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SPONSOR: |
Vaughn |
DATE
TYPED: |
|
HB |
157 |
||
SHORT
TITLE: |
Amend
Police Retirement |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Smith |
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REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
Significant (Actuarial
Study Needed) |
|
Recurring |
PERA |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Responses
Received From
PERA
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Bill 157 creates
a new optional plan for a state police member who is eligible to retire, but
may choose to remain a state police officer and have 100% of his or her pension
paid into a deferred retirement account for up to five years. Under HB 157, the retirement eligible state
police member will continue to make contributions to PERA under State Police
Coverage Plan 1, but will earn no additional service credit while he or she
participates in the deferred retirement option plan (“DROP”).
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
PERA’s actuaries have
not had an opportunity to study HB 157 to determine whether it is
cost-neutral.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The bill’s administrative
impact on PERA will be significant in that DROP plan administration is more complex
and costly than other plans administered by PERA. HB 157 will add another plan that is
completely different from the 27 other coverage plans that PERA currently
administers. HB 157 will require PERA to
set up individual accounts for DROP plan participants to track amounts
deferred, interest accrued thereon, and the division of community property
incident to divorce, if applicable.
Given the
It should be noted that
this type of DROP plan moves PERA away from traditional pension administration
and toward duties that are similar to those of a banking institution. For example, this DROP will have regular
deposits with interest added. PERA will
have to keep track of each member’s “account” separate from his or her PERA
retirement account. In addition, PERA
will be required to administer court orders dividing the community interest in
DROP plans, if applicable.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
HB 157 does not address how
PERA will be required to administer court orders dividing the community
interest in DROP plans, if applicable.
Since
In addition, HB 157 does not address whether the
retirement eligible state police officer is “retired” or not for purposes of
disability benefits. There is a question
regarding what other benefits, such as health insurance, for which the member
is eligible depending on his or her status as a “member” or “retiree.”
Page 2, line 1, refers to “executive director” and should be replaced by “association.”
Page 2, line 16, refers to “executive director”
and should be replaced by “association.”
Page 3, line 6, “disability retirement” should
be added. For purposes of the PERA Act,
a member is “retired” if it is determined he or she is disabled.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
PERA reports that an
issue is whether a DROP plan will encourage retirement eligible state police
officers to retire earlier than under current actuarial assumptions. As written, HB 157 may have a negative
actuarial impact on the retirement fund.
If the DROP plan creates an incentive for state police officers to
retire earlier and “DROP”, there will be a cost to the fund. True actuarial costs can only be measured
with experience. As a result, the cost
of the DROP plan can only be assumed on today’s valuations; these costs may go
up or down as experience dictates.
Unlike HB 157’s
proposal, many DROP plans are structured to pay less than 100% of the pension
amount into the plan or offset interest rates earned on deferred amounts to
achieve cost-neutrality. Without a
determination of cost-neutrality by PERA’s actuary, HB 157 may be contrary to
NM Const., Art. XX, Section 22 (no benefits may be enhanced unless the costs of
those benefits are properly funded in accordance with actuarial
standards).
For the period ending
In aggregate, the system had an experience loss
for the year ending June 30, 2002 of $258 million, due to rate of return on
funding value of assets less than assumed (5.5% vs. 8%) and retirements greater
than assumed. Specifically, PERA’s
actuaries reported a loss of $328 million for 3 of the 4 years of investment
activity that will flow into the recognized gain/loss in next year’s actuarial
valuation. If a loss of this magnitude
occurs next year, the effect would be that the overall PERA funding ratio will
drop below 100% and PERA UAAL will increase to approximately 20 years.
SS/prr/njw