The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» A plan to change pension system for Georgia teachers is pared back,

Teachers, retirees rise up to force legislator­s to step back on cuts.

- By James Salzer jsalzer@ajc.com

A plan to make changes in the pension system for Georgia teachers was pared back Tuesday after lawmakers were flooded with emails from educators and retirees.

Teacher and retiree groups started a campaign recently against legislatio­n pushed by state House Retirement Chairman Tommy Benton, R-Jefferson, that he said was aimed at making the giant pension plan for 400,000 teachers, University System of Georgia employees and retirees more financiall­y stable.

“We’ve got to start doing something,” Benton told his committee.

But Benton said the flood of emails made it unlikely his original legislatio­n — House Bill 109 — would pass, so he narrowed the scope of the measure.

Now, if approved by the General Assembly, new teachers in the future would not be able to count sick leave toward their

pension, something that can add $1,000 or more a year to their pension when they retire. In addition, cost-ofliving pension increases — which are 3% annually — would be tacked on once a year. Currently, retirees get 1.5% twice a year. Changing it to a once-a-year increase would save the system $17 million annually, Benton said.

What happened to Benton’s bill has been a seemingly yearly occurrence at the General Assembly: Lawmakers say they need to make moves to ensure the longterm financial stability of the $83 billion pension system, but major changes they suggest draw strong reaction from politicall­y powerful, active and organized teacher and retiree groups.

Teachers are having a good 2020 session so far. Gov. Brian Kemp recommende­d a $2,000 pay raise for teachers, something lawmakers will have to decide whether the state can afford amid budget cuts. Kemp has also called for reduced student testing, a move teacher groups have supported.

On Tuesday, Benton’s committee passed a separate bill that would allow retired educators to teach in a school full time and continue receiving their pension. Currently, they can only work part time and continue receiving benefits. Only teachers in certain areas, such as math and science or areas designated by the Department of Education as those in need, could come back full time and continue getting their pension.

The average teacher pension is about $37,000 a year.

Lawmakers have talked about tinkering with the pension system for years as similar retirement programs across the country became severely underfunde­d.

Comparably, Georgia’s Teacher Retirement System has not been in bad shape financiall­y, but lawmakers had to pour in extra money in recent years to make it more stable.

This year, the system was in such good shape — buoyed by strong investment returns — that it cut back on what employers had to pay in. That meant the state’s contributi­on to teacher pensions is going down by $190 million, which is about half of what the teacher pay raise would cost.

“We’re not blowing your money,” said Bill Sloan, the executive director of the Georgia Retired Educators Associatio­n and a member of the retirement system board. “The people who think TRS is in trouble ... I don’t agree with that at all.”

The state and school district annual contributi­on to the system has topped $2 billion, and a state audit last year projected that could hit $4.4 billion by 2045 without any changes. Many of the changes originally proposed by Benton came from that audit.

Teacher groups have successful­ly beaten back attempts in recent years to make changes such as turning the pension system for new hires into a 401(k), a defined-contributi­on program that is more common in the private sector. In such programs, rather than getting a fixed or defined monthly payment when they retire, employees and employers contribute into an investment fund that workers can take with them if they switch jobs.

On Tuesday, some lawmakers, including Benton, were critical of the email barrage. “Most of them had no idea what was in the bill,” Benton said. “I deleted every one of them. For the most part, they hadn’t read the bill.”

Margaret Ciccarelli, a lobbyist for the Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators, the state’s largest teacher group, said she and her staff met with Benton and made suggestion­s on his legislatio­n.

Another member of the House Retirement Committee, state Rep. David Wilkerson, D-Powder Springs, said he was happy to hear from retirees and teachers and questioned the need for Benton’s bill.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Sen. Jesse Stone, R-Waynesboro, reads over legislativ­e proposals and other documents Tuesday during the 11th day of the General Assembly’s 40-day 2020 session.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Sen. Jesse Stone, R-Waynesboro, reads over legislativ­e proposals and other documents Tuesday during the 11th day of the General Assembly’s 40-day 2020 session.

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