|
LEOFF
Plan 1 Restructuring- Q & A
By
the Senate Ways and Means Committee
March
27, 2001
Summary
The
proposed Senate 2001-03 operating budget uses a $250 million portion
of surplus state assets in the Law Enforcement Officers and Fire
Fighters Retirement System (LEOFF Plan 1). Under the proposal, the
current LEOFF Plan I system is restructured. Current retirees and
active members yet to retire continue to receive all benefits defined
in state law. Surplus assets are divided between the LEOFF I members,
local governments that are obligated to pay lifetime medical costs
for LEOFF members, and the state. For example, employees in LEOFF
paid nearly 12 percent of the plan 's contributions, so their share
of surplus assets would be 12 percent. Without the LEOFF restructuring,
the Legislature would be forced to cut state programs and services
even further, reduce budget reserves to much lower levels, or both.
a
Q:
Why this proposal at this time?
Transferring
a portion of the LEOFF surplus to the state budget benefits taxpayers
because it avoids cuts to state services that otherwise would be
necessary to balance the budget while keeping reasonable emergency
reserves in place. Since the Governor's budget proposal was released
in December, $350 million in new budget costs have been identified.
Without additional LEOFF funds, some of the following programs would
have to he cut in order to balance the 2001-03 budget:
- Eliminate
Better Schools class size reduction funds ($80 million savings)
- Reduce
medically indigent reimbursements to hospitals ($31 million savings)
- Eliminate
dental and vision care for low income adults ($25 million)
- Reduce
enrollments in the Basic Health Plan by 15,000 ($50 million savings)
- Eliminate
funding for low-wage worker hourly pay increase ($20 million savings)
- Make
across-the-board cuts in higher education ($23 million savings)
- Reduce
cost-of-living adjustments for state employees and higher education
employees by using a lower inflation percentage ($75 million savings)
- Further
reduce General Fund budget reserves (up to $100 million)
back to top
Q:
What is LEOFF Plan 1?
LEOFF
Plan 1 is the older of two statewide pension plans for law enforcement
officers and fire fighters. The Legislature established the LEOFF
Plan 1 in 1969 by consolidating various municipal police and fire
fighter pension systems and transferring the members to the new
state system. In 1977, the original LEOFF system (Plan 1) was closed
to new members and subsequent employees became members of Plan 2.
Plan 1 has 8,000 retirees and 1,400 members still working.
back
to top
Q:
How does the LEOFF Plan 1 work now?
The
LEOFF Plan 1 retirement system is a defined benefit plan in which
a member's retirement benefits are based on the member's salary
and years of service. The benefits are guaranteed by the state and
plan benefits are not dependent on the level of employer/employee
contributions or market performance of the plan's investments. In
addition to these pension benefits, LEOFF 1 members receive lifetime
medical benefits, which their employers (local governments) are
obligated to fund. To fund these benefits, the state has contributed
about 77 percent of the amount, 11.5 percent is from employer contributions,
and 11.5 percent is from employee contributions.
back
to top
Q:
How big is the LEOFF Plan 1 surplus?
The
LEOFF Plan 1 Fund includes about $1 billion more than is needed
to fund benefits for current and future LEOFF Plan 1 retirees. The
Plan 1 Fund currently has assets of approximately $5.2 billion based
on the most recent market valuation estimate for December 2000.
(The State Actuary will complete a new valuation study this summer.)
Actuaries estimate that the total cost of paying benefits to current
and future retirees will be about $4.2 billion.
back
to top
Q:
How did we get this surplus?
LEOFF
1 was created in 1970 when the state assumed responsibility for
more than $100 million of unfunded liability from local government
police and fire pension plans. Since then, funding LEOFF 1 primarily
has been a state responsibility. Over time, the state has contributed
about 77 percent of its funding. Contributions earned higher than
expected investment returns so that by 1999, surplus assets totaled
$1 billion. Because assets exceeded liabilities of the system, all
further contributions to the plan were terminated in June 2000.
back
to top
Q:
Is the Senate budget taking money that belongs to LEOFF 1 beneficiaries?
No.
Nothing changes for LEOFF members. In fact, they get additional
pension benefits - on top of guaranteed pension benefits defined
by state law - and there are no more employee contributions to the
system. In addition, lifetime medical benefits paid by employers
- cities, counties and fire districts - are backed up by new assistance
to employers that help these jurisdictions meet their obligations
to LEOFF members.
LEOFF
members would get every pension benefit they now receive or are
owed. But they don't own surplus assets not needed to fund their
guaranteed benefits. The state made by far the largest contribution
to the program over the years, so the state owns a sizable share
of the surplus.
back
to top
Q:
How much of the surplus will the state get, and how much will LEOFF
members and local governments get?
In
the next biennium, about $250 million would go to the state budget.
LEOFF members would see a new investment of between $90 million
to $ 120 million in additional benefits - as much as $12,000 each
for self-directed individual retirement accounts. And $90 million
to $120 million would go to a fund to help local governments provide
medical and long-term care to retirees.
back
to top
Q:
Where do the courts stand on this kind of pension restructuring?
The
courts have supported principles that guide the Senate proposal.
State and federal courts have held that members of a defined benefit
plan like LEOFF 1 have a right only to the promised pension benefits,
and have no claim to any surplus assets. Court rulings in the past
have dealt with private pension funds, however, and the Senate proposal
marks the first time a state pension fund has been restructured
in a way that allows the surplus to be used to benefit taxpayers.
The state Supreme Court never has ruled on ownership of surplus
assets in a state pension fund, although a 1956 ruling suggested
that LEOFF members' claim to pension funds does not go beyond their
defined pension benefits.
back
to top
Q:
How does anyone know what it really will cost to pay the benefits
guaranteed to 1 LEOFF retirees?
LEOFF
1 members receive the most generous benefits of any pension fund
in the state retirement system. Through 2040 they will have received
$14 billion in benefits after contributing $267 million in total
member contributions. Actuaries who determine what amount of pension
funds needs to be available to pay the guaranteed benefits take
into consideration expected fluctuations in the economy. The LEOFF
1 Plan currently has $5 billion in assets. Actuaries estimate the
costs of paying benefits to current and future retirees will be
$4 billion.
The
rising costs of medical care are addressed by the Senate proposal.
It provides local governments a share of the surplus to help them
meet their obligation to pay the costs of LEOFF retiree's medical
care.
back
to top
Q:
Does the phrase "plan termination" mean a reduction
in the LEOFF Plan 1 benefits?
No.
LEOFF Plan 1 is being restructured and improved, not abolished.
Under federal tax laws, the surplus can only revert to the state
if the existing plan structure is ended. The proposed legislation
creates a new Restated LEOFF Plan with identical defined benefits
and a substantial new defined contribution benefit, with design
being placed in the hands of the affected LEOFF Plan 1 participants.
The legislation expressly prohibits any action that would jeopardize
the defined benefits and the state remains constitutionally bound
to insure the integrity of the new LEOFF plan. No future employee
or city employer contributions can ever be required. The reduction
from the state's reversion cannot be made unless adequate funds
remain in the reserve to address any actuarial cost fluctuations
in the restructured LEOFF plan.
back
to top
Q:
What changes will LEOFF Plan 1 retirees see in their pension plan?
All
members of the LEOFF Plan 1 pension system will be transferred to
a new Restated LEOFF Retirement System, which includes a defined
benefit plan that exactly duplicates the provisions and benefits
of the original LEOFF Plan l system, plus a new defined contribution
plan that provides additional benefits. The defined benefit component
is fully funded by a transfer of sufficient assets from the old
Plan l fund to guarantee the actuarial soundness of the new plan,
with no further contributions required from employers or employees.
back
to top
Q:
Is the new LEOFF 1 retirement plan better?
Yes.
In addition to the defined benefit plan that continues the existing
benefits of LEOFF Plan l, the new defined contribution plan will
distribute 12 percent of the plan's surplus assets (between $90
and $ l 20 million) among the individual members of the plan, through
a self-directed retirement plan that will be designed by a council
consisting of LEOFF Plan l members. Within the distributed funds,
the council can design a customized plan based on the preferences
of the members. This new benefit is in addition to the existing
Plan l benefits.
back
to top
Q:
Does the Senate budget plan use the entire reversion of surplus
assets?
No,
even though it would be entitled to do so from a legal point of
view. While the historical contribution levels to LEOFF Plan l Fund
reflect the substantial financial obligation undertaken by the state
to eliminate large, previously unfunded liabilities, only 77 percent
of the fund is attributable to state taxpayers. Of the remaining
23 percent of contributions, l 1.5 percent is from employer (local
governments) contributions and l 1.5 percent is from employee (police,
sheriffs, and fire fighters) contributions. The Senate restructuring
proposal respects these historical contribution percentages. Assets
of the Plan l Retirement Fund that are surplus to the actuarial
needs of the defined benefit plan of the Restated LEOFF system,
are distributed to three new funds as follows:
-
LEOFF Defined Contribution Plan (12 percent of surplus assets or
between $90 and $120 million) that will fund self-directed individual
retirement accounts for each active member and retiree of the former
LEOFF Plan l system.
-
LEOFF Medical Benefits Risk Pool (12 percent of surplus assets or
between $90 and $120 million) assists local governments in providing
medical benefits and long-term care for LEOFF l retirees.
-
State Surplus Assets Reserve Fund (76 percent of surplus assets
or between $600 and $750 million) consists of the remainder
of the LEOFF Plan l assets, to be used to guarantee the actuarial
soundness of the Restated LEOFF defined benefit plan (in case of
any adverse actuarial experience) and to provide a budget reserve
for state government.
back
to top
Q:
What other entities have restructured a pension system like this?
Several
local government pension plans, including the Anchorage, Alaska
Police and Fire System, and the West Palm Beach Fire Fighters Plan,
have terminated plans that had surplus assets and arranged for the
sharing of the surplus between the plan sponsors and the plan members.
It is our understanding that several other states have begun to
review this option, and that some large nonprofit organizations,
including the American Red Cross, have terminated over-funded defined
benefit pension Plans.
back
to top
Q:
How does the recent drop in the stock market effect this proposal?
While
recent volatility in the stock market will affect the total value
of the existing Plan I fund, it will not reduce the amount of money
required to be deposited in the new fund to guarantee the existing
benefits. Any drop in the stock market may affect the amount of
surplus remaining after the new plan is fully funded.
back
to top
Q:
How does this change effect benefits for nonmember spouses?
The
new restated LEOFF system does not eliminate any benefits to be
received by members' spouses or children. In addition, they will
be eligible to participate in the new benefits of the defined contribution
plan to the same extent they participate in the current plan. The
net result is increased benefits for all members and beneficiaries.
back
to top
Q:
Does taking these additional dollars out of the retirement surplus
affect other retirement plans?
Other
retirement systems are not affected. This proposal does not affect
the state's retirement systems for teachers, state employees, or
Plan 2 of LEOFF. LEOFF Plan 1 is the only state retirement plan
that is closed to new members and has a substantial surplus.
back
to top
Q:
Do we have to sell at a loss or liquidate investments at the State
Investment Board to do this?
No.
The assets necessary to fund the new LEOFF system will be transferred
from the old system, without liquidating the investments. A portion
of the reverted assets may be sold during the next several years,
however, to meet the state's cash needs or to make distributions
to the beneficiaries of the new defined contribution plan.
back
to top
|