Bill would let military retirees and fully disabled veterans to keep contributing to military retirement accounts

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A bill led by Rep. Jen Kiggans, R-Va., a former Navy pilot, would enable military retirees and veterans with 100% disability to continue making contributions to their military retirement accounts known as Thrift Savings Plans. (U.S. Air Force)

WASHINGTON — Service members retiring from the military will for the first time be allowed to keep contributing to their military-sponsored retirement accounts — known as Thrift Savings Plans — under legislation introduced by Rep. Jen Kiggans, R-Va., a former Navy pilot.

The Financial Opportunities for Retirees and Warriors Advancing Retirement Development — or FORWARD Act — also would let veterans who are 100% disabled send a portion of their monthly benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs to Thrift Savings Plans that they opened during military service, according to the bill.

Under the law now, veterans can keep their Thrift Savings Plans, also known as TSP accounts, after they leave the military. But they cannot continue putting aside a portion of their income into the retirement account.

TSP accounts are funds that offer “a variety of investment options, from a short-term U.S. Treasury security to index funds made of domestic and international stocks,” according to a federal government website on the savings plan.

The bill enables qualifying veterans to continue making contributions to their Thrift Savings Plans using their monthly retirement pension or from their disability payments. Service members are eligible for retirement and military pensions after 20 years of military service.

“For our 20-year retirees and veterans with a 100% disability rating, it’s only fair that they can keep contributing to the Thrift Savings Plan they’ve spent years building,” said Kiggans, a member of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee. “They shouldn’t be forced to start over in a new system when they’ve already invested in one that works for them.”

Air Force veteran Robert Tizon said he regrets not contributing to a Thrift Savings Plan during his military service.

“When I was in, Thrift Savings Plans were new at the time. I didn’t know much about them,” said Tizon, a retired master sergeant from Virginia who served 25 years.

Tizon joined the military following high school graduation and retired in 2013 after assignments to the Philippines and Iraq.

Congress originally established Thrift Savings Plans in 1986 to help federal employees save for retirement. Thrift Savings Plans are known as “defined contribution plans,” meaning individuals invest a portion of their earnings during their working years with their investment accumulating over time.

In 2001, lawmakers passed legislation that also allowed service members to participate in Thrift Savings Plans as a retirement tool.

“But right now federal law cuts off TSP [Thrift Savings Plan] contributions as soon as someone leaves the military, which creates a frustrating gap for veterans who want to continue growing their retirement savings using the plan they know and trust,” said Kiggans, 54, a former Navy pilot who joined the military in 1993 and served for 10 years.

“I understand the challenges our service members face during the transition to civilian life,” said Kiggans, who also is married to a retired Navy fighter pilot. They have a son who is training to be a pilot.

Tizon said he started contributing to a Thrift Savings Plan toward retirement when he joined the Defense Department as a civilian employee after he left the military.

“I now participate in it as a federal civilian worker. I only wish I had started sooner,” he said.

Rep. Wesley Bell, D-Mo., a co-sponsor of the bill, also said veterans have earned the right to build a secure future using the retirement plan.

“Retired service members and disabled veterans are being forced off their existing plans the day they hang up the uniform. The FORWARD Act is a common-sense fix that removes that barrier,” said Bell, a member of the House Armed Services Committee.

Government contributions to a Thrift Savings Plan are similar to a 401(k) with automatic and matching contributions. But the bill would not authorize a matching contribution from the military.

A hearing has not been scheduled for the bill, which would require a rule change by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board in coordination with the Defense Department and VA, according to Kiggans’ office.

Tizon said he joined the military as an 18-year-old, and retirement savings were far from his mind.

“The TSP was new back then. There was no one to mentor me about it,” he said.

But Tizon said he has made saving for retirement a priority as an employee at the Defense Department for the past 12 years using the Thrift Savings Plan.

“I am someone who keeps an eye on his funds, and this is a big benefit. I’ve accumulated six figures, and it will really help when I retire in the next five to 10 years,” he said.