FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1262



C 50 L 07
Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Addressing the public employment of retirees from the teachers' retirement system plan 1 and the public employees' retirement system plan 1.

Sponsors: By House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Bailey, Conway, Fromhold, Ericks, Simpson and Moeller; by request of Select Committee on Pension Policy).

House Committee on Appropriations
Senate Committee on Ways & Means

Background:

Separation From Service.
A member must separate from service in order to qualify for a retirement allowance. Separation from service is defined in the Public Employees' Retirement System Plan 1 (PERS 1) to mean that the member has no oral or written agreement to resume work with their employer after entering retirement. In contrast, separation from service in the Teachers' Retirement System Plan 1 (TRS 1) requires that the member have no written agreement to resume work with their employer after entering retirement. After entering retirement status, a member may begin his or her retirement allowance on the first day of the month following the month that he or she applies for retirement benefits. The date that retirement benefits begins is referred to as a member's "accrual date."

Length of Separation From Service.
Members of PERS 1 and TRS 1 who re-enter employment with an eligible employer within one month of retiring are subject to a benefit reduction. The reduction is equal to 5.5 percent of the monthly benefit for every eight hours worked that month and is applied until such time as the retiree remains absent from eligible employment for at least one full calendar month.

Retirees from PERS 1 who have been separated from service for one calendar month after their accrual date may work up to 867 hours per calendar year without a reduction in pension benefits. Retirees from PERS 1 who have been separated from service for three calendar months, and whose hiring meets specific approval and record-keeping requirements, may work up to 1,500 hours per calendar year without a reduction in pension benefits. Once the 1,500 hour limit is exceeded, pension benefits are suspended until the beginning of the next calendar year.

Retirees from TRS 1 who have been separated from service for one calendar month may work up to 1,500 hours per year without a reduction in pension benefits.

1,900-Hour Lifetime Limit.
The number of years a PERS 1 retiree may work for 1,500 hours without a reduction in benefits is limited, however. Each PERS 1 retiree may only work for a lifetime cumulative limit of 1,900 hours beyond 867 hours per calendar year. The 2003 Legislature passed Substitute House Bill 1829, which added additional restrictions on reemployment by retirees that apply to PERS 1 but not TRS 1. (Substitute House Bill 1829 contained provisions adding similar restrictions to TRS 1, but those sections were vetoed by the Governor.)

False Claims.
Both PERS and TRS have provided sanctions for filing false statements to the Department of Retirement Systems (DRS) since 1947. A person who files a false record or false statement to the DRS in any attempt to defraud the retirement systems is guilty of a gross misdemeanor in PERS and a felony in TRS. The felony provision in TRS was made a class "B" felony by the 2003 Legislature.

Summary:

Separation From Service.
The definition of "separation from service" in PERS is amended to specify that expressions or inquiries about postretirement employment by employers or employees do not constitute an agreement, and does not mean that separation from service did not occur. The definition of "separation from service" in TRS is amended to include the same language as PERS, as amended in the act. Separation from service does not occur in TRS when an employee and employer have a written or oral agreement to resume employment following termination. Claiming separation from service, and eligibility for a retirement benefit, when such an agreement exists may violate the TRS false claims provision.

False Claims.
An additional false claims provision is added to TRS, specifically providing a gross misdemeanor penalty related to a member's separation from service and qualification for a retirement allowance.

Length of Separation From Service.
The break in service required for members of TRS 1 required for eligibility for years of 1,500 hours of covered employment without suspension of retirement benefits is lengthened from one month to one and one-half months.

1,900-Hour Lifetime Limit.
The number of hours a TRS 1 retiree may work for 1,500 hours without a reduction in benefits is limited to 1,900 hours in excess of 867 per year, cumulative for the lifetime of each retiree. This 1,900-hour restriction is applied prospectively after the effective date of the act.

Written Employer Hiring Policies.
Several procedures for hiring retirees are added to TRS 1, and the PERS 1 procedure is also modified. A school board or the other highest decision-making authority must approve hiring a retiree. In both PERS 1 and TRS 1, an employer must hire a retiree pursuant to a written policy and must document a justifiable need to hire a retiree into the position being filled. The employer must also hire the retiree through the established process for the position, retain records of the procedures followed and decisions made in hiring, and provide those records in the event of an audit.

Votes on Final Passage:

House   93   2
Senate   48   0

Effective: July 22, 2007