When John Yanouzas retired from UConn in 1997 with a nearly six-figure pension, the business school professor vowed not to become a "couch potato."They sure are special class of workers!
So the man who once told The New York Times he needed to work two jobs or risk having to "knock out vacations, [a] second home, other luxuries," kept on teaching under a law that allows retirees in rare cases to work part time for the state without jeopardizing their pensions.
Eleven years later, the 80-year-old Yanouzas is still at the blackboard, teaching one class a semester for about $26,000 a year, while still collecting his $134,000 annual pension.
Throughout the state university system, hundreds of professors have similar deals, and across all agencies, more than 1,000 retirees collected both a pension and a paycheck from the state in 2008, despite a law designed to limit the practice.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Retired, Rehired: Many Collect Connecticut Pensions And Paychecks
Overpaid Government Worker reports: