The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ruling could cost schools $250 million

Ga. high court opinion may lead to class action in retirement fund suit.

- By Marlon A. Walker marlon.walker@ajc.com

The DeKalb County School District could owe current and former employees more than $250

million for breaching a contract by abruptly ending annual contributi­ons to a supplement­al retirement fund.

The Georgia Supreme Court issued an opinion Monday upholding a Georgia Court of Appeals ruling that the DeKalb County School District should have given employees two years’ notice before any contributi­on reductions.

According to the original lawsuit, filed in 2011 by teacher Elaine Gold and school counselor Amy Shaye, the school district instead suspended contributi­ons to the Georgia Tax Shelter Annuity Plan abruptly in 2009, citing a budget shortfall after a 3% state reduction in funding for all Georgia

school systems.

Other employees may soon be able to join the lawsuit as a class action.

District officials said Monday they will work with their attorneys to determine where the process heads next.

“Although we would have liked to see a different outcome, we will move forward with the next phase of this process,” Superinten­dent Steve Green said. “We value the hard work of all DeKalb County School District employees. Despite the dispositio­n of this case, we remai nc ommitted to our teachers and employees.”

In 2015, DeKalb County Superior Court Judge Gregory Adams ruled the district did not breach a contract, sayin gt here was no provision calling for a two-year notice before reducing the contributi­ons. The Georgia Court of Appeals reversed that decision last year, citing a “government­al promise” that no changes would take place without two years’ notice .T he case will now return to DeKalb County Superior Court, where a judge will determine whether other employees can join the suit as a class action, then award compensati­on. More than 10,000 employees were impacted.

“The board promised its teachers and employees it would fund this retirement benefit,” Elaine

Gold, now retired, said. “The district says it wants to retain good teachers in the classroom. But breaking this promise has hurt everyone — the students, the community and especia lly the classroom teachers.”

Former Gov. Roy Barnes, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said a class-action suit would “ensure that everyone who was impacted by the district’s unlawful action is fairly compensate­d.”

The district had annually contribute­d 6% of a participat­ing employee’s salary. During the 2009-10 school year, DeKalb was scheduled to pay $26.5 million into the plan. If it is found to be liable for that much for each year since, the district could be responsibl­e for more than $250 million, just more than 20% of its annual operating budget. The DeKalb County Board of Education approved a $1.2 billion budget for the 20192020 school year. The district currently has about $100 million in its general fund balance.

The annuit yp lan, establishe­d in 1979, was an additional benefit to educators and a Social Security alternativ­e. The fund is separate from the state retirement fund and contributi­ons were paid into individual employee accounts, not taxed until withdrawn.

Former DeKalb County Board of Education Chairman Tom Bowen said after th el awsuit was filed th atth eb oard did not act improperly, adding that the board had the ability to amend its policies.

The suit argues, thoug h,that the board voted to waive the twoyear notice a year after contributi­ons were suspended.

In late 2015, the DeKalb school board voted to establish a 403(b) plan with a match of employees’ contributi­ons up to 2 percent of their salaries. That is less than the halted plan’s 6% contributi­on that required no match. While the district has spent tens of millionson­thene w benefit, fewer employees have participat­ed, mostly because fewer employees were eligible. Chief Financ ialOffi cer Bell said in 2018 that some employees still received a TSA contributi­on that had not been suspended in the school board’s 2009 decision.

The district’s school board opted out of Social Security in 1978, and DeKalb is on e ofmany districts across the state that does so. In neighborin­g Gwinnett County, which also opted out of Social Security, career schoolteac­hers can receive nearly their entire salary annually during retirement because of two retirement plans funded mostly by state and local tax money.

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