The Oregon state employee. (Salem, Oregon.) 1944-195?, May 01, 1950, Page 21, Image 21

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    19
$200.00
66
qq
$250.00
72
iQ7
$300.00
77
' .
* P e rm a n e n t an d to ta l d isab ility b enefits fo r a disabled w o rk er a re th e sam e
as benefits fo r a re tire d w o rk e r w ith no dependents, assum ing the sam e n u m b er
° f 7 ™rrl Of c?v f ? S e- No fam ily benefits are provided in disability Jcasesi IJ-
t W ith w ife 65 o r m e r.-’-
J
TABLE 2. Illu stra tiv e m onthly benefits for survivors of in su red w o r k J S u n d e r
H. R. 600MB
A verage
M onthly
Wage
Aged
W idow*
$150.00
$200.00
"$*250.00
$300.00
$42
46
50
54
$150.00
$200.00
$250.00
$300.00
$43
47
1 51
55
A ged parent* or
one child alone
W idow and
one child
W idow and
2 children
W idow and
3 children
In su red W o rker C overed fo r 5 Y ears
$42
$85
$113
46
92
lg M
50
100
133
54
108
144
In su red W orker Covered fo r 10 Y ears
$43
$87
$116
47
94
126
5BM
102
137
55
110
147
In su re d W orker Covered fo r 20 Y ears
$45
$91
$120
50
99
132
54
107
132
58
116
150
$150.00
$45
$200.00
50
$250.00
54
$300.00
58
* Age 65 or over.
$120
150
150
$120
150
150
150
$120
150
„,-150
150
R Tfin^nL ^ w \ A ? nU ali ° St f ?r old_age’ survivors an d disaM
. b e n e fits u n d er H
R. 6000) .(W orker an d em ployer pay sam e am ount.)
■
If■
A nnual C ontribution
Calendar
Year
P ercen t
of w ages
W ages
$1200 year
Wages
$2400 year
W ages
$3600 year
1950 . ■
—
$18
$36
I B
I
1951-59
1
24
48
72
1960-64
2W I
30
60
90
1965-69
3 * 1/
36
72
108
•1 9 ®
■ CAUTION: T he benefi-t>rates show n in th e tables below are based ■ ’in l7
"each
and the benpfit n 6d H H
m o n th ly rate. A ctually, the av e ra g e m onthly w age
“ aim is filed
p a y m e n ts fo r an y w o rk er Ci>n be calculated only a t the Ume his
w a T c o v ^ T em pY oM
s te a l™
Boardman Retires
R ecent rep o rts th a t Sam H. B oard -
m an w ould re tire as su p e rin te n d e n t of
estate p a rk s u n d e r th e sta te highw ay
commission h av e now been confirm ed.
The Ig tm n issio n has announced his re -
tirem en t to becom e effective J u ly 1,
this year.
B oardm an
e n te re d th e em ploy
of the state as resid en t en gineer of th e
B ^ di nan ’ E astern O regon gisTrict, in
1919, and continued in an engineering
capacity u n til 1929, w hen he becam e
h ead of th e sta te p a rk s division. Since
his la tte r ap p o in tm en t he has m ade
th a t the ™
d
w o rk er
|g |h e a d q u a r t e r s in Salem . H e is 75
y1PSIof age and is enjoying fairly
good h ealth.
W hen B oardm an w as appointed to
his p resen t position th e re ' w ere only
I few sm all "M ate p ark s in O r e g o n
w hich w ere u n d e r ju risd ictio n of dis­
tric t hig h w ay d e p artm en t engineers.
S tate P a rk s Outstanding-
U nder B oardm an’s guidance th e
Oregon state n a tu ra l p a rk system has
become outstanding in the U nited
States.
Officials recall th a t B oardm an w as
tak en off an oiling job on th e C ra te r
(C ontinued on P age 35)