HOUSE BILL REPORT

                  HB 2487

 

             As Reported By House Committee On:

                       Appropriations

 

Title:  An act relating to Washington school employees' retirement system.

 

Brief Description:  Creating the Washington school employees' retirement system.

 

Sponsors:  Representatives Lambert, H. Sommers, Carlson, D. Sommers, Ogden, L. Thomas and Thompson; by request of Joint Committee on Pension Policy.

 

Brief History:

  Committee Activity:

Appropriations:  2/9/98 [DPS].

 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS

 

Majority Report:  The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass.  Signed by 22 members:  Representatives Huff, Chairman; Alexander, Vice Chairman; Clements, Vice Chairman; Wensman, Vice Chairman; H. Sommers, Ranking Minority Member; Doumit, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Benson; Carlson; Cooke; Crouse; Grant; Lambert; Linville; Lisk; Mastin; McMorris; Parlette; Regala; D. Schmidt; Sehlin; Sheahan and Talcott.

 

Minority Report:  Do not pass.  Signed by 8 members:  Representatives Gombosky, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Chopp; Cody; Keiser; Kenney; Kessler; Poulsen and Tokuda.

 

Staff:  Denise Graham (786-7137).

 

Background:

 

Provisions of TRS and PERS Plan II.  Membership in the Teachers' Retirement System (TRS) is limited to certificated staff of school districts and educational service districts.  Membership in the Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) includes state and some higher education employees, many employees of local governments, and classified K-12 employees.

 

Under TRS Plan I and PERS Plan I, which consist of employees hired before October 1977, members can retire at any age after 30 years of service; at age 55 with 25 years of service; or at age 60 with five years of service. 

 

TRS Plan II consists of employees hired between September 1977 and July 1996.  PERS Plan II consists of employees hired after September 1977.  Normal retirement age for members of TRS Plan II and PERS Plan II is 65. 

 

The benefit allowance for both TRS and PERS Plan II is 2 percent of average final compensation times years of service. Retirement contributions for TRS and PERS Plan II are made by both the employer and the employee as a percentage of the employee's pay.

 

Members of TRS and PERS Plan II who leave employment before retirement can either withdraw their own contributions plus interest, currently set at 5.5 percent, or they can leave their contributions in the retirement system and draw a retirement allowance after reaching retirement age.  The retirement allowance of an employee who chooses to leave his or her contributions in the system is based on the average salary the employee had when a member of TRS or PERS.

 

The JCPP Discusses Retirement Plan Design and Retirement Policy.  The Joint Committee on Pension Policy (JCPP) spent several years in the early 1990s studying the design of the plan II systems. The committee found that employees' major objection to plan II centered around the retirement age.  Employees felt that if they leave before age 65, they do not get a good return on their contributions; younger employees felt they were making contributions to a retirement plan they will get very little out of.

 

The JCPP found that the TRS and PERS Plan II design acts as "golden handcuffs" to hold onto employees who want to leave or change careers before reaching age 65.  The plan II system, the committee found, is paternalistic and allows employees very little choice or flexibility in the form or timing of their benefits.  The committee also found that lowering the plan II retirement age to 62 would cost over $30 million GF-S in 1996.

 

As the JCPP set out to design an alternative to plan II, they adopted the policy that any new plan design should be as neutral as possible in its effect on employees:  it should not inhibit employees from changing careers or employers; it should not encourage employees to stay in jobs they consider highly stressful; and it should not encourage employees to seek early retirement.  The committee also adopted the policy that any new plan should not exceed the costs of plan II.

 

The committee contrasted defined benefit plans such as TRS and PERS plans I and II, in which the employer assumes responsibility for providing a specific retirement allowance for the employee's lifetime, with defined contribution plans.  Defined contribution plans guarantee only that certain contributions will be made to the plan; they do not guarantee specific benefits upon retirement.  The committee found that defined contribution plans encourage employees to assume responsibility for their long-term retirement income; they allow employees more flexibility in determining how their contributions are invested; and they are  portable in that the contributions can go with the employee when the employee changes careers or employers.

 

TRS Plan III.  In 1994, the JCPP recommended that a new retirement plan be enacted for PERS and TRS, consisting of a defined benefit portion and a defined contribution portion.  TRS Plan III was enacted in 1995.  Membership in TRS III consists of all K-12 certificated staff first hired on or after July 1, 1996, and all TRS II members who opt to transfer to TRS III.  PERS Plan III has been considered by the Legislature but not enacted.

 

The TRS Plan III defined benefit provided at retirement is 1 percent of final average salary times the number of years of service. The defined benefit of a member who leaves employment with at least 20 years of service is increased by 3 percent each year from the time of separation to the date the retirement allowance begins. Normal retirement age is 65 with 10 years of service.  Early retirement is at age 55 with at least 10 years of service.  The retirement allowance under early retirement is actuarially reduced from age 65.  The defined benefit is funded by employer contributions only. 

 

The defined contribution portion of plan III is funded by employee contributions (although an employer contribution can be made to these accounts if authorized in the appropriations act).  Upon entry into plan III, the employee must make an irrevocable choice of a contribution structure.  The options provided by statute are as follows:  Option A is 5 percent of compensation at all ages; Option B is 5 percent of compensation up to age 35, 6 percent from age 35 to 44, and 7.5 percent at age 45 and above; and Option C is 6 percent up to age 35, 7.5 percent from age 35 to 44, and 8.5 percent at age 45 and above.  Other options can be developed by the Employee Retirement Benefits Board (ERBB).  To date, the ERBB has authorized additional contribution rates of 7 percent up to age 35, 10 percent from age 35 to 44, and 15 percent at age 45 and above.

 

All investment earnings on the member's contributions accrue to the member's account.  A plan III member can choose to invest either through the State Investment Board (SIB) in the same portfolio the SIB invests all other TRS Plan II and III monies, or through self-directed investments authorized by the ERBB.  Members who choose to self-direct must pay the expenses caused by self-directed investments.

 

When an employee leaves covered employment for any reason, the employee can withdraw his or her contributions plus investment earnings as a lump sum or under payment options developed by the ERBB.  There is no formula-driven pension under the defined contribution portion of plan III.

 

Transfer payment.  Members of TRS Plan II have the irrevocable option of transferring their contributions plus interest as well as their service credit to TRS Plan III.  Those who did so before January 1, 1998, received a transfer payment of an additional 40 percent of their plan II accumulated contributions as of January 1, 1996.  The transfer payment under the 1995 legislation was 20 percent.  This was increased in 1997 to 40 percent in order to maintain approximately the same employer contribution rate in TRS Plan II as the rate would be if plan III had not been created.

 

Employee Retirement Benefits Board. The ERBB was created within the Department of Retirement Systems in the 1995 legislation.  One of the board's responsibilities is creating investment options for plan III members opting to self-invest.

 

Investment Gains.  Assets invested in the retirement funds have been experiencing growth in recent years substantially above the projected rate of 7.5 percent.  The compound average rate of return for the last four years is 13.7 percent.  Over the 1997 interim, the JCPP studied ways of using these better-than-expected returns to fund benefit increases.  As a result of this work, the JCPP recommended to the Legislature several bills containing gain-sharing provisions. 

 

Summary of Substitute Bill: 

Washington School Employees Retirement System.  The Washington School Employees' Retirement System (SERS) Plans II and III are created. The benefits and provisions of SERS Plan II are the same as those in PERS Plan II and the benefits and provisions of SERS Plan III are the same as those in TRS Plan III.  All classified employees who are members of PERS Plan II and who are employed by a school district, educational service district, the state School for the Deaf or the state School for the Blind are transferred to SERS Plan II as of September 1, 1999.  All SERS Plan II classified employees may make an irrevocable choice to transfer to SERS Plan III. The accumulated contributions of SERS Plan II members transferring to SERS Plan III are transferred to the member's account in the defined contribution portion of SERS Plan III.  All new classified school district or educational service district employees hired on or after September 1, 1999, are members of SERS Plan III.

 

Transfer Payment.  Classified employees who request to transfer from SERS Plan II to SERS Plan III prior to March 1, 2000, receive a transfer payment of 65 percent of the members' accumulated contributions as of January 1, 1999.

 

The transfer payment provided to teachers who transferred to TRS Plan III prior to January 1, 1998, is increased from 40 percent to 65 percent of their January 1, 1996, accumulated contributions. 

 

Gain-Sharing.  Gain-sharing will occur in even-numbered years whenever the compound average rate of investment returns on the pension funds over the previous four years exceeds 10 percent.  The total gain-sharing amount will be half of the investment returns over 10 percent on employer contributions, and will be paid to SERS Plan III and TRS Plan III members and retirees through a payment to their defined contribution account.  The amount distributed to a member is based on the member's years of service.  

 

The first gain-sharing for TRS Plan III members will take place July 1, 1998. The first gain-sharing for SERS Plan III will take place March 2000, but will be distributed based on service credit accumulated as of August 1997.  The amount distributed per year of service will be the same amount per year of service as was distributed to TRS Plan III members on July 1, 1998.  There will be an additional gain-sharing distribution March 2000 to all TRS and SERS Plan III members based on service credit earned through August 1999.  Thereafter, gain-sharing will occur in January of even-numbered years.

 

The Office of the State Actuary will calculate the amount per year of service to be distributed and will inform the Department of Retirement Systems of that amount.

 

The Legislature reserves the right to amend or repeal the gain-sharing provisions.

 

The State Investment Board.  The State Investment Board (SIB) is responsible for creating investment options for plan III members who choose to self-direct their investments, based on recommendations from the Employee Retirement Benefits Board.  The SIB is the trustee for the money in members' defined contribution accounts.

 

No state board, commission, agency, officer, employee or member is liable for losses resulting from investments selected by the SIB or for any reasonable attempts to implement the member's investment directions.

 

Roman Numerals Changed to Arabic.  The Code Revisers' Office is instructed to change all numerical designations of the retirement plans from Roman numerals to Arabic numerals (plan I becomes plan 1, etc.).

 

Substitute Bill Compared to Original Bill:  The original bill renamed TRS the Washington School Employees' Retirement System, and transferred classified K-12 employees into the renamed system.  The substitute bill creates a new retirement system called the Washington School Employees Retirement System, and transfers all classified K-12 employees into the newly created system.  As in the original bill, certificated and classified K-12 staff are eventually brought together in one system, SERS.

 

Appropriation:  None.

 

Fiscal Note:  Available.

 

Effective Date of Substitute Bill: Except for Sections 114 and 309, the bill takes effect September 1, 1999.  Section 114 takes effect January 1, 2001, and Section 309 takes effect immediately.

 

Testimony For:  There is a great deal of enthusiasm and support in the school districts for plan III.  Most employees will be better off in plan III than in plan II.  Plan III provides the ability to access market rates and to determine how and when to retire. 

 

Testimony Against:  Retirement age should be lower than 65 or the penalty for early retirement should be reduced.  There should be a pension board with employee representatives to run the pension system.  The transfers out of plan II could negatively impact the remaining plan II members.

 

Testified:  Doug Nelson, Kathy Whitlock and Kye Hillig, Public School Employees; Bob Maier, Washington Education Association; Tom Kammerzell, Washington Support Personnel (WEA); John Kvamme, Washington Association of School Administrators and Association of Washington School Principals (pro); Devone Smith and Pat Thompson, Public Employees Pension Coalition; and David Westberg, Stationary Engineers (con).