A major victory for the Institute!

Well here it is, the informal yet passive form of acceptance that SUNY is corrupt.

After sending numerous letters and reports to SUNY, TIAA, and the IRS I finally was able to get this account closed down. 

The official statement by SUNY was that “this was money collected in error, and that the funds would be returned to SUNY. ”  The interesting thing about this entire venture was that SUNY had me vested in a retirement account until one day short of the employer match. (which was last year). So the money in this account was never mine, it was just placed there by SUNY with my personal information in the hopes of growing the funds in my name….

I wonder what would have happened years down the road if this account gained real value. Would SUNY have just collect money on my behalf and then returned it to themselves?  Does an organize like SUNY even need to do something like this to survive? Maybe SUNY is an aging organization that has to play games with its employees to survive.

In my view, since SUNY knew about the settlement, they knew no money should have been in that account. In my view, by their apology they open the door to investigations of fraud.   

Also see the attached payout “or adjustments” they had to make to close out the account. Apparently $28.12 + $59.09 equals $84.57 (weird).

Screen Shot 2018-07-31 at 7.37.19 AM.png

My institute does not stand for this nonsense. While we are a young group, many of whom are volunteers, we treat everyone with respect, and are very upfront about our fundraising campaigns, our initiatives, and our mission. 

Thanks all to my new team(s) and collaborator(s), let do some great work!

One thought on “A major victory for the Institute!

  1. Also this process affected other people:

    See the feedback I received from other users

    I’m glad I could help in some way.

    ————————————————————————————————————————
    Dear Officer,

    Greetings and please accept my best regards. I also worked at SUNY and I have read your posts on TIAA with great interests. I would very much appreciate the opportunity to get your comments. Please advise the next step. Thank you and I wish you have a very fine day.

    Best regards,

    Anonymous

    ————————————————————————————————————————

    Dear Brian,

    Thank you for letting me know. You are not alone and there are lots of people having the problem.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/09/business/tiaa-subpoena.html

    Best regards,

    Anonymous

    ————————————————————————————————————————

    Dear Brian,

    You are absolutely right. But there are much worse cases

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/13/your-money/tiaa-403b.html

    Best regards,

    Anonymous

Comments are closed.