Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Appropriations Committee | |
HB 2927
Brief Description: Revising retirement benefits for judges.
Sponsors: Representatives Fromhold, Crouse, Nixon, Bailey, Kessler, Rodne, Moeller and Conway; by request of Board For Judicial Administration.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/26/06
Staff: David Pringle (786-7310).
Background:
State-employed justices and judges, including those on the Washington Supreme Court, Courts
of Appeals, and Superior Courts, also participate in a supplemental defined contribution program
called the Judicial Retirement Account (JRA). The JRA was established in 1988, and members
and employers each contribute 2.5 percent of pay to an individual member account. Distribution
of the JRA is available to the member upon retirement as a lump-sum, or in other payment forms
as made available by the administering agency, the Administrator of the Courts.
Since July 1, 1988, newly elected or appointed judges and justices have become members of the
Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) Plan 2. Since March 1, 2002, judges and justices
without previously established PERS membership have had the choice to enter PERS Plan 2 or
Plan 3. Judges who established membership in PERS Plan 1 prior to October 1, 1977, and who
became judges after the closure of the Judicial Retirement System in 1988 remain members of
PERS Plan 1.
PERS Plan 2 provides members with an unreduced benefit of 2 percent of average final
compensation for each year of service credit earned at age 65. PERS Plan 3 provides members
with an unreduced benefit of 1 percent per year of service credit earned at age 65, plus an
individual member account of accumulated employee contributions plus investment earnings. A
member of PERS Plan 2 or 3 may include any number of years of service towards the 2 percent
or 1 percent formula in calculating their retirement benefit. PERS Plan 1 provides members with
a 2 percent per year unreduced benefit of up to 60 percent of average final compensation after 30
years of service at any age, 25 years of service beginning at age 55, or 5 years of service
beginning at age 60.
Between 1937 and 1971, judges participated in the Judges' Retirement Plan, and between 1971
and 1988, the Judicial Retirement System. Both plans offered a benefit capped at 75 percent of
pay that could be accrued after approximately 21.5 years of service. Both systems are funded on
a pay-as-you go basis, with member contributions between 6.5 percent and 7.5 percent of pay,
and state contributions averaging in excess of 40 percent of pay. There are 19 active members of
the Judicial Retirement System and 127 annuitants (retirees plus survivors), and no active
members of the Judges' Retirement Plan and 16 annuitants.
Summary of Bill:
Membership in the JRA is provided to all justices and judges of the Washington Supreme Court,
Courts of Appeals, and Superior Courts, except members of the Judicial Retirement System. The
State Investment Board, at the request of the Administrator of the Courts, may invest the JRA
principal account.
JRA accounts are made more broadly exempt from judicial process, including from attachment
and the operation of bankruptcy or insolvency law. JRA accounts are made subject to domestic
relations orders, and lawfully demanded levies issued by the federal Internal Revenue Service.
Distribution of the accumulated contributions in a member's JRA account are made subject to
state community property laws at the time of a member's death.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.