Albuquerque Journal

Senate OKs bill boosting ERB pension fund

Measure would increase taxpayer contributi­ons

- BY DAN BOYD

SANTA FE — New Mexico’s teacher pension fund would benefit from steppedup taxpayer-funded contributi­ons under a bill that won Senate approval Thursday.

Senators voted 36-6 to pass the measure, Senate Bill 42, which would also extend for two more years a program for retired educators who return to the classroom.

The legislatio­n is sponsored by Senate President Pro Tem Mimi Stewart, D-Albuquerqu­e, a retired teacher who said changes are necessary to put the Educationa­l Retirement Board on more stable financial footing.

“I really think maintainin­g the viability of the fund is a commitment New Mexico makes to its educators,” Stewart said during Thursday’s floor debate.

Specifical­ly, the bill would increase the taxpayer-funded employer contributi­on rate paid into the pension fund by 1 percentage point over each of the next four years — taking the rate from 14.15% to 18.15% by the 2025 budget year. Employee contributi­on rates into the fund would not change.

Increasing the employer contributi­on rate would not be cheap for the state. The estimated price tag would start with an additional $34 million in the coming year and rise to an additional $136.2 million by 2025, according to a fiscal analysis of the legislatio­n.

Sen. William Sharer, R-Farmington, who voted against the proposal, said lawmakers should look at structural changes to the ERB — not just higher contributi­on rates.

“I agree we need to fix this ... but I don’t think this solves the problem,” Sharer said.

Financial concerns over New Mexico’s two large public retirement systems have played a key role in downgrades to the state’s credit rating in recent years.

While it’s not in danger of short-term insolvency, the ERB had an unfunded liability of $9 billion as of July, a figure that reflects the difference between assets on hand and current and future benefits owed.

But several senators pointed out that, even if approved, the stepped-up ERB employer contributi­on rate would still be smaller than the taxpayer-funded contributi­on rate for state employees under New Mexico’s other pension fund, the Public Employees Retirement Associatio­n.

“This is a dollar fix that has to happen,” said Sen. George Muñoz, D-Gallup.

For her part, Jan Goodwin, the ERB’s executive director, said she was pleased with Thursday’s vote in the Senate, which sent the bill on to the House for considerat­ion.

“The strong bipartisan support for this bill acknowledg­es that this is well-needed legislatio­n,” Goodwin told the Journal.

The teacher pension fund currently has more than 61,000 active members and pays benefits to nearly 51,400 retirees.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Senate President Pro Tem Mimi Stewart, D-Albuquerqu­e, reacts after her bill increasing contributi­ons into New Mexico’s teacher pension fund passed the Senate on Thursday.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Senate President Pro Tem Mimi Stewart, D-Albuquerqu­e, reacts after her bill increasing contributi­ons into New Mexico’s teacher pension fund passed the Senate on Thursday.

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