NCRA loses of hundreds of thousands of dollars of NCRA revenue due to no enforcement of retiree rules.

Below are the 2009 and 2011 NCRA Source Book numbers of retirees listed in the Source Book:

2009 Source Book Retirees: 798

2011 Source Book Retirees: 849

For an association of just over 14,500 working reporters to support free lifetime subscriptions to JCR Magazine for 849 retirees is quite a burden to the members of NCRA.

Many of the 849 NCRA retirees are working court reporters who have opted out of paying dues by switching over to free lifetime retiree status after 30 years of membership.

A great idea to prevent non-retired court reporters from opting out of paying dues after 30 years of membership is to have a 65 year age requirement for NCRA retiree status.

That 65 year age requirement would weed out a lot of those non-retired court reporters who work fulltime and claim retiree status for the no-dues retiree status for as long as they live.

Unless they were 65 years old, a member who reaches 30 years of NCRA membership at age 52 couldn’t look forward to 13 years of free membership between age 52 and age 65 and continuing lifetime retiree membership thereafter.

Anyone can check the NCRA Source Book retiree listings and see the large numbers of working court reporters who have opted to take a retiree status even though they are working and at the peak of their earning careers.

Please note the addresses of the Source Book retirees having their JCR Magazines sent to their courthouse offices and freelance agency offices.

Myself and other members are correct in saying that NCRA bylaws are being violated when non-retired people who are working fulltime are opting to be put on retiree status.

Non-retired court reporters taking retiree status is against the provisions of the NCRA bylaws and causes big, big losses in revenue to NCRA.

The NCRA bylaws say a person may request retiree status when they retire.

We have dozens and dozens of non-retired court reporters taking free lifetime retiree status which they are not entitled to. This means that young starting-out court reporters have to pay for NCRA'S expenses for those high earning court reporters who have opted to pay no dues against the provisions of the NCRA bylaws.

Article 3 of the NCRA bylaws, Section 8–Retired Lifetime Members states:

"a) Any Participating or Registered Member in good standing who has paid Participating or Registered Member dues for a period of thirty (30) consecutive years [twenty (20) consecutive years for those Retired Lifetime Memberships approved prior to July 21, 1993] and is no longer engaged in verbatim stenographic reporting shall be eligible to become a Retired Lifetime Member.

"b) Retired Lifetime Members shall not pay dues."


Also at the NCRA website it lists that being "actually retired" as a prerequisite to receiving free lifetime retiree member status.

The following is from the NCRA website:

I’m retiring from reporting, is there a retired status?

“Reporter members who have been reporter members for thirty consecutive years are eligible for free lifetime retired status.”


Perhaps NCRA members should ask NCRA board members why those board members have looked the other way while NCRA bylaws are being disregarded and causing NCRA to lose 100’s of thousands of dollars in lost dues revenue over a course of many years.

Bill Parsons