We wanted to remind you of a few of the pensions bills we’ve highlighted so far this session and to let you know where they stand as we approach Friday’s fiscal committee cutoff.
At the time of this writing, some of these bills haven’t yet been scheduled for a hearing but could get last minute hearings scheduled later this week. However, because these bills have budgetary impacts, they may be considered necessary to implement the budget (NTIB) and be exempt from the typical cut-off deadlines.
PERS 1 COLAs
UAAL sunset
HB 1201 establishes a June 30, 2025 end date for the PERS 1 unfunded actuarial accrued liability surcharge (UAAL).
After that date, the bill establishes a UAAL employer contribution rate of 0% until June 30, 2029 to supersede all other references to the UAAL in various other pensions statutes. The UAAL is an additional employer-paid surcharge added to Plan 2 and
3 pension contribution rates to pay for additional unfunded costs to PERS 1 that have accumulated over the years. AWC supports ending the UAAL and the extra costs it imposes on cities. HB 1201 is scheduled for a committee vote
in the House Appropriations Committee on February 23.
PERS 1 COLA (ad hoc & permanent)
Several bills would offer either a one-time, ad hoc COLA for PERS 1, and one would impose an ongoing automatic PERS 1 COLA. You can read more about these bills and AWC’s position on them
here.
HB 1057/SB 5350 are companion bills that authorize a one-time, ad hoc 3% COLA for PERS 1 retirees, capped at $110 per month. The bills include legislative findings that PERS 1 retirees have lost
purchasing power due to inflation, but that an automatic COLA could be cost prohibitive until the UAAL is reduced or no longer required. Both have been heard in their respective chambers. HB 1057 is scheduled for a committee vote
on February 23 and SB 5350 is scheduled for a committee vote on February 20.
HB 1459 establishes an automatic annual COLA for PERS 1 retirees capped at 3% and $110 per month starting in July 2023.
It also reduces the statutory investment rate of return assumption to 7.2% and makes legislative findings that reducing the investment rate of return assumption, coupled with expected extraordinary investment returns, will balance the benefit increases
with PERS 1’s future funding needs. The bill was scheduled for a committee vote in the House Appropriations Committee on February 2, but no action was taken, and it has not yet been rescheduled.
First responders pensions
LEO flexible work
Companion bills in the House and Senate (SB 5424 and HB 1413) remove references to “full time” from the definitions of “officers” in the Mutual Aid Peace Officer's Powers Act and the LEOFF retirement system, allowing
part-time officers to participate in LEOFF 2 and exercise full mutual aid powers. The bills also allow police departments to adopt flexible work policies, including allowing officers to work less than full time and use alternative shifts and schedules.
You can read more about the bills here. Both bills passed out of their respective policy committees, and the Senate bill has been
scheduled for a public hearing in the Senate Ways & Means Committee on February 22.
911 operators to PSERS
HB 1055 / SB 5328 expand the scope of PSERS to include jobs with a high degree of psychological risk and permits current public safety telecommunicators (like 911 operators) to choose to remain in
PERS, or join PSERS 2 as a dual member of PERS and PSERS. Current public safety telecommunicators would have from January 1, 2024 to March 1, 2024 to elect to join PSERS. New public safety telecommunicators will automatically be enrolled in PSERS.
Both bills had hearings in January, and the Senate version had a committee vote in the Senate Ways & Means Committee on February 7 and is waiting for a floor vote. The House version passed out of House Appropriations Committee on February 13
and is also waiting for a floor vote.
Other bills
Interruptive military service
HB 1007 / SB 5296 expand the definition of “veteran” to include those receiving an expeditionary badge for participation in an armed conflict, for the purposes of civil service laws and
military service credit in pensions for LEOFF 2 firefighters and law enforcement, as well as PERS employees. Interruptive military service refers to where a public employee is called away from their regular job for military service. A service credit
credits certain “veterans” pensions for their time away from their regular employment while in military service. The House bill was passed out of the House on a unanimous vote is now waiting to be scheduled for a hearing in the Senate
Ways & Means Committee. The Senate bill is currently on the Senate floor consent calendar and is
awaiting a floor vote.
Retire/Rehire
HB 1056 / SB 5349 permit PERS 2 & 3 retirees to return to public employment as an employee or contractor for up to 867 hours per year without losing their PERS retirement benefits, starting in 2024. Currently,
a PERS 2 & 3 retiree that returns to public employment would lose their retirement benefits. The House bill received a minor amendment in the House Appropriations Committee, was voted out of the House, and is now waiting for a hearing in the Senate
Ways & Means Committee. The Senate bill was passed out of the Senate Ways & Means Committee unchanged and is waiting for a vote on the Senate floor.