The Kentucky Teachers’ Retirement System lost more than $3 million last month in selling off its direct investment in a Russian bank.
comprehensive retirement plan for Kentucky’s public school teachers that includes a defined benefit, life insurance and retiree health insurance. TRS retirement eligibility is determined...
Hundreds of teachers in central Kentucky have rallied in front of public schools to protest proposed cuts to their retirement benefits in what could be a precursor to a statewide strike.
A Kentucky Teachers Retirement System attorney said the system took a loss on the sale of the Russian shares last month.
Teachers Retirement System Of The State Of Kentucky Portfolio Holdings Latest Holdings, Performance, AUM (from 13F, 13D) Teachers Retirement System Of The State Of Kentucky has disclosed 1...
ERROR LOADING Public schools closed in at least 25 Kentucky counties on Friday as teachers... reducing retirement benefits for any teacher already under contract, according to the Lexington...
The Kentucky Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a law that made changes to the state's struggling public pension system after it prompted thousands of teachers to protest.
But by the time both chambers of the Kentucky Legislature had passed it that night, the amendment process had turned the bill about sewage into a 291-page overhaul of public employees' retirement benefits. Now, it rests on Gov. Matt Bevin's desk awaiting his signature — and teachers across the state are livid. Even before the state Senate passed the bill Thursday night, teachers and other school staff had descended on the Capitol in Frankfort, bearing signs and belting chants in ...
Classes were canceled Monday for hundreds of thousands of students across two states as striking teachers rallied at Capitols in Oklahoma and Kentucky.
Here are highlights of the plan that have a direct effect on Kentucky’s current and retired school teachers: New teachers hired after January 1, 2019, will be put into a hybrid cash-balance retirement plan, where they will contribute 9.105 percent of their salary to their retirement plan, the state will contribute 6 percent of their salary and school districts w ...