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Bob Hall
stated on March 25, 2019 in the Texas Senate:
"We now have several hundred teachers that are over 100 years old and what I've read recently is that a baby born today, their age expectancy is 110, at least."
true half-true
State Sens. Bob Hall and Charles Perry speak on the floor of the Texas House. (Stephen Spillman/Austin American-Statesman) State Sens. Bob Hall and Charles Perry speak on the floor of the Texas House. (Stephen Spillman/Austin American-Statesman)

State Sens. Bob Hall and Charles Perry speak on the floor of the Texas House. (Stephen Spillman/Austin American-Statesman)

Madlin Mekelburg
By Madlin Mekelburg March 26, 2019

How many retired teachers in Texas are older than 100 years old?

During a debate in the Texas Senate about legislation that would shore up the state’s teacher pension system, Republican Sen. Bob Hall from Edgewood expressed concern about the sustainability of the system based on changing demographics in the state.

"This world has changed significantly, but our overall retirement program hasn’t changed much," he said, addressing the bill’s author. "If we were doing this today, we would probably take an entirely different approach.

"We’re in a situation where we now have several hundred teachers that are over 100 years old and what I've read recently is that a baby born today, their age expectancy is 110, at least. Thanks to medical science."

It’s true that there are hundreds of retired teachers in Texas who are older than 100, but Hall’s claim about life expectancy is off base.

Hall’s comment referred to retired teachers

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Kathi Seay, a policy adviser for Hall, said that his claim about teachers over 100 years old was about retired teachers who are members of the state’s retirement system — not current teachers in the classroom.

(A report from the Texas Education Agency says that the average age of Texas teachers during the 2016-17 school year was 31.2 and the oldest teacher that year was 75 years old.)

Carolyn Perez, spokeswoman for the Teacher Retirement System of Texas, said that as of February the system had 420,458 retired members.

Of that group, 321 were over 100 years old.

That number is consistent with the count from earlier years offered by Perez. In fiscal year 2016, there were 393 retired teachers older than 100. In 2014 there were 285 and in 2012 there were 254.

Current life expectancy is about 79

Hall’s staff did not provide a source for the second part of his claim, which stated that life expectancy for babies born this year is at least 110 years old.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calculates life expectancy estimates using information from death certificates in a given year. 

The most recent report on mortality, submitted to the agency by the National Center for Health Statistics, was published in 2017, when the life expectancy at birth was 78.6 years.

That marked a slight decline from 2016, "largely because of increases in mortality from unintentional injuries, suicide, diabetes, and influenza and pneumonia, with unintentional injuries making the largest contribution," the report says.

Has the pension system (and population) changed?

The Teacher Retirement System of Texas was established in 1937 and initially offered retirement benefits just to teachers and public school administrators, according to a strategic plan published by the system.

It was slowly expanded and now offers retirement and health care benefits to all employees at "public schools, educational service centers, charter schools, community and junior colleges, universities, and medical schools."

Lawmakers have also made tweaks to how the system manages investments and eligibility requirements for benefits.

Data from the Social Security Administration shows that the retirement age has gone up since 1937, when the state’s system was established.

The full retirement age for people born before 1937 is 65. From there forward, the retirement age slowly increases. The retirement age for people born in 1960 or later is 67.

During that time, the life expectancy increased. For men born in 1930, it was an average of 58 and for women it was 62, according to the Social Security Administration.

This estimate was on the low-end, "due mainly to high infant mortality."

Our ruling

Hall said "We now have several hundred teachers that are over 100 years old and what I've read recently is that a baby born today, their age expectancy is 110, at least."

The Teacher Retirement System of Texas said that as of February, they had 321 retired members who were older than 100, so Hall is right about that number.

And he’s right that life expectancy has increased since the system was established, but his characterization is exaggerated.

The most recent study on mortality in the United States reports that the life expectancy for babies born in 2017 is 78.6 years, not 110.

We rate this claim Half True.


HALF TRUE – The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details or takes things out of context.

 

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Half True
"We now have several hundred teachers that are over 100 years old and what I've read recently is that a baby born today, their age expectancy is 110, at least."
in the Texas Senate
Monday, March 25, 2019

Our Sources

Email interview, Carolyn Perez of the Teachers Retirement System of Texas, March 25, 2019

Email interview with Kathi Seay, Sen. Bob Hall’s office, March 25, 2019

Texas Education Agency, Certified Teacher Ages by Preparation Route 2013-2017, accessed March 25, 2019

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mortality in the United States, 2017, accessed March 25, 2019

Texas Retirement System, Strategic Plan FY 2015-2019, accessed March 26, 2019

Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook, accessed March 26, 2019

Social Security Administration, Benefits Planner, Life Expectancy, accessed March 26, 2019

Social Security Administration, Life Expectancy for Social Security, accessed March 26, 2019

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