Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Bill to rein in Pa. pension benefits on fast track

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Most rookie teachers and newly minted Pennsylvan­ia government employees would see a smaller retirement benefit in the coming decades through the state’s two big debt-plagued pension systems, under legislatio­n that passed the Senate on Monday and has the backing of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf.

The Republican-controlled Senate’s 40-9 vote could be followed by swift House action this week to send the just-unveiled bill to Wolf’s desk.

The bill is the product of months of closed-door negotiatio­ns and more than four years of Senate Republican­s pushing to end or reduce the traditiona­l pension benefit for future state government and public school employees in favor of a 401(k)-style benefit. If it becomes law, it would be the second pension benefits reduction of future employees in eight years, both spurred by a debt tied to the pension benefits of current and retired

The bill, unveiled Sunday, would create a less expensive and less generous pension benefits structure in the future, while also shifting some risk of investment losses off taxpayers and onto the public employees of tomorrow.

But actuaries note that creating the new benefits plans still leaves Pennsylvan­ia’s massive pension debt intact, and will not stop the rising pension obligation payments that are squeezing the budgets of school districts.

In his floor comments, Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, called the legislatio­n “historic reform” that “will help ensure the stability of the commonweal­th for decades to come.” Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said if lawmakers had adopted the same changes in 2001 — the year they approved a huge benefits increase — the state “wouldn’t be in this situation that we’re in today and dealing with skyrocketi­ng public employees. increases

Wolf’s office said he supports the bill and its goals of paying down the pension debt on the current schedule, reducing pension fund investment fees and shifting investment risk away from taxpayers.

Under the bill, most new employees hired after 2019 would see a smaller traditiona­l pension benefit combined with a new a 401(k)style benefit, and a larger employee contributi­on, according to an analysis of the plan by the Legislatur­e’s nonpartisa­n fiscal agency. They also could choose a plan based entirely on a 401(k)-style benefit. About one-third of future state government employees, including Pennsylvan­ia state troopers and state correction­s officers, are exempt from the plan changes.

An employee who retires with 15 years of service and a final average salary of $60,000 would see an annual benefit of about $12,000 from the new blended plan, compared to $17,000 for someone hired under the of our contributi­on.” current law, according to the analysis. Most public employees hired before 2011 have a more generous pension benefit.

The roughly $60 billion projected debt in Pennsylvan­ia’s two big public pension systems is attributed to the benefits of current and retired employees and will take more than two decades to pay down, according to estimates by the pension systems.

That debt stems from years of lawmakers and governors deferring payments into the system and approving pension benefits increases, plus disappoint­ing investment performanc­es in some years.

The bill does not reduce the benefits for current public employees, lawmakers or retirees, and it does not pledge a big influx of money to pay down the pension debt.

In 2015, Wolf had proposed borrowing $3 billion in bonds to refinance part of the pension debt and save a projected $8 billion, but legislator­s opposed it. Meanwhile, Senate Republican­s had sought billions of dollars in concession­s from current employees, but it hit opposition in the House.

Wolf vetoed Republican­penned legislatio­n in 2015 that would have ended the traditiona­l pension benefit for new hires in favor of a 401(k)-style benefit.

About one-third of U.S. states already administer a mandatory or optional 401(k)-style retirement benefit for employees, according to the National Associatio­n of State Retirement Administra­tors.

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