HR-3303-115
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.
What it does
This bill would preserve special federal retirement benefits for certain federal employees — including law enforcement officers, firefighters, air traffic controllers, nuclear materials couriers, and diplomatic security agents — who suffer a work-related injury or illness that prevents them from meeting the minimum age and years-of-service requirements normally required to qualify for those enhanced retirement benefits. Without this bill, such workers would lose access to the special retirement tier they would otherwise have earned.
Who benefits
Federal law enforcement officers, federal firefighters, air traffic controllers, nuclear materials couriers, and diplomatic special security agents who are forced out of their jobs before reaching the minimum age or service thresholds due to an on-the-job injury or illness. These workers would retain access to the enhanced "special category" federal retirement benefits they were on track to earn.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who fund the federal retirement system would bear the cost of extended or preserved benefit payments to workers who did not fully complete the standard service requirements. The federal retirement trust funds (CSRS and FERS) could face modestly increased long-term obligations. Workers in other federal job categories who face similar hardships but are not covered by this bill's specific occupational list would not receive the same protection.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that federal first responders in high-risk occupations accept physically demanding careers with the understanding that enhanced retirement benefits are part of their compensation. When a worker is injured or becomes ill specifically because of their service — through no fault of their own — denying them those benefits punishes them for the very risks their job required them to take. The current system creates an arbitrary and unfair outcome: two workers with identical careers can receive vastly different retirement benefits simply because one was injured before reaching a technical threshold. Preserving these benefits honors the government's commitment to workers who sacrificed their health in service to the public.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the special retirement tiers for these occupations were designed with specific age and service thresholds for sound actuarial and policy reasons, and that waiving those requirements — even for sympathetic cases — undermines the integrity and long-term financial stability of the federal retirement system. They contend that workers injured on the job already have access to federal workers' compensation programs specifically designed to address work-related injuries, and that stacking additional retirement benefit protections on top of those programs creates redundant and costly entitlements. Critics may also argue that expanding eligibility by administrative circumstance sets a precedent for further threshold waivers that could erode the system's fiscal foundation over time.