks at the
changes in your salary over your career and at any chang-
es the city has made to its TMRS plan, such as your de-
posit rate or the city's matching ratio. In some cases, USC
can increase your monthly retirement payment.
Generally, USC protects your benefit by including increas-
es in your salary and any changes your city might have
made to its TMRS plan and assuming those increases and
changes have been in effect throughout your career.
Although USC may increase the value of your retirement
benefit, USC does not affect the amount of money in your
member account, or the amount you will receive if you
take a refund of your member deposits and interest. USC
will only be part of your benefit if you retire and receive a
monthly retirement payment, and your city has chosen this
option as part of its plan.
How USC Works
Updated Service Credit interest is prorated in the year
you retire, so you receive the value of your USC no matter
which month you choose to retire.
Cities adopt or modify USC by ordinance. Prior to adoption,
TMRS must prepare an actuarial study to determine the
cost of the USC adoption. After receiving the TMRS study,
the city determines the percentage (50 %, 75 %, or 100 %) of
Updated Service Credit it will provide and whether it will
adopt USC on a one -time or annually repeating basis.
You must have made 36 monthly member deposits to
be eligible for USC, and these deposits must have been
made for service with the city that is adopting USC, prior
to the USC study date. The study date is 13 months before
the date the city adopts the provision.
Some cities include a transfer feature in the USC calcu-
lation. With this feature, if you have deposits in other
TMRS cities, your USC will include all service and account
balances from each city.
18 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
...................................... ...............................
Orr If my city adopts USC, will I receive increased
: credit?
A; Many members receive some increased credit.
However, if you have had no significant salary increas-
es over your career or if the city's matching ratio or
member deposit rate have not changed, you may not
receive USC.
C- How can 1 tell if my city has adopted USC?
Aw The easiest way to tell is to use the TMRS website
(City Plan Provisions) to check your city's specific plan.
The USC percentage (50 %, 75 %, or 100 %) and the
effective year will be shown. If no percentage is
shown, your city has not adopted USC. An R beside
the year indicates that your city has chosen to repeat
the USC calculation every year. A T by the percentage
indicates your city will include a transfer of USC cred-
its from other cities.
........................
Prior Service Credit
When a city joins TMRS, the employees of that city receive
credit for service performed with the city before the city
joined. Each city determines the percentage value and
pays the cost of the service credit granted.
Prior Service Credit treats your account as if you had been
a member of TMRS and were making monthly deposits
throughout those earlier periods of time.
TMRS issues a letter to each eligible member detailing
their amount of Prior Service Credit and the monetary val-
ue of the credit at the time it is granted. Interest on Prior
Service Credit is prorated in the year of retirement, so you
receive the value of your Prior Service Credit no matter
which month you choose to retire.
Loss of Prior Service Credit
If your membership in TMRS terminates, any Prior Service
Credit you have received becomes void. You keep Prior
Service Credit only if you remain a member of TMRS until
you retire.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 19
Military Service Credit
TMRS recognizes two types of Military Service Credit. One
type, governed by the federal Uniformed Services Em-
ployment and Reemployment Rights Act — USERRA — is
available to all TMRS members. The other type must be
adopted by your city.
To qualify for either type of Military Service Credit, the fol-
lowing conditions must be met:
Your active -duty service cannot have been
terminated on dishonorable terms.
You have not received credit for the same
military service in any other retirement
system or program established under the
laws of the State of Texas.
Military Service While a TMRS Member — USERRA
Credit (Applies to All TMRS Cities). If you enter active -
duty military or war - related service — either voluntarily or
because you are called to active duty — while you are a
covered TMRS employee, and you do not withdraw your
member deposits, you may be eligible to establish service
credit in TMRS for your length of military service, not to
exceed 60 months.
In order to qualify for USERRA Credit, you must be re-
employed by the city within 90 days of:
Your release or discharge from active
duty, or
Your recovery from an illness or injury in-
curred in or aggravated during your perfor-
mance of uniformed service (if your recov-
ery period does not exceed two years).
You receive credit for the months of active -duty service
performed. Under certain circumstances, you can make
the member deposits you would have made to TMRS as
an employee of the city (up to 60 months) had you not
performed military service. You have up to three times the
length of your military service to make these contributions,
but no more than 60 months. Your USERRA rights are es-
tablished by federal law. For the rules and regulations re-
garding USERRA, contact either your city's personnel de-
partment or TMRS.
20 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Credit for Other Periods of Military Service (Provision
Must be Adopted by Your City). This provision is optional
for cities. Once adopted, the provision recognizes military
service either:
Performed before you were employed by
the city, or
Performed during a time when you
voluntarily left city service for the military
and withdrew your member deposits or did
not exercise your rights under USERRA.
You may establish up to 60 months of military service
credit (time only) if your city has adopted this provision.
This type of Military Service Credit may only be received
if you are not receiving (and are not eligible to receive)
federal military retirement payments based on 20 or more
years of active duty or the equivalent.
Q, Does my time in the Armed Forces Reserves or
National or State Guard count?
Au Generally, no. However, if you were issued a DD -214
or equivalent that shows active -duty time, then that
time may be eligible for Military Service Credit.
Q Can I get credit for time served in the military by
using Restricted Prior Service Credit?
An Yes. If your city has adopted Restricted Prior Service
Credit (see below), you can receive time -only credit
(no money will be added to your account) for any ser-
vice performed on active duty. Restricted Prior Service
Credit can be established for any military service —
even for military retirees with 20 or more years of ac-
tive duty or the equivalent.
Federal tax law allows you to roll over from some deferred
compensation plans and IRAs to purchase certain Military
Service Credit, if you meet the requirements. You may not
have to pay income taxes or penalties for early withdrawal
at the time of the rollover. If you are interested in purchas-
ing Military Service Credit and you participate in a deferred
compensation plan or have an IRA, contact TMRS for more
information about your options.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 21
Restricted Prior Service Credit
If your city adopts this provision, you can receive Restrict-
ed Prior Service Credit for the following types of previous
full -time employment:
With any public authority or agency created
by the United States
With any state or territory of the U.S.
With any political subdivision of any state in
the U.S.
With any public agency or authority created
by a state or territory of the U.S.
As a commissioned law enforcement officer
employed as a college campus security
employee at a Texas institution of
higher education
•,
If you were an employee of the State of Texas or any
branch, agency, or subdivision of the State and refunded
service credit under:
The Employees Retirement System of Texas
The Teacher Retirement System of Texas
T The Judicial Retirement System of Texas
(Plan 1 or 2)
The Texas County and District Retirement
System
The City of Austin Employees Retirement
System
TMRS
To receive Restricted Prior Service Credit for service in
one of the other statewide systems, you cannot have re-
ceived service credit for that service in that system or in
TMRS. You must have refunded your service credit in the
other statewide system by withdrawing your deposits. If
you have service credit in another statewide system that
has not been refunded, you may be eligible for the Propor-
tionate Retirement Program (see page 24).
Also, see "Proportionate Buyback," page 25, for another
option regarding any refunded service with these systems.
22 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
...................................... ...............................
0: What qualifies as a public authority or agency?
A: Generally, a public authority or agency is one oper-
ated by a U.S. city, county, state, or the federal govern-
: ment. This includes regional councils of governments,
public school districts, and airport authorities. Publicly
operated hospitals, water and utility districts, and col-
; leges and universities also qualify. Service as a con-
; tracting agent with a government does not count.
: ..................................... ..............................:
Adding Restricted Prior Service Credit toward your length -
of- service requirements helps you reach vesting require-
ments and retirement eligibility sooner. For example, if
you work for a city with a 5 -year vesting requirement, have
three years of service credit in TMRS, and you are granted
two years of Restricted Prior Service Credit for your time
as a public school teacher in another state, you are now
vested with 5 years of service credit.
Probationary Prior Service Credit
If you were employed by a TMRS city on a probation-
ary basis before September 1, 1989, and did not make
TMRS deposits during your probationary period, you may
be entitled to a maximum of six months of Prior Service
Credit if your employing city adopts an ordinance granting
this credit.
Concurrent Service Credit
Concurrent Service Credit occurs when you make a mem-
ber deposit with more than one city or retirement system
in the same calendar month. Deposits you make count to-
ward your retirement benefit; however, you only receive
one month of service credit toward vesting and retirement
eligibility. Concurrent Service Credit can occur when an
employee leaves one TMRS city during a part of the month
and begins a new job with another TMRS city later in that
month.
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
In cities subject to the Family and Medical Leave Act,
employees can take an unpaid leave of absence under
FMLA.
If you are on unpaid leave under FMLA, you do not re-
ceive service credit under TMRS because you are not
receiving a salary from your city and are not making the
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 23
required member deposits. You are not, however, consid-
ered absent from service during that period of time.
Although you are not making deposits for your retirement,
you still retain your TMRS membership. If your city has ad-
opted Supplemental Death Benefits (see pages 40 — 41),
you should apply for extended coverage in order to main-
tain this death benefit. Once you return to work and again
make member deposits to TMRS, you will start receiving
service credit again.
Proportionate Retirement Program
The Proportionate Retirement Program is a program cre-
ated by State law that allows people with service in two
or more designated retirement systems to combine ser-
vice credit to meet retirement eligibility. Each participating
system has its own procedures for administering benefits
under the Proportionate Retirement Program. The partici-
pating systems are:
TMRS
4 Teacher Retirement System of Texas
Employees Retirement System of Texas
Judicial Retirement System of Texas
(Plan 1 or 2)
Texas County and District Retirement
System
City of Austin Employees Retirement System
If you have service credit in two or more of these retire-
ment systems, you may, under certain circumstances,
combine that service credit to meet service retirement
eligibility in TMRS and the other systems. Please notify
TMRS if you become a member of one of these other re-
tirement systems. Proportionate Service Credit can also
help you meet the length -of- service requirement for leav-
ing your member deposits with TMRS.
You should consult each system in which you have credit
about Proportionate Retirement before making retirement
plans. If you qualify for benefits under Proportionate Re-
tirement, you will receive benefit payments from each sys-
tem, based on your service credit with that system.
24 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Proportionate Buyback
If you are a current member of TMRS and have previously
refunded service credit from another Proportionate Retire-
ment participating system, you may choose to reestablish
that service credit under the participating system's rules.
TMRS will verify your current membership in TMRS to the
participating system to enable you to establish previously
canceled or refunded service credit.
Likewise, if you are a current member of a participating
Proportionate Retirement Program system other than
TMRS, and you have previously refunded service credit
in TMRS, you may establish credit for your TMRS time by
notifying TMRS of your eligibility and intention to establish
the credit. Service credit in TMRS that is established using
Proportionate Buyback has no monetary value and counts
only as time.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 25
Chapter 5 • Service Retirement
When you have the necessary service credit and you meet
the age requirements, if any, you may retire and receive a
monthly payment for the rest of your life.
In most TMRS cities, you can retire if:
You are at least 60 years of age and have
at least 5 years of service credit with TMRS
(some cities require 10 years of service at
age 60); or
+ You have at least 20 or 25 years of service
credit with TMRS, regardless of your age,
depending upon which option your city has
selected.
.................... *11,1111*111,111*111,Ill'''',*'',''I ........
Q: I've worked for two TMRS cities — one with "20
years at any age retirement" and one with "25 years
at any age retirement." How can I tell when I'm eli-
gible to retire?
Az If you have at least 20 years of service credit, all with
a "20-year" city, you are eligible to retire. Even if you
leave the 20-year city and go to work for a 25-year
city, you are still eligible to retire with TMRS.
If you do not have at least 20 years of service credit
with a 20-year city and must combine service credit
from a 20-year and a 25-year city, you must have 25
years of combined service credit to be eligible to retire.
.......... I ............... ....... ....... ..... _ ... _:
If you have service in more than one TMRS city and wish to
know more about retirement eligibility, call TMRS.
Q: Since TMRS credits annual interest to my member
account at the end of the year, should I wait until the
end of a year to retire?
A: TMRS prorates interest in the year of your retirement
only. This means if you retire in July, you will receive in-
terest on your member account from January through
July of that year. The prorated interest you receive is
based on the guaranteed 5% rate or any additional in-
terest credit determined by the TMRS Board of Trust-
; ees for the prior year. (However, see box at left about
possible annuity differences between calendar years.)
............. ....... _ ...........................................
26 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
How Your Service Retirement Benefit Is Calculated
The amount of your monthly retirement benefit is based
on:
Your total member deposits plus interest
City matching funds and other credits
granted
Your remaining life expectancy at retirement
Your beneficiary's life expectancy (if you
select a payment option that pays a lifetime
benefit to a survivor)
The future interest rate assumption as set
by law
The TMRS monthly payment plan you
choose
Whether you choose to take a Partial Lump
Sum Distribution
City matching funds are the funds your city contributes to-
ward your benefit. Each city sets a rate at 1 to 1 , 1.5 to 1,
or 2 to 1 (100 %,150 %, or 200 %) and matches your monthly
deposits and interest at that rate for your retirement.
Retirement Benefit Payment Options
When you retire, you will be asked to choose a monthly
payment plan. Your choice of the "best" payment plan for
you and your beneficiary should be based on your own
situation at the time of retirement.
Your choice of a retirement option is a very important deci-
sion. Once you have retired and begun to receive monthly
payments, you cannot change your retirement option (ex-
cept as described on pages 29 — 30, "Marriage After Re-
tirement").
If you are married at the time you apply for retirement and
you designate a person other than your spouse as benefi-
ciary, or you choose your spouse but select a retirement
plan other than one that pays a lifetime survivor benefit,
your spouse must consent to the selection in writing.
The TMRS monthly payment plans are:
1. RETIREE LIFE ONLY OPTION: A benefit paid only
for the life of the retired member with no provi-
sion for a survivor benefit.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 27
OR, one of three SURVIVOR LIFETIME OPTiONS that pay a
lifetime benefit to the retired member and, if the retiree
dies before the beneficiary, a lifetime benefit to the sur-
vivor:
5. Retiree Life —100% Survivor Benefit: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, and a
lifetime benefit payable to a designated survivor
equal to 100% of the retiree's benefit payable on
the retiree's death.
5. Retiree Life — 75% Survivor Benefit: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, and a
lifetime benefit payable to a designated survivor
equal to 75% of the retiree's benefit payable on
the retiree's death.
Ore Retiree Life — 50% Survivor Benefit: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, and a
lifetime benefit payable to a designated survivor
equal to 50% of the retiree's benefit payable on
the retiree's death.
OR, one of three GUARANTEED TERM OPTIONS that pays
a lifetime benefit to the retired member and guarantees a
fixed number of payments from the retirement date if the
retiree dies before the guaranteed term of payments.
5. Retiree Life — 5 Years Guaranteed: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, with at
least 60 payments guaranteed if the retiree dies
before the designated survivor.
5. Retiree Life —10 Years Guaranteed: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, with at
least 120 payments guaranteed if the retiree dies
before the designated survivor.
7. Retiree Life —15 Years Guaranteed: A benefit
payable for the life of the retired member, with at
least 180 payments guaranteed if the retiree dies
before the designated survivor.
The guaranteed term of payments begins with the first
payment received by the retiring member. A member will
receive benefits for his or her entire life, but if the member
dies before the guaranteed term is reached, payments
will only be made to the member's beneficiary for the
remaining period of the guaranteed term.
28 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
For example, a member choosing the 5 -year guaranteed
term retires and begins receiving monthly payments. After
two years, the retired member dies. Payments will contin-
ue to the beneficiary for the remainder of the 5 -year term
— three years in this case — then cease.
0. How much money will I receive as a retiree?
A: At any time, you can run a retirement estimate
online under MyTMRS. If you want us to mail or fax
your estimate, call the TMRS Phone Center toll -free
at 800.924.8677. Estimates cannot be e- mailed for
security reasons.
0. Is my first retirement monthly payment direct
deposited?
.A: Yes. Your first monthly payment is direct deposited
to your designated financial institution because you
must set up direct deposit to receive payments from
TMRS.
0: When are direct deposits made?
A.- Direct deposits of retirement benefits are made on the
last business day of each month.
You can see and print a yearly schedule of direct de-
posit payment dates on www.tmrs.com, or you may
request the schedule by calling 800.924.8677.
..................................... ...............................
Marriage After Retirement
If you marry after retirement, you may be eligible to change
your payment plan to provide a survivor benefit for your
new spouse. To be eligible for this change, you must have
chosen the Retiree Life Only option or a Guaranteed Term
Option at retirement and married after retirement. Or,
if you retired under a Survivor Lifetime Option, but your
original beneficiary died and you remarried after retire-
ment, you may also make this change. You have a period
of one year following the date of your marriage to notify
TMRS that you want to change your retirement option to
provide a survivor benefit. This change can be made only
one time.
Note that changing your option does not increase the total
benefit you and your survivor will receive. Depending on
your circumstances, the option you choose, and the age
of your beneficiary, the monthly benefit you receive may
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 29
be reduced to pay the cost of the additional survivor
benefit. If you marry after retirement and wish to consider
making this change, contact TMRS.
IRS Limits on Benefits
Section 401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code limits the
choice of retirement options for new retirees who desig-
nate a younger "non- spouse" beneficiary. In other words,
TMRS may not be able to allow the member to select the
100% or 75% "survivor" options if the non - spouse benefi-
ciary is significantly younger than the member. If affected,
the retiring member will be notified that he or she must
either choose an eligible retirement option or change the
designated beneficiary.
Section 415 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 limits the
annual amount of pension payments that may be paid by a
pension plan's trust to its retirees. This provision is known
as the Section 415 limit, which is set by Congress and can
be periodically adjusted by the IRS. Consequently, any
portion of a retiree's annual benefit that exceeds the annu-
al limit cannot be paid from the TMRS trust fund. However,
the IRS allows pension plans to create a separate fund to
pay the "excess" benefits. Accordingly, the TMRS Act es-
tablished such a fund to ensure that an annuitant receives
the full amount of his or her annuity, even when it exceeds
the annual 415 limit. If a retiree exceeds the annual limit in
any given year, TMRS will notify the retiree.
Accounts with $10,000 or Less
If your member deposits, interest, the city's matching
funds, and other credits in your account total $10,000 or
less on your effective date of retirement, you will receive
that amount in a lump sum at the time you retire. Rather
than receive a very small payment each month, you will
receive all your funds at one time.
Partial Lump Sum Distribution (PLSD)
You may choose to receive a partial lump sum payment
from your member account when you retire. The lump sum
payment is equal to the monthly payment of your Retiree
Life Only option multiplied by your choice of 12, 24, or
36 and cannot exceed 75% of your member deposits
and interest. This lump sum payment is then deducted
from the total amount used to calculate your monthly re-
tirement payment, and a new, reduced monthly payment
is determined.
30 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
The Partial Lump Sum Distribution is subject to income tax
and possibly an additional 10% tax penalty at the time of
payment (exceptions to this penalty for certain employees
may apply; see page 48 — 49). You may be able to roll over
this distribution into an IRA or other qualified retirement
plan, such as a 401(k) plan, 457(b) plan, or a 403(b )plan, to
continue to defer any income tax payments. For informa-
tion on taxes, see Chapter 11.
Q: Are the city's matching funds included BEFORE my
Partial Lump Sum Distribution is determined?
AR Yes. Your city's matching funds, member deposits,
interest, and other credits are all used to calculate
a monthly retirement benefit from which your Partial
Lump Sum Distribution is determined.
HELPS Provision for Retired Public Safety Officers
TMRS participates in a program made possible by the
Healthcare Enhancement for Local Public Safety (HELPS)
provision of federal law. This provision allows retired or
permanently disabled public safety officers to elect an
amount to be deducted from their TMRS retirement ben-
efit payment to pay for health care or long -term care insur-
ance premiums. The amount an eligible retiree excludes
from taxable income may not exceed $3,000 in one year.
If a retired (or retiring) officer wishes to make this election,
the amount is directly transferred by TMRS to an insurer.
Definition of Public Safety Officer. By law, the term
"public safety officer" includes the following individuals
serving a public agency in an official capacity:
An individual involved in crime and juvenile
delinquency control or reduction, or
enforcement of the criminal laws (including
juvenile delinquency), including but not
limited to police, corrections, probation,
parole, and judicial officers
Professional firefighters
Officially recognized or designated:
Public employee members of a
rescue squad or ambulance crew
Chaplains of fire departments and
police departments
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 31
Call 800.924.8677 for more information or to see if you
qualify. You may wish to consult with your tax advisor or
the IRS to determine if you can use this provision for public
safety officers.
Annuity Increases (COLAs)
After you retire, your city may choose to grant retirees an
increase (when the cost of living increases) to protect their
benefit from the effects of inflation.
If your city chooses this option, your retirement benefit
payments may be increased by the percentage (30 %, 50 %,
or 70 %) of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increase chosen
by your city. The cost of living adjustment, or COLA, is mea-
sured from the December before your retirement through
the December that is 13 months prior to the effective date
of the Annuity Increase. The calculated increase will be
applied to your original monthly retirement payment.
You will be notified in your Retiree Account Statement
(sent in late January) if you will receive a COLA for the
coming year.
Retiree Account Statements
In late January of each year, TMRS sends retirees a state-
ment reflecting their account status. This statement shows
the annuity amount, withholding, and amount of COLA (if
any) for the coming year.
It is important that you keep TMRS informed if your ad-
dress changes. A correct address is necessary for TMRS
to send your statement and other important information.
Continuing to Work After You are Eligible to Retire
If you are eligible for retirement under TMRS but continue
to work for a member city, you continue to make member
deposits. Your member account continues to be credited
with interest, and you continue to earn service credit. You
don't have to retire when first eligible but may make this
decision at any time after you attain eligibility.
Employment After Retirement
Make your retirement decision carefully. If you return to
work at the same city you retired from, your benefits
could be affected. If you return to work for the city that
was your last employer prior to retirement, in a position
32 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
that requires TMRS membership, your monthly retire-
ment benefit will be suspended. You must rejoin TMRS
and make member deposits.
"Suspended" means that you will not receive your monthly
benefit payments as long as you are a member making de-
posits to TMRS. Any suspended payments will be forfeited
and will not be paid at a later date, nor will your monthly
benefit be recalculated to include these forfeited pay-
ments (with one exception; see below). When you later ter-
minate this new period of employment, TMRS will resume
payment of your original monthly retirement benefit, and
you will receive an additional retirement benefit based on
your post- retirement employment.
Your benefit will not be suspended if you go to work for:
* An employer that is not a TMRS city
The TMRS city that was your last employer
before you retired, and you are employed
in a position that does not require TMRS
membership
A TMRS city other than the one that
employed you at the time of your retirement,
provided your new employment begins after
your effective date of retirement
Exception: TMRS retirees may return to work for the same
city and may receive a lump -sum payment equal to the
sum of suspended payments, under certain circumstanc-
es. In general, if a retiree has a break in service of at least
eight years, he or she may return to work for the same
city and be eligible for a lump sum payment of any benefit
payment suspended during the period of reemployment.
Separation from Service Must Be "Bona Fide"
Employees participate in TMRS until they retire, die, or
separate from service. Upon separation, employees may
apply for a distribution (refund or retirement), and the city
is required to certify the termination, which must be bona
fide for both state and federal tax law purposes. The TMRS
Act and the Internal Revenue Code do not permit a distri-
bution if an employee resigns and is rehired by the same
city in a prearranged manner. Such an arrangement would
not be considered a bona fide separation.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 33
Chapter 6 • Applying For Service Retirement
To apply for TMRS retirement, request a Service Retire-
ment Application packet from TMRS or download the
packet from the TMRS website. The packet contains all the
forms you need, as well as information about retirement.
Application and Retirement Date
Your Service Retirement Application must be received in
the TMRS office by your effective date of retirement but
no more than 90 days before the effective date. Remem-
ber, retiring from TMRS and notifying your city that you
intend to retire are separate processes. Check with your
city's personnel office for their requirements.
Your TMRS effective retirement date must be the last
day of a calendar month. Your first benefit payment will
be made at the end of the month following your effective
retirement date, if we have received all the necessary re-
tirement papers. If we not have received them, then your
benefit payments will be delayed until we have all the re-
quired documents.
Social Security and Your TMRS Benefit
If you receive Social Security benefits, they will not af-
fect your TMRS benefit. However, there are some Social
Security provisions you may want to learn more about.
J The Government Pension Offset. If you receive a So-
cial Security benefit based on your spouse's employment,
and you also receive a pension from a government em-
ployer who was not part of the Social Security program,
your Social Security benefit may be offset by your gov-
ernment pension. The offset may reduce the amount of
your spouse's Social Security benefit by two - thirds of the
amount of your government pension. (More information can
be found on the Social Security Website: www.sso.gov.)
The Windfall Elimination Provision. If you receive a So-
cial Security benefit, but the majority of your career was
spent working for a government employer who was not
part of the Social Security program, your Social Security
benefit may be calculated using a formula that reduces
your Social Security benefit. (For more information about
the provision, see www.sso.gov)
34 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
TIVIRS Retirement Checklist
You will need the following items to complete your retire-
ment app|icaUonpnocess.
Forms and Information Sheets
(all |n the Service Retirement Application pecbet:
+ Application for Service Retirement (TK4RS45)—
no more than 90 days before retirement
�
Selection of Retirement Plan (TIVIRS-24)
�
Selection of Partial Lump Sum Distribution
(TK4R5-PLSD)— use this form if you want part
of your benefit ina lump sum
� Name Certification (TK4RS-30)— use this if
your current name differs from the name on
your birth certificate; TK4R5 can accept acopy
of your driver's license or marriage certificate
�
Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Payments
�
Acceptable Proofs of Birth (TK4RS-27)
�
Electronic Direct Deposit Authorization
(TK4R5-80E)
�
Texas driver's license or Texas |Dcard
� Birthcertificete — officia|certifioateofbirth
issued by the state (not the hospital-issued
certificate)
�
Birth certificate for beneficiary (copy, and only
if Survivor Lifetime option is selected)
+ After TIVIR5 receives your retirement application,
vve will send you e Tax Withholding Form (W4-P).
which you will need to complete and return to
us (available online and may be submitted with
the retirement application)
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 35
Chapter 7 • Occupational Disability Retirement
If you become disabled so that you are no longer able
to perform your job, and the disability is likely to be per-
manent, you may be eligible for Occupational Disability
benefits from TMRS. An Occupational Disability benefit
is calculated like a Service Retirement benefit, based on
your deposits and interest, your city's matching funds, and
other credits, and is payable to you beginning on the last
day of the month following your effective retirement date,
assuming your disability is approved by the TMRS Medical
Board.
If you are eligible for Service Retirement and you become
disabled, you may wish to consider applying for Service
Retirement rather than Occupational Disability. The ben-
efits are equal, and Service Retirement places no restric-
tions on your earnings.
Applying for Occupational Disability
If you become disabled, you may apply for an Occupa-
tional Disability Benefit using an Occupational Disability
Retirement Packet. You may obtain this packet either from
your city, by calling TMRS, or by downloading it from www.
tmrs.com. As part of the application process, you will be
asked to have an examination by a physician.
After you file your application, including the physician's
statement, a statement from your city, and a copy of your
city job description, the TMRS Medical Board will make a
determination. If the Medical Board finds you are disabled
to the extent that you should be retired (and you meet
the other requirements for Occupational Disability Retire-
ment), your application will be approved.
If the Medical Board finds that you do not meet the re-
quirements, additional medical examinations may be re-
quired, or your application may be denied.
Occupational Disability Benefits and
Other Earnings
If the Medical Board approves your Occupational Disabil-
ity Retirement, you will receive a monthly benefit. While
receiving Occupational Disability Retirement benefits, you
may pursue other employment, but your monthly benefit
36 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
may be affected if your retirement benefit plus your em-
ployment income exceed the salary you received when
you were an active TMRS member.
If you retire under Occupational Disability, TMRS may re-
quest that you provide information regarding any earned
income you may have each year until you reach age 60.
If your earnings plus your Occupational Disability benefit
exceed the amount prescribed by law, your monthly dis-
ability benefit will be reduced for the following year by the
amount of your excess earnings. Your benefit will not be
reduced below what your individual member deposits and
interest alone would provide, but if your income from oth-
er sources is high enough, the city- funded portion of your
benefit may be eliminated (see formula below).
Occupational Disability Benefit Options
If you become eligible for Occupational Disability Retire-
ment, you may select either a Retiree Life Only benefit or
any other payment option (pages 27 — 29). The amount
of the benefit is based on the same factors (deposits, ser-
vice credits, life expectancy, interest rate assumption, plan
selected) as those used in determining the amount of a
Service Retirement benefit.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 37
Chapter 8 • Death Benefits
Upon your death, your beneficiary or estate is guaranteed
to receive at least a refund of your remaining member de-
posits and interest. The benefit payments and the recipi-
ent of your benefits will be determined by several factors,
including your employment status, beneficiary designation
(if applicable), benefit payment selection (if applicable),
and any other TMRS statutory provisions in effect at the
time of your death.
Designating Your Beneficiary
Your beneficiary is the person you choose to receive your
TMRS benefit in the event of your death. You may desig-
nate one person, your estate, a trust, or up to three differ-
ent people on a "share -and share alike" basis (each per-
son receiving an equal share) as your beneficiary. You may
also designate alternate beneficiaries, in the event your
primary beneficiary dies first.
If you are married and vested at the time you designate
a beneficiary, state law requires your spouse to give his
or her consent before you can name someone other than
your spouse as beneficiary.
TMRS will ask you to choose a beneficiary three different
times while you are employed with the city — when you
first become a TMRS member, when you become vested,
and when you retire. Also, you may change your beneficia-
ry as your personal circumstances change. If TMRS does
not have a properly designated beneficiary on file at the
time of your death, benefit payments may be delayed
and may not be paid in accordance with your wishes.
Benefit Payments
If you are not vested or retired at the time of death, your
designated beneficiary will receive a lump sum refund of
your member deposits and interest. Your designated ben-
eficiary is not eligible to receive monthly retirement ben-
efits and will not receive any city matching funds. If a valid
beneficiary designation is not on file with TMRS, the re-
fund will be paid to your estate.
If you are vested but have not retired at the time of death,
your designated beneficiary may be eligible to receive a
monthly retirement benefit based on both your member
deposits and interest, and the city's matching funds. When
38 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
you become vested (after 5 or 10 years of service, depend-
ing on your city's plan), TMRS will notify you of your vested
status and ask you to designate a beneficiary at that time.
If you do not properly designate a beneficiary after be-
coming vested, your previous beneficiary designation is
no longer valid, and your benefits will be paid in this order:
To your surviving spouse
If you have no spouse, to any surviving
children
If you have no spouse and no children, to
the last beneficiary you designated prior to
becoming vested
If you have never designated a beneficiary,
to your estate
If you have properly designated a beneficiary after vest-
ing, your designated beneficiary may choose to receive
one of the following benefits at the time of your death:
A lump -sum refund of your member deposits
and interest. If this benefit option is selected,
the city's matching funds are forfeited and
there will be no further payments.
Monthly payments for life based on both
the city's matching funds and your member
deposits and interest. This benefit option is
only available if you have designated only
one beneficiary.
Monthly payments for 15 years based on
both the city's matching funds and your
member deposits and interest. If the benefi-
ciary is your estate, the maximum monthly
payout is 5 years.
A spouse beneficiary may choose to leave your member
deposits and interest with TMRS, where they will continue
to be credited with interest until the date you would have
reached age 60. At that time, your spouse may choose to
receive monthly payments for life or for 15 years, based on
both the city's matching funds and your member deposits
and accumulated interest.
To exercise this option, your surviving spouse must make
that election within 180 days from your date of death; oth-
erwise, the benefit is payable immediately. Your member
deposits and interest may be refunded to your spouse
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 39
beneficiary at any time after the election is made, but with-
drawing the deposits and interest will prevent your spouse
beneficiary from receiving future monthly benefits, and the
city's matching funds will be forfeited.
If you are retired at the time of your death, benefit pay-
ments will be issued in accordance with the benefit option
you selected at retirement. See pages 27 — 29 for specific
information on these benefit options.
Supplemental Death Benefits
Your city may choose to include a Supplemental Death
Benefit (SDB) in its retirement plan. If your city has cho-
sen this provision and you die while employed by the city,
TMRS will pay your designated beneficiary or estate a
benefit approximately equal to your current annual salary,
plus any retirement benefits due.
A different beneficiary may be designated to receive the
SDB payment, but most members designate the same
beneficiary as the one chosen for their retirement ben-
efit. If you retire from multiple cities, your beneficiary will
receive only one SDB payment. Your last employing city
pays the benefit.
For Supplemental Death Benefit purposes, "annual sal-
ary" is calculated as the salary from which you made
the required member deposits to TMRS during the 12
months before your death. If you were paid less than 12
months, TMRS will require annual salary information from
your employer.
...................................... ...............................
Q Is the SDB payment taxable?
Aa In general, no. TMRS considers the SDB payment to
the beneficiary to be similar to proceeds from a group-
: term life insurance program. If the SDB is made pay-
: able to an individual, it is not subject to federal income
tax. However, TMRS encourages you to consult a tax
advisor.
..................................... ..............................:
Period of Coverage
You are covered for Supplemental Death Benefits if your
city has adopted the Supplemental Death Benefits option
for its members and you are a city employee required to
make member deposits with TMRS.
You are covered on the first day of the first month in which
these requirements are satisfied. Except as described be-
40 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
low under "Extended Coverage," coverage stops on the
last day of any month in which either of the above require-
ments is not satisfied.
Supplemental Death Benefit
Extended Coverage
If circumstances cause you to be absent from your city
employment for an extended period of time, your cover-
age under the Supplemental Death Benefits program may
be extended if these three conditions are met:
As a result of illness or injury, you are unable
to engage in any gainful employment or you
are on extended leave under the provisions of
the federal Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA).
You made a required member deposit with
TMRS as an employee of a city offering the
coverage for Supplemental Death Benefits
for the month preceding the first entire month
of your absence from work.
Your application is approved by the TMRS
Board of Trustees.
Extended coverage continues until the last day of the
month in which any of the following occur:
You return to work
The Board finds that you have become able
to engage in gainful employment
You cease to be a member of TMRS
You retire
The city terminates coverage
An application for Extended Supplemental Death Ben-
efits must be made in writing to the Board of Trustees and
must contain a statement from your doctor regarding your
inability to work and the length of time you are expected
to be away from the job.
Retiree Supplemental Death Benefits
If you retire with TMRS, a Supplemental Death Benefit
in the amount of $7,500 will be paid on your death as
long as the TMRS city from which you retired offers such
coverage.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 41
Chapter 9 • Leaving City Employment / Refunds
If your employment terminates with all participating TMRS
cities, you may choose to — but do not have to — apply for
a refund of your total member deposits plus interest.
Leaving City Employment
If you leave your city before you are vested (after 5 or 10
years of service, depending on your city's plan), and do
not go to work for another TMRS city, you may leave your
member deposits with the System for up to 60 months
and keep your TMRS membership. You are not considered
absent from service if you are on FMLA leave. After the
60 -month period, your TMRS membership terminates. If
you go to work for a public employer who participates in
the Proportionate Retirement Program, the 60 -month limit
may not apply (see page 24).
If you are not vested and you leave your member depos-
its with TMRS, your deposits will stop being credited with
interest after the 60 -month period. Therefore, at that time,
you should apply for a refund of your member deposits
and interest. You may be able to roll over your refund into
an IRA or other eligible retirement plan for income tax pur-
poses. See pages 50 — 51 for more on rollovers.
It you stop working for one TMRS " RS city, but become
employed by n ti f "TMRS city before withdraw-
ing your member deposits, your membership in
°ras not terminated. 'You cannot withdraw l
your member deposits and interest,
If you leave employment with a TMRS city and go to work
in a position covered by one of the retirement systems that
participates in the Proportionate Retirement Program (see
page 24), you may withdraw your member deposits, but
you should be aware of the value of your TMRS service
credit under the Proportionate Retirement Program.
If you are vested, you may leave your member deposits
with TMRS until you are eligible and choose to retire.
Your deposits continue to be credited with interest.
42 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Refunds (Withdrawing Your Deposits)
A refund cannot be processed until your final member de-
posit to TMRS is received and credited to your account.
The city's payroll report transmitting your final deposit
must be received by TMRS before your refund can be
paid. Once your application and the city's payroll report
and your final deposit are received, your refund will be
processed for payment.
...................................... ...............................
0: What is vesting?
A- In most TMRS cities, you are vested when you earn 5
years of service credit. Some cities require 10 years to
vest. Once you are vested and you reach the neces-
sary age requirements, you may retire and receive a
monthly retirement benefit for the rest of your life. If
you leave your city job after you are vested and leave
your member deposits with TMRS, you keep your right
to a retirement benefit. Your TMRS deposits will con-
: tinue to earn interest, and when you meet the nec-
essary age and service credit requirements, you can
retire from TMRS. Remember, you can only receive
the city's matching funds if you retire and receive a
monthly retirement benefit. For more information, see
Chapter 5.
O. If I choose to take a refund, do I receive the city's
matching funds?
A: No. When you receive a refund, you receive your mem-
ber deposits and interest but not the city's matching
funds. The only way you can receive the city's match-
: ing funds is to retire and receive a monthly benefit
payment.
If you cease to be employed by one TMRS city, you
can choose to receive your member deposits and in-
terest — only if you do not become employed in an-
other TMRS city prior to receiving your refund payment
from TMRS. If you do take a job with another TMRS
city and are enrolled in TMRS prior to receiving your
refund, you cannot receive a refund. You must con-
: tinue your TMRS membership and leave your member
:............................................ ... ....... ...........
..:
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 43
...................................... ...............................
deposits and interest in your member account to earn
retirement credit.
0: Can 1 refund part of my member account and leave
the rest in TMRS?
A„ No. If you choose to receive a refund of your mem-
ber deposits and interest, you must refund all of your
account. You must also stop employment and your
membership with all TMRS cities to receive a refund.
Remember that a refund does not include the city
matching funds.
a If 1 stop working for a TMRS city and 1 am not vested,
why should 1 consider leaving my member deposits
with TMRS?
A: If you might return to work for a TMRS city or in a job
covered by one of the retirement systems that partici-
pates in the Proportionate Retirement Program (see
page 24) within 60 months, you should consider leav-
ing your member deposits in TMRS.
Your member deposits continue earning interest as
credited by TMRS during the 60 -month period, and
the service credit you have earned still counts toward
retirement. Also, if you take a refund, you lose the
city's matching funds.
Q What is the city's monthly payroll report, and when
does the city have to submit it to allow me to get my
refund?
A: Each city sends TMRS a monthly payroll report and
deposits, which must be received by TMRS by the
15th of the month after the month being reported. The
monthly report shows each member's individual de-
posit for the month. After the city has submitted the
report (with your final deposit) to TMRS, the report in-
formation must be added to your account before any
refunds can be issued.
,m How long does it take to get my refund?
An Refunds are typically paid by TMRS 30 to 45 days after
you were last paid by the city, provided TMRS receives
everything from your city on time.
A refund cannot be processed until your final member
deposit to TMRS is received and credited to your ac-
count. The city's report transmitting your final deposit
: ................................... ............................... :
44 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
..................................... ...............................
must be received by TMRS before your refund can
be paid. Once your application and the city's report
are received, your refund is processed for payment.
If you have registered for MyTMRS (www.tmrs.com),
you can track the status of your refund.
0: Why does TMRS take out 20% of my refund for
taxes?
Aw TMRS is a tax - deferred retirement plan. This means
you have not paid income taxes on your member de-
posits or the interest credited to your account. The IRS
requires TMRS to withhold 20% of the taxable amount
of your refund as taxes, unless you roll the funds over
to an IRA (Individual Retirement Account) or other
qualified retirement plan.
If you withdraw your member deposits and interest
before you turn age 591/2, you may owe an additional
10% income tax penalty for an early distribution. How-
ever, if you leave city employment in the year you turn
55 or later, and withdraw your member deposits and
interest, you will not owe the additional 10% income
tax. See the "Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Pay-
ments" included in your TMRS refund packet.
If you roll over the payment to a Roth IRA, a special IRS
rule applies, making the amount of the payment (re-
duced by any after -tax amounts) taxable to you. TMRS
must withhold 20% of the taxable portion of the pay-
ment. The additional 10% income tax on early distribu-
tions may apply to the amount withheld but will not
apply to the amount deposited in the Roth IRA. How-
ever, you may owe the additional 10% penalty if you
withdraw the amount rolled over to the Roth IRA within
5 years of the rollover. Please consult your tax advisor.
Exceptions: Public safety employees qualify for an ex-
ception to the additional 10% income tax penalty at
age 50 or later. Your city will need to certify your status
as a public safety employee (a form is available from
the TMRS website).
For more information on leaving your TMRS city, see
pages 9 —11.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 45
Chapter 10 • Divorce
If you divorce, your TMRS retirement benefit may be in-
volved in the settlement or division of property. In the
event of a divorce, TMRS encourages you to contact us
as soon as possible in the process. The TMRS Support
Services Team can be reached toll -free at 800.924.8677
or by e -mail at divorce@tmrs.com. Your attorney may wish
to visit the TMRS website (under Publications) for more de-
tailed information on divorce and TMRS benefits.
Divorce and Your TMRS Benefit
Texas is a community property state, which means prop-
erty acquired during your marriage is owned by both you
and your spouse. Any TMRS retirement benefit earned
during marriage is community property.
Dividing your TMRS benefit requires a special court order
known as a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). A
QDRO is usually a separate document from your divorce
decree, but in some cases may be contained within the
divorce decree. State law requires that the QDRO meet
certain legal requirements. TMRS has developed a model
QDRO to assist your legal advisor in drafting a QDRO that
meets these requirements.
The QDRO will specify what portion of your benefit will
be paid to your former spouse. Benefits are not payable
immediately to the former spouse. When you begin to re-
ceive a TMRS benefit, the portion specified in the QDRO
will be paid to your former spouse. Likewise, if you with-
draw your member deposits and interest, the QDRO will
govern what portion your former spouse receives.
If your TMRS benefit is not divided between you and your
former spouse, TMRS requires specific language in the
divorce decree to specify that the benefit is not to be di-
vided.
Certified Copy
If the retirement benefit is to be divided, TMRS must re-
view and approve a certified copy of the QDRO before
retirement benefits can be paid to a former spouse or be-
fore a refund can be processed. A certified copy is one
that is certified with the original stamp and seal, plus the
46 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
signature of the clerk of the court in the county where the
divorce was granted. A certified copy is not a document
bearing only the seal of a notary public.
Divorce After Retirement with TMRS
If you divorce after you retire from TMRS and your retire-
ment benefit is to be divided, a QDRO is required. Call
TMRS for assistance.
Removing Your Former Spouse as Beneficiary
If you retired under a Joint Survivor Lifetime option and di-
vorced after retirement, the divorce decree or QDRO may
allow TMRS to remove your former spouse as beneficiary.
If this occurs, TMRS may also be able to increase your fu-
ture benefit payments to the monthly amount you would
have received had you originally selected a Retiree Life
Only benefit. Please contact TMRS for assistance with this
provision.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 47
Chapter 11 • Taxes
TMRS is a qualified, tax - deferred retirement plan under
Section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code. You do not pay
income tax on your monthly member deposits to TMRS,
but you will pay tax when you receive a payment from the
System, either as a refund or a monthly benefit.
When you receive a payment from TMRS, all or part of that
payment will be subject to federal income taxes, based on
the tax laws and the rules and regulations of the Internal
Revenue Service. The information in this Benefits Guide is
based on the Internal Revenue Code and the IRS regula-
tions in effect at the time this Guide was published. IRS
regulations and federal tax law can change. In any matter
involving taxation of your TMRS benefit, TMRS encourag-
es you to contact a tax advisor.
Monthly Retirement Benefits
If you retire and receive a monthly benefit from TMRS, part
or all of your monthly benefit will be taxable as income.
For those members who have service before January 1,
1984, a portion of the benefit based on the deposits made
before that date will not be taxable. This portion is called
the "monthly exclusion amount"
Each year, at the end of January, TMRS will mail you a form
1099 -R, showing your total retirement payments for the
preceding year, the taxable and nontaxable amounts (if
any), and the amount of tax withheld by TMRS. This form
can be viewed and printed through MyTMRS.
Partial Lump Sum Distribution
When you retire, if you choose to receive part of your ben-
efit as a Partial Lump Sum Distribution (PLSD), that lump
sum will be taxable income for the year in which it is pay-
able to you.
The PLSD will be considered taxable income for the year
in which you receive it. You can defer paying income tax
by rolling your PLSD into an IRA or other eligible plan.
If you receive your PLSD directly before reaching age
591/2 and you do not roll over your PLSD, you may be
subject to an additional 10% income tax penalty for an
early distribution.
48 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
You will not incur the additional 10% income tax on your
PLSD if you terminate employment with the TMRS city
from which you retire in the year you turn age 55 or later
or if you are a public safety employee who terminates em-
ployment in the year you turn age 50 or later. Although
you may receive your PLSD directly with no additional 10%
income tax, you will still be subject to regular income tax
on the PLSD for the year you receive it.
Federal income tax law requires TMRS to withhold 20%
of a PLSD, unless it is rolled into an IRA, a Section 457
deferred compensation plan for governmental employees,
or another qualified retirement plan (see list under "Roll-
overs," pages 50 — 51). If only a part of your PLSD is rolled
into an eligible plan, TMRS will withhold taxes on the part
that is not rolled over.
When you apply for a PLSD, the form you will fill out in-
cludes a "Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Payments,"
which contains current information on federal regulations
governing distributions and rollovers. The form, "Selection
of Partial Lump Sum Distribution," which includes the "Spe-
cial Tax Notice," is also available on the TMRS website un-
der Forms.
Refunds
If you leave employment with a TMRS city and apply for a
refund of your member deposits and interest, your refund
will be taxable income for the year in which it is payable
to you. (If your refund includes any deposits you made be-
fore January 1, 1984, that portion will not be taxed because
those deposits were made before TMRS deposits became
tax - deferred.)
When you receive your refund check, you will also receive
a statement showing the taxable portion of the refund.
TMRS will mail you a 1099 -R form, showing the amount of
the refund and taxes withheld, in January of the year fol-
lowing your refund. Your form 1099 -R can be viewed and
printed through MyTMRS.
A refund will be considered taxable income for the year
in which it is payable to you. You can defer paying income
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 49
tax by rolling over your refund into an IRA or other quali
fied retirement plan.
In certain cases, if you do not roll over your refund, you
may be subject to an additional 10% tax penalty. You will
not incur the additional 10% penalty on your refund if you
terminate employment with a TMRS city in the year you
turn age 55 or later. However, if you terminate employ-
ment before the year you turn age 55, then decide to re-
ceive a refund directly (not rolled over) before age 591/2,
you may incur the additional 10% tax.
Exception: If you are a public safety employee (fire, police,
or emergency medical personnel) who terminates in the
year you turn 50 or later, you will not incur the additional
10% tax penalty. (Note: If you meet the definition of public
safety employee for the age 50 exemption, a city official
must certify your eligibility. A certification form for this pur-
pose is available on our website.) Although you may re-
ceive your refund directly with no additional 10% tax pen-
alty, you will be subject to regular income tax on the refund
in the year it is payable to you.
"Public safety employees" includes law enforcement,
fire fighting, and emergency medical services person-
nel as defined in federal law. You must be in an eligible
position at the time of your retirement to qualify for this
provision.
Federal income tax law requires TMRS to withhold 20% of
a refund, unless it is rolled over to an IRA, a Section 457
deferred compensation plan for governmental employees,
or another qualified retirement plan. If only a part of your
refund is rolled over, TMRS will withhold taxes on the part
that is not rolled over.
When you apply for a refund, the form you will fill out in-
cludes a "Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Payments,"
which contains current information on federal regulations
governing distributions and rollovers. The Refund Applica-
tion, which includes the "Special Tax Notice," is also avail-
able on the TMRS website.
IM.1 •TR
Your PILSD or refund is eligible to be rolled over to an IRA
or other qualified retirement plan. If you roll over one of
these payments from TMRS, you will defer payment of tax-
50 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
es until the money is withdrawn, and you may avoid a tax
penalty that you would owe if you received the payment
directly.
Federal law on rollovers provides that plans eligible to re-
ceive a rollover from TIVIRS (of either a PLSD or a refund)
are:
T Governmental 457 plan
4 403(b) plan
T 401(a) plan (including 401(k) plans)
MENUMV
4 Roth IRA (after 20% is deducted for federal
income tax)
Plans that are not eligible to receive rollovers include:
Simple IRAs
Non - governmental 457 plans
Designated Roth account in an employer
plan
It is important to understand that special rules apply to
rollovers to Roth IRAs, including additional income taxes
and withholding requirements that may not apply to other
types of rollovers.
Once your refund or PLSD is rolled over into another plan,
future distributions from that plan may be subject to other
federal laws and regulations. Consult a tax advisor to be
sure of the tax consequences of your options.
Supplemental Death Benefit (SBD)
TMRS considers the Supplemental Death Benefit to be
similar to group -term life insurance for federal income tax
purposes.
...................................... ...............................
Orr Is the SDB payment taxable?
A. In general, no. TMRS considers the SDB payment to
the beneficiary to be proceeds from a group -term
life insurance program. If the SDB is made payable
to an individual, it is not subject to federal income tax-
es. However, TMRS encourages you to consult a tax
advisor.
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 51
Chapter 12 • TMRS Services / Retirement Estimates
TMRS is committed to helping you understand your ben-
efits and make the best use of your city's TMRS retirement
program. The resources TMRS makes available to mem-
bers include:
www.tmrs.com. The TMRS website offers
up -to -date benefit information; news on
TMRS legislation, investments, and Board
of Trustee actions; downloadable forms; a
searchable list of city plan provisions; and
much more. The website is your best source
for current TMRS information.
MyTMRS. This is a special feature of the
TMRS website that allows members
and retirees to review their own account
information. Members may view and print
Annual Statements and run retirement
-- estimates, and retirees may view and print
their 1099 -Rs and account statements. See
the TMRS website and click on MyTMRS
to register.
TMRS Phone Center. The Phone Center
is staffed by benefit counselors trained
to answer your questions on specific
benefit issues. Call the Phone Center at
800.924.8677 or, in Austin, at 512.476.7577,
or e -mail phonecenter @tmrs.com.
Travel Team. TMRS has a group of benefit
counselors who travel throughout the state,
appearing at city events, benefit fairs, and
regional conferences to speak on TMRS
benefit issues. Your city can contact TMRS
to schedule a visit.
Newsletters. TMRS publishes newsletters
for active members (INSIGH7) and retirees
(RetirementWise) at regular intervals each
year. The newsletters offer announcements
and in -depth articles on issues of interest to
TMRS members. Please keep your address
current with TMRS, so the newsletters will
reach you.
52 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
TMRS FACTS. This is a booklet for members
that answers most member questions in a
O &A format. This guide is meant to be used in
conjunction with your City Plan. It is available
in English and Spanish.
Specialized brochures on benefit topics.
These can be downloaded from the
website, obtained from your city, or
requested directly from TMRS by calling
the Phone Center.
Member Annual Statements. These state-
ments provide a written summary of your
account, reflecting the information TMRS has
on file for you. Annual Statements summarize
your service history, your retirement account
balance, your beneficiary information, and
also give you retirement estimates. If you
see errors in this statement, please contact
us immediately.
Retiree Account Statements. These are
statements sent early each year that show
the annuitant's account status, including
the amount of annuity, federal tax with-
holding, other adjustments (if any), and
the amount of the COLA, if the annuitant
receives one that year.
TMRS Annual Conference and Regional
Conferences. TMRS holds an annual
conference each year for city employees
who help administer TMRS benefits.
TMRS also conducts a number of Regional
Pre - Retirement Conferences for members
approaching retirement. See the website or
call TMRS for a schedule.
Retirement Estimates
Since retirement benefits vary from city to city, benefit esti-
mates from TMRS must be prepared on an individual basis.
TMRS members get estimates of their retirement benefits
each year on the Annual Statement. The estimates show
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 53
the benefit that you would receive under the available op-
tions at the first eligible year and five years later. As you
near retirement, you may need more detailed estimates,
showing different options and time frames. TMRS can pre-
pare estimates based on one or more anticipated dates
of retirement and can provide additional benefit informa-
tion, such as the value of your optional Partial Lump Sum
Distribution (PLSD) and how taking a PLSD will affect the
amount of your annuity.
54 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Accounts Under $10,000 ............................30
Beneficiary's Options .........................38
Annual Statement ........ ............................13,
53
Annuity Increases ( COLAs) .........................
32
Applying for Retirement .........................34
-35
Beneficiaries ........ ...............................
4,38-40
After Divorce ......... ...............................
46 -47
Benefit Payment Options ..................38
-39
Designating................. ...............................
38
Benefits
( QDROs) ........................ ...............................
Accounts Under $10 ,000 ........................30
Removing a Former Spouse
Annuity Increases (COLAs) .....................32
as Beneficiary ..... ...............................
Calculation ...................... .............................27
Elected Officials ............ ............................11,
Death ...................... .............................6,
38 -41
Direct Deposits ............. .............................29
Employment After Retirement ..............
Disability ............... .............................6,
36 -37
Division of Benefits (Divorce) ...........
46 -47
Estimates ................ ...............................
53 -54
Guaranteed Term Options ................28
-29
IRS Limits on Benefits . .............................30
Family and Medical Leave Act
Occupational Disability ......................36
-37
Options for Payment ..........................27
-29
Partial Lump Sum Distribution ..30,
48 -49
Retiree Life Only Option ...........................27
Income Tax ...................... ..........................48
Service Retirement ... ..........................26
-33
Social Security and your Benefit........... 34
Supplemental Death ..........................40
-41
Survivor Lifetime Options ........................
28
Workers' Compensation and TMRS
.....16
Birth Certificates ............... .............................35
Buyback of Service Credit ...........................17
Proportionate Buyback ............................
24
Certified Copy of QDRO ..............................
46
Changing from One City
27, 31
to Another ...... ............................26,
42 -44
City Matching Funds .. ............................14,
27
On PLSD .......................... .............................31
12
City Plan Options ............ .............................2,
8
City's Monthly Payroll Report ......................
44
COLAs (see Annuity Increases)
42 -45, 49 -50
Combined Service Credit (See
-51
Proportionate Retirement Program)
7-11,12-15
Compensation ................ ...............................
7 -8
Concurrent Service Credit ..........................
23
Continuing to Work ........ ...............................
32
Current Service Credit ..... .............................16
Death Benefits ............................... 6,38-41
Beneficiary's Options .........................38
-40
Direct Deposits ............... ...............................
29
Disability Benefits . .............................6,
36 -37
Occupational Disability ......................36
-37
Other Income ................. .............................37
Divorce........................ ...............................
46 -47
After Retirement ............ .............................47
Qualified Domestic Relations
Orders
( QDROs) ........................ ...............................
46
Removing a Former Spouse
as Beneficiary ..... ...............................
47
Elected Officials ............ ............................11,
22
Eligibility for Retirement ..............................
26
Employment After Retirement ..............
32 -33
Ending Membership ............................9,
42 -45
Estimates of Retirement Benefits ........ 53-54
Exclusion Amount ........... ...............................
48
Extended Coverage for Supplemental
Death Benefits ........... .............................41
Family and Medical Leave Act
( FMLA) ....................... ...............................
24
Federal Service .............. ..........................21
-22
HELPS Provision (federal law) ...............31
-32
Income Tax ...................... ..........................48
-51
Ineligible Employees ......... ..............................7
Interest on Member Deposits..10,
12, 26, 42
Leaving City Employment .........
6, 9 -11, 42 -45
Mandatory Participation .... ..............................7
Marriage (See Beneficiaries)
After Retirement ........... .............................29
Death Benefits ............ ..........................38
-41
Divorce.................... ...............................
46 -47
Match, City ................ ............................14,
27, 31
Member Accounts .......... ..........................12
-15
Review or Change Account .....................15
Member Deposits ......... .............................5,
12
Interest ......... ............................10,
12, 26, 42
Leaving City Employment ..........
6,9-11,42
Refunds ..... ...............................
42 -45, 49 -50
Taxes............................. ..........................48
-51
Membership ..... .............................4,
7-11,12-15
Termination of Membership ..........
9, 42 -45
Military Service Credit .. ..........................20
-21
Fallen Military, Survivors ....................
19,40
TMRS Member Benefits Guide 55
Monthly Exclusion Amount .......................... 4O
MyTMR5 .................................................
6.14.52
National Guard Service .................................
21
Occupational Disability Benefits—
...... 36-37
Options, Benefit ......................................
27-29
Other Retirement Systems (See
Proportionate Retirement Program)
Partial Lump Sum Distribution .......
3O.4O-48
Prior Service Credit ......................................
19
Loss oY Prior Service Credit .....................
19
Probationary Prior Service Credit
.----.Z]
Proportionate Buyback ................................
25
Proportionate Retirement
Program .......................................
Program .............................................
1[\24
Prorated Interest .............................................
1Z
Public Safety Employees ......................
@5,49
Public Safety Officers ..............................
31-32
Public Service ............................................
21-23
Qualified Domestic Relations Orders
;JDROs----------------'46
40-4x
Refunds .....................................................
42~45
Taxes on .................................................
49{1
Removing a Former Spouse
43
es Beneficiary .........................................
47
Restricted Prior Service Credit .............
22-23
Rollovers .....................................................
50-51
Retirement ..........................................
5.2b-33
Annuity Increases p%]LAs .....................
32
Applying for Retirement ....................
34-35
Benefit Estimates ................................
53-54
Benefit Calculation .....................................
27
Benefit Options ....................................
27-29
Checklist ......................................................
35
Direct Deposit of Benefits ................
E\35
Divorce After Retirement --------.47
n8-19
Eligibility ..-----------------26
1&19
Employment After Retirement
---32-33
Guaranteed Term Options ................
28-29
HELPS Provision ...................................
3U-32
Marriage After Retirement ......................
2g
Partial Lump Sum Distribution ...
30,4O-49
Retiree Account Statement ......
32.35.53
Retiree Life Only Option ...........................
27
Supplemental Death Benefits ...........
4041
56 TMRS Member Benefits Guide
Service Credit ...................................... 4`16-25
Buyback of Service Credit .................
17,24
Combining from Multiple Cities .........
y7,19
Concurrent Service Credit ......................
23
Correcting Errors ........................................
13
Cunen—'--------------15
Family and Medical Leave Act
(FMLA) ............................................
22-23
Military Service Credit .........................
20-21
Prior Service Credit ..-----------19
Proportionate Buyback ...........................
25
Proportionate Retirement
Program .......................................
10.24
Probationary Prior Service Credit .........
23
Restricted Prior Service Credit ........
22-23
Updated Service Credit .......................
%8-19
Workers' Compensation and TNRS
..... 16
Social Security and Your Benefit ...............
34
Supplemental Death Benefits .............
40-4x
Extended Coverage ..................................
41
For Retirees ................................................
4O
Period of Coverage ..................................
43
Taxes............................................................
48-5;
Monthly Retirement Benefits ..................
4O
Partial Lump Sum Distribution ---48^49
Pre and Post-Tax Deposits ......................
4O
Public Safety Employee Exemption
...... 50
Refunds-----------------49-5;
Rollovers .................................................
5O-5U
Terminating Membership .......................
42-45
TMR5|D Number ...................................
14
TNRS Services .................................... 2.52-53
TNR5Websne ...........................................
.5Z
Updated Service Credit ..........................
n8-19
Transfer Feature ...................................
1&19
Updating Account Information ...............
1345
Uniformed Services Employment
and Reemployment Rights Act
(U5ERR8) .............................................
19-21
Vesting ....................................... 4`8.3940'43
Designating Beneficiary 4fter— ...........
'41
RSO
TEXAS MUNICIPAL RETIREMENT SYSTEM
A Retirement
Program for
0 0
Texas Municipal
Employees