Retirees of the Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) and the Public Safety Employees' Retirement System (PSERS) are generally able to work up to 867 hours per year in a position covered by any of the state's pension systems while receiving a retirement benefit. A retiree that works more than 867 hours is reinstated as an active member and their retirement benefit ceases.
Members of PERS Plans 2 and 3 have a normal retirement age of 65 and may retire as early as age 55 with a reduced benefit if they meet service credit requirements. Members of PSERS with more than ten years of service have a normal retirement age of 60, and may retire as early as age 53 with a reduced benefit if they meet service credit requirements.
Until July 1, 2026, PERS and PSERS retirees may work for a state agency for up to 1040 hours per year in a nursing position while continuing to receive a pension benefit.
PRO: There are widespread workforce shortages across many sectors. Healthcare and nursing are the most critical. This bill is part of a solution and can be implemented quickly. There is a penalty for coming back to work after retirement that can reduce benefits for life. This bill gets rid of that penalty and encourages retired nurses to return to patient care. This issue has been addressed in the Legislature for the shortage of educators. Removing this barrier is one step toward fixing the nursing shortage. It will help alleviate workforce challenges for nurses in state agencies. There is a cost to doing nothing.