(a) When a judge is certified as eligible for retirement, no further contribution shall be required of the judge. (b) Upon the written notice of election by the member of the Arkansas Judicial Retirement System, a judge with at least twenty (20) years of judicial service may continue or recommence payment of the six-percent (6%) contribution into the system to accrue the maximum retirement benefit provided under § 24-8-218 . Acts 1953, No. 365, § 9; A.S.A. 1947, § 22-909; Acts 2009, No. 744, § 1. (a) When a judge is certified as eligible for retirement, no further contribution shall be required of the judge. (b) Upon the written notice of election by the member of the Arkansas Judicial Retirement System, a judge with at least twenty (20) years of judicial service may continue or recommence payment of the six-percent (6%) contribution into the system to accrue the maximum retirement benefit provided under § 24-8-218 . Acts 1953, No. 365, § 9; A.S.A. 1947, § 22-909; Acts 2009, No. 744, § 1. (a) When a judge is certified as eligible for retirement, no further contribution shall be required of the judge. (b) Upon the written notice of election by the member of the Arkansas Judicial Retirement System, a judge with at least twenty (20) years of judicial service may continue or recommence payment of the six-percent (6%) contribution into the system to accrue the maximum retirement benefit provided under § 24-8-218 . Acts 1953, No. 365, § 9; A.S.A. 1947, § 22-909; Acts 2009, No. 744, § 1. (a) When a judge is certified as eligible for retirement, no further contribution shall be required of the judge. (b) Upon the written notice of election by the member of the Arkansas Judicial Retirement System, a judge with at least twenty (20) years of judicial service may continue or recommence payment of the six-percent (6%) contribution into the system to accrue the maximum retirement benefit provided under § 24-8-218 . Acts 1953, No. 365, § 9; A.S.A. 1947, § 22-909; Acts 2009, No. 744, § 1.
‹ Prev All Arkansas sections Next ›
Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.