From the Retirement Protection Act to tax reform, much has changed for retirees over the past quarter-century. Kiplinger's Retirement Report By Mary Kane, Associate Editor February 5, 2019From Kiplinger's Retirement Report Twenty-five years ago, Kiplinger's Retirement Report launched to help readers enjoy a richer retirement. Our first issue, published in February 1994, offered guidance on timely issues of the day, such as how to take advantage of the home-sale-profit exclusion (then $125,000) and how to comply with new rules that for the first time required a receipt for charitable donations of $250 or more. Some advice, such as how to figure tax on Social Security benefits, proved to be evergreen. This timeline notes just some of the significant retirement issues that we have covered in the past quarter-century.SEE ALSO: 6 Ways Retirement Has Changed Over the Past 25 Years 1994 The Retirement Protection Act expands efforts to find missing pension-plan participants. 1998 Roth IRAs become available. Advertisement 2000 Social Security earnings test removed for those at full retirement age or older. 2003 Congress creates Part D prescription-drug benefit for Medicare, which hits the marketplace in 2006. 2006 Pension Protection Act encourages auto enrollment in 401(k)s and creates IRA qualified charitable distribution rules. 2009 Required minimum distributions from retirement accounts waived one year only as a result of the 2007-09 financial crisis. Advertisement 2012 Labor Department beefs up 401(k) fee disclosures. 2014 Qualified longevity annuity contracts created. SEE ALSO: 8 Steps to a Happy Retirement 2015 Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 nixes some Social Security claiming strategies. 2018 Major overhaul of tax law takes effect, including nearly doubling the standard deduction to lowering tax rates.