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Broome County hotel occupancy unchanged in November, other key indicators rise 8 percent
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Broome County hotels had a mixed month in November. The hotel-occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county was unchanged at 56.4 percent compared to a year earlier. That was the worst monthly performance in this measure in 2022 as occupancy had increased every month before that, […]
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BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Broome County hotels had a mixed month in November.
The hotel-occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county was unchanged at 56.4 percent compared to a year earlier. That was the worst monthly performance in this measure in 2022 as occupancy had increased every month before that, ranging from a nearly 4 percent rise to a more than 45 percent gain. Year to date through November, occupancy was up 15.7 percent to 61.7 percent.
Two other important indicators of business performance for Broome County hotels posted healthy gains in November.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), an industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, increased 8.1 percent to $57.99 in the 11th month of 2022 compared to the same month the year prior. Through the first 11 months of 2022, RevPar had climbed 34.9 percent to $66.74.
Average daily rate (ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, also rose 8.1 percent to $102.74 in the county in November, compared to November 2021. For the full 11-month period, ADR was up 16.6 percent to $108.20.

Upstate Medical, Syracuse Crunch partner on opioid- abuse prevention campaign
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Upstate Medical University and the Syracuse Crunch are partnering on a public-education campaign to fight opioid use and overdose. Assemblymember Pamela Hunter (D–Syracuse) secured a grant to help fund the program, Upstate Medical said in a release. Crouse Health is also participating in the campaign. Howard Dolgon, who owns the Syracuse Crunch,
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Upstate Medical University and the Syracuse Crunch are partnering on a public-education campaign to fight opioid use and overdose.
Assemblymember Pamela Hunter (D–Syracuse) secured a grant to help fund the program, Upstate Medical said in a release. Crouse Health is also participating in the campaign.
Howard Dolgon, who owns the Syracuse Crunch, said the team will develop an initiative to use its platform and players to bring messages to general audiences. The Crunch will also connect with athletic trainers and student-athletes on issues related to opioid use.
Dr. Robert Corona, CEO of Upstate University Hospital, applauded the participation of the Crunch in this initiative.
“Athletes are heroes to a lot of kids,” Corona said. “A lot of the kids that end up taking pain medications are athletes. So, their heroes are people like the Crunch athletes, so they’ll listen to them.”
Opioid abuse may result from the misuse of prescribed drugs, Upstate Medical said. Prescription opioids are often prescribed to treat moderate to severe pain following surgery or injury, the health system noted.

New CEO is quite familiar with Menorah Park
“My paternal grandparents were Menorah Park residents — my grandmother at the Jewish Home and my grandfather at the Oaks,” Russell D’Amico said. “I was a frequent visitor, got to know the staff and appreciated the kindness and attention my grandparents received. My father, Ronald D’Amico, was the podiatrist at Menorah Park for many years.
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“My paternal grandparents were Menorah Park residents — my grandmother at the Jewish Home and my grandfather at the Oaks,” Russell D’Amico said. “I was a frequent visitor, got to know the staff and appreciated the kindness and attention my grandparents received. My father, Ronald D’Amico, was the podiatrist at Menorah Park for many years. Menorah Park’s continuum of care and its local focus and deep roots in Central New York are its calling card and what drew me to this position. I’m looking forward to getting to know our residents, our staff members, and collaborating with entire senior executive team, including the board.”
D’Amico started his CEO duties at Menorah Park on Dec. 15.
As the new top executive, D’Amico succeeds longtime CEO Mary Ellen Bloodgood, who has transitioned to a new role as chief development officer of the Menorah Park Foundation, per Menorah Park’s Jan. 9 announcement.
Menorah Park is located at 4101 E. Genesee St. in the town of DeWitt.
D’Amico has worked in Central New York’s senior health-care community and as an educator in related areas for more than 16 years. He most recently served as VP of administration and long-term care at Auburn Community Hospital’s skilled-nursing facility. Before that, he was an administrator of several Loretto health-care facilities.
In addition to his work experience, D’Amico has been a faculty member at Bryant & Stratton College, teaching courses in health-care administration.
D’Amico earned a master’s degree in health-services administration from Strayer University, received a bachelor’s degree in therapeutic recreation from SUNY Cortland, and is a licensed nursing-home administrator.
Menorah Park says it offers a “broad range of high-quality, affordable health, housing, and community services and programs, providing a more comprehensive, cohesive, and holistic approach to healthy aging.”

Upstate consumer sentiment rises in Q4 in Siena survey
Consumer sentiment in upstate New York and statewide rose in the fourth quarter, compared to the prior quarter but remained well below pre-pandemic levels, according to a new survey. The Siena College Research Institute (SRI) measured upstate New York consumer sentiment at 65.5 in the fourth quarter, up 6.4 points from the last measure of
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Consumer sentiment in upstate New York and statewide rose in the fourth quarter, compared to the prior quarter but remained well below pre-pandemic levels, according to a new survey.
The Siena College Research Institute (SRI) measured upstate New York consumer sentiment at 65.5 in the fourth quarter, up 6.4 points from the last measure of 59.1 in the third quarter of 2022. The results were part of the institute’s latest quarterly survey of consumer sentiment released on Jan. 4.
SRI measured the statewide consumer-sentiment level at 72.3, up 1.5 points from the third quarter. The statewide figure was 12.6 points higher than the fourth-quarter reading of 59.7 for the entire nation, which was up 1.5 from the third-quarter number, as measured by the University of Michigan’s consumer-sentiment index.
New York’s current index increased nearly 3 points to 66.7 and the future index edged up nearly 1 point, resulting in New York’s measure of future expectations moving up from 75.2 in the third quarter to 75.9 in the fourth quarter. Both the New York and national indexes all increased about 1-3 points.
Overall confidence remains higher in New York than across the nation. Future confidence in the Empire State is just above the breakeven point of balanced optimism and pessimism and 16 points higher than national future confidence.
Both New York’s consumer sentiment and the nation’s consumer sentiment “picked up ever so slightly” over the fourth quarter with New York’s index continuing to outpace the country’s by nearly 13 points, according to Don Levy, SRI director.
“While Democrats and New York City residents record scores that display more optimism than pessimism, the largest increases in sentiment this quarter were among Republicans — up nearly 8 points — and Upstaters — up over 6 points,” Levy said in the SRI report. “Lingering inflation, food prices, and political uncertainty may explain NY’s current sentiment measurement remaining over 20 points lower than the pre-pandemic level. Still, demand for major consumer goods is high most especially for cars/trucks at over 25% the highest since fall of ‘19.”
In the fourth quarter of 2022, buying plans were up 3.8 percentage points from the third-quarter measurement to 25.5 for cars and trucks. Buying plans were down 2.9 points to 26.1 percent for major home improvements, edged down 1 point to 28.4 percent for furniture, slid 2.2 points to 44.8 percent for consumer electronics, and declined 2.5 points to 11.5 percent for homes, the SRI said.
Gas and food prices
In SRI’s quarterly analysis of gas and food prices, 68 percent of upstate New York respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly budgets, which is down from 74 percent in the third and second quarters of 2022 and 73 percent in the first quarter.
In addition, 66 percent of statewide respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly spending plans, down from 69 percent in the third and second quarters of last year and the same as the figure from the first quarter of 2022.
When asked about food prices, 80 percent of upstate respondents indicated the price of groceries was having a serious impact on their finances, down from 84 percent in the third quarter of 2022 and from 82 percent in the second quarter.
At the same time, 79 percent of statewide respondents indicated the price of food was having a serious impact on their monthly finances, up from 78 percent in third quarter of 2022 but down from 80 percent in the second quarter of last year.
SRI conducted its survey of consumer sentiment on Dec. 12 and Dec. 13 by random telephone calls to 403 New York adults via landline and cell phone. It has an overall margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points, the institute said.

Cornell to boost financial aid for all qualifying undergrads in 2023
ITHACA, N.Y. — All Cornell University undergraduate students who qualify for financial aid in 2023 will receive increases in university grant aid. That’s according to a recent announcement from Cornell, citing the “success of the ongoing ‘To Do the Greatest Good’ campaign. About 4,700 students will get increases in grant aid of between $500 and
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ITHACA, N.Y. — All Cornell University undergraduate students who qualify for financial aid in 2023 will receive increases in university grant aid.
That’s according to a recent announcement from Cornell, citing the “success of the ongoing ‘To Do the Greatest Good’ campaign.
About 4,700 students will get increases in grant aid of between $500 and $1,500 for the spring semester, with a corresponding reduction in self-help aid, comprising student contributions, loans, and work-study expectations.
Additional policy changes will result in more aid for the 2023-24 academic year, with 7,100 students getting increases up to $1,800, including reductions in self-help aid. The increase in grant aid is possible because of Cornell’s initial investment of nearly $14 million for the coming year, the school noted in a mid-December release.
The changes in policy, which will extend beyond the 2023-24 school year, begin to “fulfill the affordability goals that are central” to the “To Do the Greatest Good” campaign to raise $5 billion. That will include $500 million in endowment and current-use funds for undergraduate financial aid, Cornell said.
Jonathan Burdick, vice provost for enrollment at Cornell, said the “swift and generous” response from Cornell donors — raising $323 million towards the $500 million goal since the campaign began — has allowed Cornell to increase support now, ahead of meeting final goals in 2026.
The total estimated cost to attend Cornell in the current 2022-23 academic year at its endowed colleges is $83,296 — including tuition, housing, meals, and books — but before financial aid is applied, according to the Cornell website. The total cost for New York state residents to attend one of Cornell’s state contract colleges, such as the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business, is $62,798, before financial aid. Non-New York state residents attending the Cornell state contract colleges pay the endowed-colleges rate.
VIEWPOINT: Are Business Non-Compete Clauses a Thing of the Past?
Analyzing the FTC’s new regulation On July 9, 2021, President Joe Biden issued an executive order that, among other things, directed the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) “to curtail the unfair use of non-compete clauses and other clauses or agreements that may unfairly limit worker mobility.” Making good on (and, in fact, going significantly beyond) this
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Analyzing the FTC’s new regulation
On July 9, 2021, President Joe Biden issued an executive order that, among other things, directed the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) “to curtail the unfair use of non-compete clauses and other clauses or agreements that may unfairly limit worker mobility.” Making good on (and, in fact, going significantly beyond) this directive, on Jan. 5, 2023, the FTC released its proposed regulation which declares most non-compete clauses, and other clauses which have the effect of prohibiting competition, an unfair method of competition. This proposed regulation has a wide-reaching impact and is analyzed more fully below.
The Regulation
The FTC’s proposed regulation seeks to add a new subchapter J, consisting of part 910, to Title 16, Chapter 1 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Section 910.2(a) of the proposed regulation declares: “[i]t is an unfair method of competition for an employer to enter into or attempt to enter into a non-compete clause with a worker; maintain with a worker a non-compete clause; or represent to a worker that the worker is subject to a non-compete clause where the employer has no good faith basis to believe that the worker is subject to an enforceable non-compete clause.” The term “worker” applies to both employees and independent contractors.
Section 910.2(b) of the proposed regulation requires employers to rescind existing non-compete clauses with their employees (current or past) within 180 days after the regulation is formally published and subsequently provide each employee notice of such recission within 45 days after rescinding the noncompete clause. Section 910.2(b)(2)(C) provides model notice language for employers to give to their current or past employees subject to non-competition obligations.
Section 910.3 provides a narrow exception to the ban on non-compete clauses, which permits a person who is a “substantial owner of, or substantial partner in” a business to enter into a noncompete agreement where that person is “selling a business entity or otherwise disposing of all of the person’s ownership interest in the business entity, or … selling all or substantially all of a business entity’s operating assets.”
Section 910.1(b)(1) defines a non-compete clause as “a contractual term between an employer and a worker that prevents the worker from seeking or accepting employment with a person, or operating a business, after the conclusion of the worker’s employment with the employer.” Section 910.1(b)(2) expands this definition to include “a contractual term that is a de facto non-compete clause because it has the effect of prohibiting the worker from seeking or accepting employment with a person or operating a business after the conclusion of the worker’s employment with the employer.” Such de facto non-compete clauses include a non-disclosure agreement “written so broadly that it effectively precludes the worker from working in the same field after the conclusion of the worker’s employment with the employer” and contractual terms “that require[] the worker to pay the employer or a third-party entity for training costs if the worker’s employment terminates within a specified time period, where the required payment is not reasonably related to the costs the employer incurred for training the worker.”
Section 910.4 of the proposed regulation purports to preempt state laws to the extent such state laws are inconsistent with the proposed regulation.
The Regulation’s Potential Impact
The FTC’s proposed regulation will have a wide-ranging impact on all manner of businesses, big and small, across all industries. The regulation, if adopted, unequivocally precludes classic non-compete clauses entered into as a condition of employment. In addition, the FTC’s broad definition of non-compete clauses, which includes “de facto” non-compete clauses, creates the potential that broadly drafted non-disclosure, non-solicitation, anti-poaching monetary penalty clauses and other types of restrictive covenants meant to protect trade secrets, confidential business information and/or the exploitation of customer relationships and goodwill could violate the FTC’s proposed regulation and be effectively nullified.
As a result, should the FTC’s proposed regulation go into effect, businesses will not only be prohibited from using non-competition clauses, but they must also carefully review (and, if necessary, revise) their employment and post-employment contracts to ensure that any non-disclosure, non-solicitation, anti-poaching or other agreements intended to protect the business are narrowly tailored to avoid potential nullification through the FTC’s proposed regulation.
Further, and regardless of whether the rule is finalized or challenged on rulemaking grounds, the legal position underlying the FTC’s announcement creates additional risks to employers seeking to implement and enforce non-compete agreements.
The Future of the FTC’s Proposed Regulation
Whether the FTC’s proposed regulation will ultimately go into effect remains to be seen. Initially, the proposed regulation faces a 60-day public comment period, during which the public is invited to comment on the proposed regulation, which may or may not impact the final regulation. Comments on the regulation proposal may be made up to 60 days after the Federal Register publishes the proposed rule. The public comment period will open soon.
Following the public comment period, the FTC will take another vote on the final regulation before final publication of the regulation. The final vote has not yet been scheduled.
The FTC’s proposed regulation is likely to generate significant and substantial litigation on various grounds, including, without limitation, that it exceeds executive authority and goes beyond the limited mandate of President Biden’s executive order.
Conclusion
The future of non-compete clauses is murky. If the FTC’s proposed regulation goes into effect, non-compete clauses as we know them will be a thing of the past. However, the FTC’s proposed regulation will likely face many challenges in the weeks and months to come and may be tied up with legal challenges for the foreseeable future.
Should the FTC’s proposed regulation go into effect, employers will need to take steps to comply with the regulation. [That includes] reviewing their employment and post-employment agreements to identify whether they contain any non-compete clauses and, if so, rescind such clauses and provide the necessary notice to employees.
In addition, employers should immediately consider, in anticipation of the regulation going into effect, having their non-disclosure, non-solicitation, anti-poaching, and other types of agreements reviewed. If necessary, [the agreements should be] revised, to better ensure they are no broader than necessary to protect against the use and disclosure of confidential and trade-secret information or the exploitation of customer relationships and goodwill.
Bradley A. Hoppe is a member (partner) in the Buffalo office of Syracuse–based law firm Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC. He is a litigation attorney who handles a wide range of business, commercial and municipal matters at the trial and appellate levels in both state and federal court. Contact Hoppe at bhoppe@bsk.com. Kevin G. Cope is an associate in Bond’s Buffalo office. He is a litigation attorney who assists a wide range of clients in resolving pending matters, or, when possible, to avoid litigation through implementing measures to mitigate or avoid potential exposure. Contact Cope at kcope@bsk.com. This article is drawn and edited from the law firm’s website.

OCC, area hospitals allocated money for health-care projects
ONONDAGA — Onondaga Community College (OCC) is planning renovation work to help students pursuing health-care careers to learn in an environment offering real-life health-care scenarios. “So, our nurses, our physical-therapy assistants, our [radiologic technology] assistants … they’ll all be learning in a co-located space that simulates what they’re going to experience out in the workforce,”
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ONONDAGA — Onondaga Community College (OCC) is planning renovation work to help students pursuing health-care careers to learn in an environment offering real-life health-care scenarios.
“So, our nurses, our physical-therapy assistants, our [radiologic technology] assistants … they’ll all be learning in a co-located space that simulates what they’re going to experience out in the workforce,” Dr. Warren Hilton, president of Onondaga Community College, said in response to a question from a CNYBJ reporter.
OCC will use $2 million in federal funding for a new hospital-simulation lab that’s meant to train future nurses in Central New York.
“Now that’s just what the doctor ordered to help address our health-care worker shortage,” U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) said in his remarks at the Jan. 5 announcement.
Standing with local dignitaries and health-care professionals, the senator announced the funding during a visit to the OCC campus.
The $2 million grant for OCC is part of a total of $12 million that Schumer said he helped secured in the recently approved federal budget to boost hospitals and health-care providers across the region.
The money seeks “to expand their facilities, to boost life-saving care in everything from cancer treatment to suicide prevention,” the Senate majority leader added.
OCC has “long wanted” to expand its programming and training but needed the funding to upgrade and expand the facility to accommodate the equipment and labs to train its students, Schumer said.
This new facility will help bolster the OCC School of Health’s expansion as it prepares to launch new programs for a variety of high demand health-care career paths, which the school projects will almost double the current enrollment in its health programs, per a Schumer news release on the funding announcement.
Additional projects
Besides OCC’s funding, the federal money will also benefit projects at some of the area’s hospitals.
Upstate University Hospital will use a $1.1 million grant for the creation of the Upstate Suicide Prevention Center.
“Upstate Medical University has been at the forefront of suicide prevention with its zero suicide program for early detection, the adolescent intensive outpatient program for crisis stabilization, the neuromodulation program for biologic-based treatments, and the innovative psychiatry high-risk program which was developed by Upstate Medical University to provide transformative healing for high risk adolescents and young adults, which was recently awarded the designation as a best practice for suicide prevention by the National Suicide Prevention Resource Center,” Dr. Robert Gregory, director of psychiatry high risk program at Upstate University Hospital, said in his remarks. “Having funding for a suicide prevention center will enable us to coordinate and expand these efforts to the entire community, bringing a beacon of hope for the recovery of suicidal individuals and their families.”
The health system anticipates serving at least 600 youth and young adults annually over the next five years in outpatient settings and in 50 school districts across Central New York.
Upstate University Hospital will also use about $900,000 for a multidisciplinary Lyme and tick-borne disease treatment center.
In addition, Crouse Health will use more than $1 million for work on the rapid-evaluation unit of Crouse Hospital’s emergency department, enabling it to reconfigure the current space and build out into an adjacent area.
“Our project is to expand the rapid evaluation unit in our emergency room. Over the course of the pandemic, the need for emergency services has continued to increase. So, this project will allow us to expand the front of our emergency room, improve access, improve the patient experience, improve quality, and more efficiently get patients through the emergency room to allow to take care of more patients,” Dr. Seth Kronenberg, COO and chief medical officer at Crouse Health, explained in his remarks.
The funding awards also include $2 million for the Auburn Community Hospital Cancer Center to help it buy medical equipment for cancer diagnostics.
Oneida Health Systems, Inc. will use $1 million for behavioral-health renovations, and Valley Health Services in Herkimer will use a $2 million funding award for its skilled nursing and neurobehavioral care facility.
The funding awards also include nearly $3 million for Cortland County as it works to turn a downtown building into a mental-health facility.
Mohawk Valley EDGE names new board chair and directors
ROME, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley EDGE, a not-for-profit corporation that works to strengthen and grow the Mohawk Valley’s economy, announced the appointment of Justin Hummel as chair of the board of directors and the election of three new board directors. Hummel was first elected as an MV EDGE director in 2016. He serves as CEO
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ROME, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley EDGE, a not-for-profit corporation that works to strengthen and grow the Mohawk Valley’s economy, announced the appointment of Justin Hummel as chair of the board of directors and the election of three new board directors.
Hummel was first elected as an MV EDGE director in 2016. He serves as CEO of Hummel’s Office Plus, a multi-generational business-supply dealer founded in 1934. In this role, he manages day-to-day operations at the company, which is the largest independent business-supply dealer in upstate New York. Hummel succeeds previous board chair Rocco F. Arcuri, Sr., president and CEO of Adirondack Bank. During his tenure, Arcuri oversaw the MV EDGE board through the COVID-19 pandemic, Wolfspeed’s Marcy fabrication facility construction, and fostered a positive relationship with Oneida County, the economic-development organization said in a release.
Also elected to the MV EDGE board to fill vacancies are Nick Alger, director at NYSTEC; Anna D’Ambrosio, president and CEO at Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute; and Richard Evans, president and COO at Pacemaker Steel & Piping.
The Mohawk Valley EDGE board includes more than 50 business and community leaders from Herkimer and Oneida counties, representing sectors including finance, insurance, advanced technology, manufacturing, higher education, and health care.

LGS names two new board members, announces officers
DeWITT, N.Y. — Leadership Greater Syracuse (LGS), a nonprofit that offers a yearlong civic-leadership training program, recently announced that two community members have joined its board of directors. The two new board members are Bishop Colette Matthews-Carter of Interfaith Works and Joseph Rocco, III of Bowers & Company. They will each serve a three-year term.
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Leadership Greater Syracuse (LGS), a nonprofit that offers a yearlong civic-leadership training program, recently announced that two community members have joined its board of directors.
The two new board members are Bishop Colette Matthews-Carter of Interfaith Works and Joseph Rocco, III of Bowers & Company. They will each serve a three-year term.
Matthews-Carter is the director of the El-Hindi Center for Dialogue & Action at Interfaith Works. She is a diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioner, trainer, and facilitator. She is also a pastor at Zion Hill World Harvest Baptist Church in Syracuse, as well as a graduate of the LGS Class of 1997.

Rocco, a graduate of the LGS Class of 2021, is a certified public accountant and is currently an audit partner at Bowers & Company, where he specializes within the firm’s manufacturing, transportation, banking and not-for-profit niches. He is heavily involved in the organization’s on-campus recruiting and internal business development programs. Rocco has also been named treasurer of the LGS board.
In addition to Rocco, the following three board members were elected as officers. They will serve a one-year term and include:
• President: Amy Lawler, controller of Anoplate (LGS Class of 2011)
• Vice President: Ryan McDermott, VP, M&T Bank (LGS Class of 2011)
• Secretary: Renae Rokicki, senior leadership and development coordinator at Upstate Medical University (LGS Class of 2014)
“LGS is honored to have these high caliber professionals serve on our board of directors,” LGS Executive Director Pam Brunet said in a release. “These individuals are leaders within their organizations and they epitomize the LGS mission by taking an active role in the community.”
The LGS Class of 2023 is in the process of beginning its program year. It’s the 33rd class in the organization’s history.
Ask Rusty: Can I Get Survivor Benefits While Still Working?
Dear Rusty: I lost my wife several years ago and I qualified for Social Security spousal benefits. Unfortunately, because of my income, I have not been able to take advantage of this benefit. I am currently 64 and still working. I believe I have until the age of 70 to receive this. Is there any
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Dear Rusty: I lost my wife several years ago and I qualified for Social Security spousal benefits. Unfortunately, because of my income, I have not been able to take advantage of this benefit. I am currently 64 and still working. I believe I have until the age of 70 to receive this. Is there any way to claim any of this before I start taking my Social Security in a couple of years?
Signed: Working Widower
Dear Working Widower: Your entitlement to surviving spouse benefits from your wife actually never expires so, you can wait until you stop working full time, or until you reach your full retirement age (FRA), to claim your benefit as a widower.
Social Security’s “earnings test” lasts until you reach your FRA, which, for you, is 66 years and 8 months. That is the age at which your earnings from working will no longer affect your Social Security (SS) benefit. So, you can simply defer claiming your survivor benefit until you reach your FRA, or until you stop working full time and won’t exceed the annual earnings limit (the earnings limit changes yearly; for 2023 it is $21,240). But there is no way to avoid the earnings test if you’re collecting SS benefits of any kind before you reach your full retirement age. If you collect your surviving spouse benefit early and exceed the earnings limit, the Social Security Administration will take away benefits equal to $1 for every $2 you are over the limit (half of what you exceed the limit by), and if your work earnings are high enough it can temporarily disqualify you from receiving SS benefits. The penalty for exceeding the earnings limit is also less severe in the year you reach your FRA.
You might take some comfort in knowing, anyway, that taking your survivor benefit before your FRA would mean it would be reduced (by 4.75 percent for each full year early) but waiting until you reach your FRA to claim it would mean you’ll get 100 percent of the survivor benefit you’re entitled to (the same amount your wife was entitled to when she died). And you can claim your survivor benefit (only) first and collect that, while allowing your personal SS retirement amount to continue to grow, up to age 70 if you wish. You should strive to maximize whichever benefit will be highest — your own, or your survivor benefit — and collect that benefit for the rest of your life. If you choose to claim your survivor benefit at your FRA and switch to your own higher amount at 70, your personal SS retirement benefit at 70 will be almost 27 percent more than it will be at your full retirement age. That would be a good way to avoid the earnings test, maximize both benefits, and secure the highest possible Social Security benefit for as long as you live.
Whether waiting until 70 to claim your own SS retirement benefit makes sense depends on whether it will be higher at age 70 than your survivor benefit at your FRA, and on your life expectancy. Average life expectancy for a man your current age is about 84 and you would break even moneywise at about age 81 if you wait until age 70 to claim your own SS retirement benefit. So, you’d get the most in cumulative lifetime benefits by waiting until your FRA to claim your survivor benefit and — if it will be higher — waiting until you’re 70 to claim your own SS retirement benefit. The choice is yours to make but longevity is the key, so you should carefully assess your potential life expectancy, including your family history, your current health, and your lifestyle to help you decide.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4-million-member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author’s note: This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.
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