David Rudykoff, appellant pro se, сhallenged the constitutionality of the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 415(a)(7). After exhausting his administrativе remedies before. the Social Security Administration (SSA), Rudykoff brought an action in the United States District Court for the Eastеrn District of New York seeking review of the decision to reduce his benefits pursuant to the WEP. Rudykoff now appeals the district court’s affirmance of the reduction of his benefits, claiming that the WEP unconstitutionally discriminates against rеtired federal employees such as himself. Because we find the WEP constitutional, we affirm.
During' his 47 years of employment, Ru-dykoff worked in both the public and private sectors. For 31 years, he was a federal employee and his earnings were exempt from social security taxes because of his participation in the Civil Service Retirement System, a federal pension plan. Rudykoff worked an additional 16 years in the private sector, where he paid social security tax on his earnings.
In October 1994, Rudykoff applied to the SSA for retirement benefits based on his credited earnings in the private sector. The SSA initially calculated his benefits at $429 per month. Apprоximately five months later, the SSA informed Rudykoff that his correct monthly benefit amount was actually $204 because the WEP applied to his benefit calculation. The SSA’s initial benefit determination had not taken into account that Rudykoff had numerous years of federal employment when his wages were not taxed for social security, and that hе was receiving a federal pension of $1,531 per month from the Civil Service Retirement System.
Rudykoff challenged the reduction of his benefits through a variety of administrative proceedings. After an administrative law judge affirmed the SSA’s corrected calculation, Rudykoff brought suit in the district court alleging that the WEP is unconstitutional because it is irrational and discriminates against federal employees. In February 1998, the district court granted the Commissioner of the SSA’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, finding that the WEP is reasonably related to the legitimate government aim of reducing unintended benefit windfalls to those receiving federal pensions. On appeal, Rudykoff raises substantially the same argumеnts as to the constitutionality of the WEP that he raised below.
This Court reviews the district court’s grant of judgment on the pleаdings
de novo. See Clark v. Commissioner of Soc. Sec.,
The WEP was enacted to eliminate the unintended benefits windfall that accrued to workers who split their career between emplоyment in which their earnings were taxed for social security and
We cannot say that Congress’s reasoning in enacting the WEP was irrаtional or discriminatory. Rather, we agree with the district court that the WEP furthers the rational goal of insuring that certain individuals do not receive an unintended benefit under the Social Security Act because of their particular employment history. Such windfalls were an unanticipated byproduct of a social security system designed to bеnefit low wage earners, and their elimination was a reasonable means of achieving the legitimate gоal of maximizing the funds distributed in accordance with that design.
The only other circuit to address the question of WEP’s constitutiоnality found, as we do now, that the provision survived rational basis scrutiny. In
Das v. Department of Health & Human Servs.,
We have considered Rudykoffs other arguments and find them without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of judgment on the pleadings.
