SENATE BILL REPORT

                  ESHB 2491

              As Reported By Senate Committee On:

                  Ways & Means, March 2, 1998

 

Title:  An act relating to the sharing of extraordinary investment gains.

 

Brief Description:  Sharing extraordinary investment gains.

 

Sponsors:  House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Carlson, H. Sommers, Ogden, Conway, Wolfe, Lambert, D. Sommers, O'Brien, Schoesler, Alexander and Gardner; by request of Joint Committee on Pension Policy).

 

Brief History:

Committee Activity:  Ways & Means:  3/2/98 [DP].

 

SENATE COMMITTEE ON WAYS & MEANS

 

Majority Report:  Do pass.

  Signed by Senators West, Chair; Strannigan, Vice Chair; Bauer, Fraser, Hochstatter, Kohl, Long, Loveland, McDonald, Roach, Rossi, Schow, Snyder, Spanel, Swecker, Thibaudeau and Zarelli.

 

Staff:  Deb Kime (786-7454)

 

Background:  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 Joint Committee on Pension Policy (JCPP) studied ways of using these better‑than‑expected returns to fund benefit increases. As a result of this work, the JCPP recommended several gain‑sharing bills to the 1998 Legislature. 

 

The Teachers' Retirement System (TRS) Plan I and the Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) Plan I are defined benefit plans, which means that members receive a formula‑driven benefit at retirement.  Members of TRS and PERS Plan I pay 6 percent of salary toward the cost of their benefits. This contribution rate is set in statute and does not vary when benefits are increased or when investment earnings are greater or less than assumed. 

 

TRS and PERS Plan I are closed retirement systems that experienced chronic under‑funding in the 1970s and 1980s.  Under current law, PERS and TRS Plan I employer contribution rates are set at the level percentage of pay necessary to pay off the total costs of the systems by July 1, 2024.  The current unfunded liability in TRS and PERS Plan I is $5.2 billion. Better‑than‑expected investment returns are held in the pension trust funds.  The pension contribution rates paid by employers (including the state and local governments) have been adjusted downward when earnings are higher than expected.  Earnings below the projected level of 7.5 percent could result in higher employer contribution rates.

 

In 1993, pension contribution rates were adjusted downward due to higher‑than‑expected investment gains and faster‑than‑expected membership growth.  As a result of the decrease in employer contribution rates, pension contributions made from the General Fund‑State for the PERS, TRS and the Law Enforcement Officers' and Fire Fighters' (LEOFF) systems were $49.4 million lower than they would have been had the rates not been decreased.  That same year, legislation was enacted providing benefit increases for members of PERS, TRS and LEOFF.  The increase in the employer contribution rates due to the new benefits raised the General Fund‑State pension contributions during the 1993‑95 biennium by $27 million.  Another $25 million was transferred from the General Fund‑State to the Budget Stabilization Account.  In 1994, $25 million was transferred from the Budget Stabilization Account to the newly created Pension Funding Account.

 

"Pop‑Up" Benefit. A retiree under the Judicial Retirement System, LEOFF Plan II, TRS Plans I, II or III, or PERS Plans I or II, can choose a lower monthly benefit in exchange for his or her spouse receiving a benefit after the retiree's death.   This is called a survivor option.  Members of the pension systems who retired after January 1, 1996, receive a "pop‑up" in their benefit if their spouse dies first; that is, the benefit the retiree receives "pops‑up" to the level the benefit would have been if the retiree had not chosen the survivor option. (Surviving spouses of retired LEOFF Plan I members automatically receive the same benefit the retiree received during his or her lifetime, so the "pop‑up" is irrelevant to the LEOFF Plan I system.)

 

Uniform COLA.  PERS and TRS Plan I retirees receive an annual cost‑of‑living adjustment, called the Uniform COLA, beginning at age 66.  The current COLA is 63 cents per month, per year of service.  The COLA increases by 3 percent each year.  Next year, PERS and TRS Plan I retirees will receive another 64 cents per month per year of service, in addition to the COLA amounts received in previous years.

 

Summary of Bill:  When the compound average rate of investment returns on the pension funds over the previous four years exceeds 10 percent, half the earnings over 10 percent will be used to increase benefits and the other half will be used to accelerate the amortization of the Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) and the Teachers' Retirement System (TRS) Plan I costs. 

 

The first gain sharing will occur July 1, 1998, and will fund the present actuarial value of a retroactive "pop‑up" benefit for retirees who retired prior to 1996, as well as an increase in the Uniform COLA.  Thereafter, gain sharing will occur January 1 of each even‑numbered year whenever the four year compound average rate of investment returns on the pension funds is more than 10 percent.  After the initial July 1, 1998, gain sharing, all subsequent gain sharing will take the form of an increase in the Uniform COLA.

 

The office of the State Actuary will calculate the amount of the Uniform COLA increase and will inform the Department of Retirement Systems of the amount. 

 

The Legislature reserves the right to repeal the gain‑sharing provisions of the bill.

 

Appropriation:  None.

 

Fiscal Note:  Available.

 

Effective Date:  The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.

 

Testimony For:  Please support ESHB 2491 as amended.  The bill no longer uses the $25 million from the Pension Funding Account.  This is a positive first step; hopefully, gain sharing will also be extended to Plan 2.  The Apop-up@ feature will help some of the neediest retirees.  We appreciate the work of the JCPP.

 

Testimony Against:  None.

 

Testified:  PRO:  Representative Carlson, original prime sponsor; Pat Hoban, Robert Waranke, John Lothspeich, WSRTA; Lynn McKinnon, WPEA; Helen Carlstron, WEA-retired.