1-06-death-4019001
Eligibility
Regardless of your years of service credit, if you die as the natural and proximate result of an on-the-job accident, not due to your own willful negligence, an accidental death benefit may be paid on your behalf.
The Benefit
This benefit is a pension equal to one-half (50 percent) of your Final Average Salary. Each April, the benefit may change based on the amount of the increase or decrease in the Consumer Price Index, or by 3 percent, whichever is less. The benefit will never be reduced below the amount initially paid.
The benefit can only be paid to the following beneficiaries, in this order:
- First, to your surviving spouse, provided he or she has not renounced survivorship rights in a separation agreement, until remarriage;
- Second, to your surviving children, until they reach age 25;
- Third, to your dependent parent or parents, as determined under regulations established by the Comptroller; or
- Finally, to any other person who qualified as a dependent on your final federal income tax return, or the return filed in the year immediately preceding the year of your death, until this person reaches age 21.
The beneficiaries listed above would generally be eligible for an annual Cost-of-Living Adjustment after receiving the accidental death benefit for five years.
If the total of all the accidental death benefit payments made to your beneficiaries is not more than the amount of the ordinary death benefit, the difference will be paid to the last eligible beneficiary or beneficiaries from the list above. If none exist, the benefit will be paid to the person(s) who would be eligible to share in your estate if you died without a will.
Filing
Your family or employer should notify us when you die so we can forward the appropriate forms to your beneficiary. If you die on or after January 1, 2020, the application for the Article 14 accidental death benefit must be filed within five years of your date of death (for members who died before January 1, 2020, the application had to be filed within two years of your date of death).