The Palm Beach Post

Social Security bonus of $581 being sought

- By Rob Hotakainen Tribune News Service

WASHINGTON — Top Senate Democrats want Congress to approve a one-time $581 emergency payment for the more than 65 million retirees, veterans and Americans with disabiliti­es who receive Social Security payments.

S e n s . P a t t y Murr ay o f Washington state and Chuck Schumer of New York said the payments would help those who were denied a cost- of-living adjustment in 2016 and who are set to receive an average raise of $5 per month — or 0.3 percent — in 2017. It would increase the average monthly payment to $1,360 per month from $1,355.

While the increase is tied to the Consumer Price Index, Murray said it’s “woefully inadequate for Washington state seniors to keep up with the ever-increasing costs of everyday life.”

And Schumer said that too many retirees are financiall­y vulnerable and that Congress needs to help “make up for their lost dollars.”

Senate Democrats pushed the plan last year without luck.

N o w i t ’ s p a r t o f t h e post-election agenda that Democratic leaders will pursue if they win enough seats Nov. 8 to take control of the Senate next year.

S h o u l d t h a t h a p p e n , S c hu mer woul d re p l a c e Republican Sen. Mitch McCo- nnell of Kentucky as Senate majority leader, while Murray would lead the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee or possibly the powerful Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

When Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., first introduced the bill, she said the $581 payment would represent a 3.9 percent increase for Social Security recipients, equal to the same percentage raise that most business executives received the pre- vious year. Warren proposed that the payments be made as refundable tax credits.

Democrats want to pay for the legislatio­n by changing a law that allows corporatio­ns to write off executive bonuses as a business expense for performanc­e pay.

Murray said that ending the tax subsidies for corporate bonuses would help provide emergency relief to more than 1.2 million people in her state.

Schumer noted a prece- dent for the legislatio­n, with Congress approving a $250 one-time payment for Social Security recipients in 2009 to help them get through the recession.

He s a i d t he ext r a $ 5 81 would be e qu a l to t hre e months of groceries for most seniors and that the emergency payment could also help them pay for out-ofpocket expenses for the prescripti­on drugs they receive under Medicare.

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