SENATE BILL REPORT
ESHB 1044
As of April 24, 2005
Title: An act relating to pension funding methodology.
Brief Description: Changing pension funding methodology.
Sponsors: House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representative Sommers; by request of Office of Financial Management).
Brief History: Passed House: 4/21/05, 55-42.
Committee Activity:
SENATE COMMITTEE ON WAYS & MEANS
Staff: Erik Sund (786-7454)
Background: The Office of the State Actuary is responsible for recommending appropriate
member and employer contribution rates for the Public Employees', Teachers', School
Employees', and Washington State Patrol Retirement Systems to the Pension Funding Council
(PFC), which adopts the rates for each fiscal biennium. Included as part of the rates
recommended by the State Actuary to the PFC for the 2005-07 biennium were pre-funding for
the gain-sharing benefit in the Plans 1 and 3 and contributions towards paying off the unfunded
liabilities in the Plans 1.
Gain-sharing was created by the 1998 Legislature as a mechanism to increase member benefits
in PERS 1, PERS 3, TRS 1, TRS 3, and SERS 3. These increases occur whenever there are
extraordinary investment gains, which are defined as compound average of investment returns
on pension fund assets that exceeds 10 percent over a period of four fiscal years. Once each
biennium, the State Actuary determines whether gain-sharing benefits will be made. Any
distributions occur in January of even-numbered years. In Plan 1, half of all extraordinary gains
are used to enhance the Uniform Cost-of-Living Adjustment (Uniform COLA) that is given to
eligible retirees each year. In Plan 3, half of the extraordinary gains are paid directly into eligible
members' and retirees' defined contribution accounts. There have been two gain-sharing
distributions since 1998, which resulted in combined benefit improvements costing roughly $1.1
billion. When the gain-sharing benefit was created by the 1998 Legislature, language was
included in the law to reserve the right of the Legislature to amend or repeal the gain-sharing
benefits.
The cost of future gain-sharing has never been reflected in the basic contribution rates for the
affected systems and was not included in the 2002 actuarial valuation, as the funding
methodology and materiality of the gain-sharing provisions were under review. The recent 2003
Actuarial Valuation Report (prepared in December 2004) identified gain-sharing as a material
liability and included this liability in calculating the basic contribution rates recommended by the
State Actuary to the PFC.
While the state retirement plans that are currently open to new members (the Plans 2 and 3) are
currently fully funded, unfunded accrued actuarial liabilities (UAALs) exist in both PERS 1 and
TRS 1. This means that the value of the plan liabilities, in the form of members' earned benefits
to date, are exceeded by the value of the plan assets. As of the most recent actuarial valuation,
the UAAL for PERS 1 is $2.6 billion and the UAAL for TRS 1 is $1.4 billion. The statutory
funding policy for paying off the UAAL in the Plans 1 is codified as a goal within the actuarial
funding chapter. Per statute, the funding process for the state retirement systems is intended to
fully amortize the total Plan 1 costs by not later than June 30, 2024. The payments towards the
UAAL are included in employer rates and are not shared by members. Under Chapter 11 of the
Laws of 2003 (EHB 2254) the Legislature suspended the employer contributions towards the
PERS 1 and TRS 1 unfunded liabilities for the duration of the 2003-05 biennium.
The State Actuary's recommended employer 2005-07 contribution rates under current law are 5.73
percent for PERS, 6.74 percent for TRS, and 7.56 percent for SERS. The recommended Plan 2
member rates for the same period are 3.38 percent for PERS 2, 2.48 percent for TRS 2, and 3.51
percent for SERS 2. Member rates in PERS 1 and TRS 1 are fixed at 6 percent. Member
contributions in PERS 3, TRS 3, and SERS 3 are made into members' individual defined
contribution accounts and do not affect pension system funding.
Summary of Bill: Recognition of the cost of future gain-sharing benefits in retirement system
contribution rates is delayed until after the 2005-2007 fiscal biennium. The Select Committee
on Pension Policy will study the options available to the Legislature for addressing future gain-sharing liability, including: repealing, delaying, or suspending the gain-sharing provisions,
making gain-sharing discretionary, or replacing gain-sharing with other benefits.
Contributions toward the UAAL in PERS 1 and TRS 1 are suspended for the 2005-2007 fiscal
biennium. Annual contribution rates for PERS, TRS, and SERS employers and Plan 2 members
are specified for each year of the 2005-2007 fiscal biennium, as part of a four-year phase-in of
contribution rate increases projected for the 2005-2009 period. The employer contribution rates
for FY 2006 are 2.25 percent for PERS, 2.75 percent for SERS, and 2.73 percent for TRS, and
the Plan 2 member contribution rates for FY 2006 are 2.25 percent for PERS, 2.75 percent for
SERS, and 2.48 percent for TRS. For FY 2007 the employer contribution rates are 3.50 percent
for PERS, 3.75 percent for SERS, and 3.25 percent for TRS, and the Plan 2 member contribution
rates are 3.50 percent for PERS, 3.75 percent for SERS, and 3 percent for TRS. The Pension
Funding Council is required, upon completion of the 2005 Actuarial Valuation, to adopt
contribution rates that complete the four-year phase-in schedule, adjusted for any material
changes in benefits, assumptions, methods, or experience.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect on July 1, 2005, except for sections 2 and 4 of the bill, which take effect July 1, 2006.